We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
THE WIND MAY BE SHIFTING
We have previously reported that the prison reform bill named FIRST STEP Act, H.R. 5682, faces a tough battle in the Senate, starting with the unwillingness of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to bring it to a vote, and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) pledging that no FIRST STEP Act will pass without the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (S.1917) being written into FIRST STEP’s provisions.
But it was a wild week in the nation’s capital last week, and as a result, the goal may be closer than ever. In one of Washington’s most interesting plot twists, historic criminal justice reform legislation now finds itself atop Trump’s policy agenda, and one floor vote away from his signature.
A detailed story in Foreign Affairs last week suggested that a deal that includes some first-step changes to harsh sentencing laws is now likelier in the wake of the Alice Johnson commutation of the life sentence of Alice Marie Johnson. Even Sessions has said he could support reforms to “stacking” provisions in 18 USC 924(c), which results in first-timers getting three or more stacked 924(c) enhancements for a single course of conduct, with sentences of 62 years or more for what should be a 12-year bit.
While the SRCA proposal to reform what are generally (and misleadingly) called “851” enhancements (provisions in 21 USC 841(b) that double mandatory minimum sentences for prior state felony drug convictions), might not make it, a compromise could include a broader safety valve, which would give judges more discretion to depart from mandatory minimums when circumstances warrant.
Senators Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), both longtime SRCA supporters, will be key brokers in any deal. Lee could help bring Democrats such as SRCA supporters Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) to the table, and Paul shares a backyard with McConnell, who will determine if the bill even gets a vote.
Also heartening was McConnell’s unpopular announcement last week that the Senate will not take the month of August off, as it usually does, but instead stay in town to complete a lot of unfinished business.
All is not roses, however. Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas), one of the few Americans who believes the country has an “underincarceration problem,” has mounted a guerrilla campaign to undermine FIRST STEP’s support on the right. For example, he is reportedly pushing law-enforcement groups to oppose the bill. His efforts have borne fruit recently, as the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association withdrew its endorsement of the bill after being pressured by Cotton’s office. Also, last week, the National Association of Assistant U.S. Attorneys slammed FIRST STEP, but that group hardly needed Cotton’s urging to do so.
Foreign Affairs, The Art of a Deal on Criminal Justice Reform (June 8, 2018)
Townhall, The FIRST STEP Prison Reform Bill Should Be a No-Brainer (June 8, 2018)
National Review, A Prison-Reform Bill Passed the House 360–59. It’ll Probably Die in the Senate (June 6, 2018)
– Thomas L. Root