Sentencing Flashcards

1
Q

What Amendment protects against excessive punishment?

A

The Eight Amendment

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2
Q

When is punishment constitutionally excessive

A
  1. It makes no measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment OR
  2. Is grossly out of proportions on the severity of the crime
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3
Q

What is the more common means of challenging punishment as constitutionally excessive

A

Is grossly out of proportions with the severity of the crime

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4
Q

What punishment counts as excessive according to the Supreme Court

A
  1. Life in Prison for a parking ticket - Ewing
  2. Death for Rape - Coker v Georgia
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5
Q

What doesn’t count as excessive

A
  1. Life with Parole Habitual Offender Laws - Rummel v Estelle
  2. Life without Parole Tough on Crime Laws - Harmelin v Michigan
  3. A Life for a Life(death sentence for murder) - Coker
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6
Q

What factors does the Supreme Court use in Sentencing Proportionality Review?

A
  1. The primacy of the Legislature - deference given to the legislature
  2. The variety of legitimate state punishment reasons
  3. Federalism - States are allowed to deal with criminal behaviour in different ways as they choose
  4. The Eighth amendment only forbids grossly disproportionate extreme sentences
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7
Q

What was the holding of Coker v Georgia?

A

Imposing the death penalty for the crime of rape violates the Eighth Amendment

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8
Q

What was the holding of Ewing v California?

A

The Constitution does not prohibit a 25-year sentence for serious, habitual offenders

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9
Q

What was the holding of Harmelin v Michigan?

A

Life without Parole for possessing 672g of cocaine (felony) as a first offense was constitutional

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10
Q

As reviewed in Ewing

What was the holding of Solem v Helm?

A

Life without parole for 7 non-violent felonies was a violation of the eighth amendment because there was no possibility of parole

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11
Q

What was the holding in Rummel v Estelle?

A

Habitual Offender Laws that impose longer sentences (including life) do not violate the 8th amendment

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12
Q

How does the court distinguish the ruling that life under the Habitual Offender Statute in Rummel was constitutional but Life without Parole for 7 non-violent felonies was unconstitutional?

A

Helm’s sentence was more serious than the life sentence validated in Rummel because parole was possible after 12 years.

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13
Q

What are the penological schemes a state may decide to advance?

A

Punishment, Retribution, Deterrence and Rehabilitation

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