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After the issuance of a particularly fractured decision, featuring multiple concurrences and dissents, former Chief Justice Rehnquist once quipped, “I didn’t know we had that many people on our Court.”  The quote came to mind after reading a recent Supreme Court decision, Arizona v. Gant, in which Justice Scalia did something rather unusual and, from the perspective of those tasked with application of the Court’s often splintered decisions, laudatory.  He provided the fifth vote needed to produce a majority opinion, despite the fact that he did not entirely agree with the opinion he joined.

In Gant, the Court addressed the scope of the “search-incident-to-arrest” exception to the warrant requirement established in Chimel v. California.  In Chimel, the Court held that police may, incident to an arrest, search the area within the arrestee’s immediate control, i.e., the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.  In New York v. Belton, the Court extended the rule, holding that police may also search the passenger compartment of the vehicle from which an arrestee was taken.  Most lower courts understood Belton to permit a vehicle search incident to arrest even when there was no real possibility that the arrestee could gain access to the vehicle at the time of the search.  Some courts even allowed a search under Belton when the handcuffed arrestee had already left the scene.

Gant presented an opportunity to narrow this construction of the Belton rule.  

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Fairness in Federal Cocaine Sentencing Policy

As is notorious, federal law treats one gram of crack cocaine the same as 100 grams of powder cocaine. Thus, a defendant caught with five grams of crack faces the same five-year mandatory minimum prison term as a powder cocaine offender in possession of 500 grams; 50 grams of crack produces the same ten-year minimum as five kilograms of powder. Despite a steady stream of criticism from academics, judges, and the United States Sentencing Commission over the past 20 years, Congress has declined to revisit the 100:1 ratio. In 2007, the Commission took a small step towards remedying the imbalance, reducing crack sentences under the advisory federal sentencing guidelines (which also contained a 100:1 crack/powder disparity) by two levels, then designating the amendment for retroactive application. As a result, thousands of federal crack prisoners received sentence reductions averaging about 17 percent. However, as the Commission itself acknowledged, true reform would require Congress to modify the 100:1 ratio and the resulting statutory mandatory minimum terms. Based on a change in position by the last major player supportive of the 100:1 disparity, the United States Department of Justice, that reform may, finally, be imminent.

In recent testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs, Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer indicated that the Administration “believes Congress’s goal should be to completely eliminate the sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and powder cocaine.” It is too soon to tell whether Congress will completely eliminate the disparity, as the Justice Department appears to advocate, or merely narrow it to, say, 10:1 or 20:1, as the Commission and some legislators have previously recommended. Whatever it elects to do, Congress should consider retroactive application of the statutory change. Experience under the Commission’s recent crack guideline amendment shows that courts are well-equipped to apply the change to existing sentences.

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Criminal Appeals Conference

Chad Oldfather and I are organizing a conference on criminal appeals at Marquette on June 15 and 16.  I am very excited about the line-up speakers, which includes many leading criminal law and appellate process scholars from around the nation, as well as several state supreme court justices and other appellate judges.  The full schedule, including links for registration, can be found here.

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