President’s Focus on Immigration Reflected in Increased Federal Prosecutions – Update for September 23, 2019

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

TRUMP’S FOCUS ON IMMIGRANTS REFLECTED IN NEW SENTENCE DATA

The US Sentencing Commission’s 3rd Quarter Preliminary Fiscal Year 2019 Data, released last week, shows that the Dept. of Justice has responded to President Trump’s preoccupation with illegal immigrants. Immigration cases increased from 34.7% to 37.7% (an increase of almost 9%, for the math-challenged), but drug prosecutions fell 1.2% and fraud cases fell 0.8%. Immigration offenses were only 30.5% of total prosecutions in 2017, meaning that in the last two years, the use of federal criminal law resources to prosecute (and imprison) illegal immigrants has increased by over 22%.

Piechart190923If DOJ’s pace of prosecutions in 2019 continues through the end of the fiscal year next week, federal criminal cases will have increased by about 4.3% over last year. Of course, this assumes that the rate of prosecutions remains the same throughout the year, but if the assumption holds, it is clear that reduction of mass incarceration is a Congressional concern, and not so much one for the Executive Branch.

There is a glimmer of good news, however. The average federal sentence continues to fall, from 44 months in FY 2018 to 43 months in the first three quarters of FY2019. In 2017, half of all defendants received sentences of under 21 months and half received sentences of more than 21 months. So far in FY 2019, half of all defendants got sentences under 18 months, and half got over.

U.S. Sentencing Commission, Quarterly Data Report (Sept. 17, 2019)

– Thomas L. Root

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