Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (“TRAC”) has a new report titled Equal Justice and Sentencing Practices Among Federal District Court Judges, here. The email I received with a summary of the report was titled: “The Impact of the Identity of the Judge on Sentencing.”
TRAC gathers and maintains a lot of data and ways to access and analyze data at its web site, here. For example, TRAC provides reports and bulletins on the IRS . Scholars, practitioners, and students should familiarize themselves generally with the TRAC offerings and studies.
The particular TRAC offering discussed here on sentencing practices should be interesting for scholars, practitioners and students of federal tax crimes. Sentencing, after all, is where the rubber hits the road so to speak. So, I offer some excerpts first from the email summary and then the report (with some redundancy):
Excerpts from the Email Summary
While judges need sufficient discretion to consider the totality of circumstances in assigning a sentence in a specific case to ensure it is "just," a fair court system always seeks to provide equal justice under the law, working to ensure that sentencing patterns of judges are not widely different for similar kinds of cases.
While special circumstances might account for some of these differences, half of the courthouses in the country had median differences in prison sentences of 16 months or more, and average differences of 21 months or more. Five courthouses showed more than 60 months difference in the median prison sentence handed out across judges serving on the same bench.