The recent sentencing of Paul Manafort by federal judges in two different district courts has renewed interest in the sentencing practices of individual judges. Countless studies over the years have documented a basic fact: while decisions should be determined by the law and the facts, in reality there is a third very important force at work. This ingredient is the identity of the judge assigned to a given case. Again and again, court records show that the particular predilections of individual judges influence the legal decisions that they reach, including those involving sentences.The posting has further analysis for sentencing and some good lengths.
I do want to emphasize that "particular predilections of individual judges" do affect the range of legal decisions judges reach. Judges do not simply call balls and strikes within a well-defined strike zone (as Justice Roberts famously claimed). Judges often, with little review, define the strike zones in ways to permit them to call balls and strikes as they wish.
I do not mean this as an indictment of the judiciary. I think it is inevitable that giving the judge the leeway to do justice rather than simply call balls and strikes within well previously defined strike zones will also give judges some ability to do great mischief.
As to sentencing in particular, the Sentencing Guidelines were intended to narrow the range of a judge's discretion and bring some nationwide uniformity in sentencing. The TRAC posting says:
The existence of judge-to-judge differences in sentences of course is not synonymous with finding unwarranted disparity in sentencing practices. A key requirement for achieving justice is that the judges in a court system have sufficient discretion to consider the totality of circumstances in deciding that a sentence in a specific case is just. No set of rules, including the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, can substitute for this necessary flexibility.
But a fair court system always seeks to provide equal justice under the law, working to ensure that sentencing patterns of judges not be widely different when they are handling similar kinds of cases.After Booker, though, we are essentially back in the pre-Guidelines world where a judge can do what he or she wants so long the Guidelines calculation is correct and the judge states rather minimal reasons for variance from the Guidelines sufficient to avoid abuse of discretion review on appeal (if appealed). I think that there should be some strengthening of the role of the Guidelines because, simply, justice should not depend upon which judge imposes the sentence.
And, of course that does not address the predilections that affect the outcome of the other decisions a judge makes in a case.
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