We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
SENTENCING COMMISSION WAVES AS ITS CAR CAREENS OFF THE CLIFF
The US Sentencing Commission is down two commissioners (operating with five instead of seven). The terms of two more commissioners expire at the end of this year. Absent quick work by the Trump administration in nominating people that the Senate is willing to confirm (who can forget Trump’s last picks, which included Judge Henry “Hang ‘Em High” Hudson?), we may again have a legally impotent USSC as of January 1, 2027.
When the USSC last lost its quorum in December 2018, five years passed without any amendments being adopted. Trump, in office at the time, apparently saw the Commission as pretty low priority, taking a single stab at populating the Commission and then giving up. It took Biden appointing enough commissioners to fill the chairs again, with the first amendments to the Guidelines since November 2018 adopted in November 2023.
Last week, the Commission published its proposed priorities for the coming year, two broad-brush proposals that are a departure from the specific proposals of years past (such as the methamphetamine tables or theft/fraud loss calculations). Instead, the USSC proposes to undertake an evaluation of the guidelines and federal sentencing practices in light of the Commission’s mission set forth in statute and to “undertake a comprehensive review of the Rules and consider whether any amendments to such Rules may be appropriate to further the agency’s statutory purposes and enhance public engagement with and understanding of the Commission’s work.
This is unmitigated squishiness, much more a navel-gazing existential introspection than a serious consideration of substantive changes in the guidelines to reflect justice or reality.
Ohio State University law professor Doug Berman wrote in his Sentencing Law and Policy blog last week that “[i]t seems increasingly likely that the USSC will be without a quorum for the start of 2027 and maybe for years thereafter. That may explain why we are getting two broad ‘review’ proposed priorities rather than any specifics.”
The Commission last week published a Retroactivity Impact Analysis of Certain 2026 Amendments, which examined three proposed amendments in the 2026 package sent to Congress last month. If two of these Guidelines, the “inflationary adjustments amendment” and the “multiple counts amendment,” were made retroactive, nearly 5,000 federal prisoners would be eligible for an 18 USC § 3582(c)(2) sentence reduction.
But they won’t be made retroactive. The Commission reports that it “has chosen to not solicit public comment or hold a hearing on retroactivity. When the Commission submits amendments to Congress, it may decide to publish an issue for comment and hold a hearing on whether to make some or all of those amendments retroactive… The Commission is not taking these steps for any of the amendments submitted to Congress on April 30, 2026.”
Apparently, three Commissioners supported retroactivity for the inflationary adjustment Amendment to USSG § 2B1.1 (the theft-fraud guideline. Unfortunately, 28 USC § 994(a)(2) requires four votes for Commission action, including on retroactivity.
Prof Berman wrote, “There is a reasonable basis to believe that, had the USSC had a full slate of Commissioners, there likely could have been a fourth vote for making at least the inflationary adjustments retroactive. But even though it seems a majority of the five current Commissioners would have voted for retroactivity, that’s not sufficient because there is a statutory requirement of four total votes for the USSC to formally act.”
USSC, Retroactivity Impact Analysis of Certain 2026 Amendments (June 4, 2026)
Sentencing Law and Policy, US Sentencing Commission requests input on policy priorities while indicating recent guideline amendments will not be retroactive (June 11, 2026)
~ Thomas L. Root



















