Sentencing Flashcards
What Amendment protects against excessive punishment?
The Eight Amendment
When is punishment constitutionally excessive
- It makes no measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment OR
- Is grossly out of proportions on the severity of the crime
What is the more common means of challenging punishment as constitutionally excessive
Is grossly out of proportions with the severity of the crime
What punishment counts as excessive according to the Supreme Court
- Life in Prison for a parking ticket - Ewing
- Death for Rape - Coker v Georgia
What doesn’t count as excessive
- Life with Parole Habitual Offender Laws - Rummel v Estelle
- Life without Parole Tough on Crime Laws - Harmelin v Michigan
- A Life for a Life(death sentence for murder) - Coker
What factors does the Supreme Court use in Sentencing Proportionality Review?
- The primacy of the Legislature - deference given to the legislature
- The variety of legitimate state punishment reasons
- Federalism - States are allowed to deal with criminal behaviour in different ways as they choose
- The Eighth amendment only forbids grossly disproportionate extreme sentences
What was the holding of Coker v Georgia?
Imposing the death penalty for the crime of rape violates the Eighth Amendment
What was the holding of Ewing v California?
The Constitution does not prohibit a 25-year sentence for serious, habitual offenders
What was the holding of Harmelin v Michigan?
Life without Parole for possessing 672g of cocaine (felony) as a first offense was constitutional
As reviewed in Ewing
What was the holding of Solem v Helm?
Life without parole for 7 non-violent felonies was a violation of the eighth amendment because there was no possibility of parole
What was the holding in Rummel v Estelle?
Habitual Offender Laws that impose longer sentences (including life) do not violate the 8th amendment
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?
Helm’s sentence was more serious than the life sentence validated in Rummel because parole was possible after 12 years.
What are the penological schemes a state may decide to advance?
Punishment, Retribution, Deterrence and Rehabilitation