Disparity in Sentencing for Crack Cocaine Offenders: the U.S. Supreme Court Speaks

I previously authored a post entitled "Disparity in Sentencing and Crack Cocaine."  Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed this same issue in two different cases.  The result was a resounding win for both defendants. 

In his blog entitled "Sentencing Law and Policy," Professor Douglas A. Berman summarizes the two cases as follows:

The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that the federal guidelines on sentencing for cocaine violations are advisory only, rejecting a lower court ruling that they are effectively mandatory. Judges must consider the Guideline range for a cocaine violation, the Court said, but may conclude that they are too harsh when considering the disparity between punishment for crack cocaine and cocaine in powder form. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote the decision in Kimbrough v. U.S. (06-6330)....

Ruling in a second Guidelines case, Gall v. U.S. (06-7949), the Court — also by a 7-2 vote — cleared the way for judges to impose sentences below the specified range and still have such punishment regarded as “reasonable.” The Justices, in an opinion written by Justice John Paul Stevens, told federal appeals courts to use a “deferential abuse-of-discretion standard” even when a trial sets sets a punishment below the range. Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., announced the opinion in Stevens’ absence.

Florida drug offense lawyer Ronald Chapman has been representing people accused of committing drug crimes in Florida since 1990.  You can read more about Mr. Chapman’s experience as a Florida drug offense attorney as well as review news articles about some of his cases.  Some of the types of cases and issues that Mr. Chapman has handled since 1990 include:

Death Penalty Cases
Assault and Battery Cases
DUI Cases
Drug Cases
Sex Crimes Cases
Sealing & Expunging Criminal Records
Bond|Bail
Mistaken Identification and Wrongful Conviction
Police Interrogations
Sentencing

Disparity in Sentencing and Crack Cocaine

In a previous blog posting, I argued for rationality in sentencing given the widespread problem of prisoner overcrowding in the United States generally and in Florida particularly.  After publishing that posting, I came upon an article that appears on the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers' website.  That article points out the disparity in sentencing between those convicted of crack cocaine offenses versus those convicted of powder cocaine offenses has been well known for years.  The U.S. Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in a case that dealt with this disparity.  Will the high court do anything to correct this unjust disparity in sentencing?  We can only hope.

Florida drug offense attorney Ronald Chapman has been representing people accused of committing drug crimes in Florida since 1990. You can read more about Mr. Chapman’s experience as a Florida drug offense lawyer as well as review news articles about some of his cases.  Some of the types of cases and issues that Mr. Chapman has handled include:

Death Penalty Cases
Assault and Battery Cases
DUI Cases
Drug Cases
Sex Cases
Sealing & Expunging Criminal Records
Bond|Bail
Mistaken Identification and Wrongful Conviction
Police Interrogations
Sentencing