Document Type
Article
Comments
20 Federal Sentencing Reporter 28 (October 2007)
Abstract
This essay surveys the sentencing issues left open by Rita v. United States and considers how the presumption of reasonableness is likely to operate in practice and how rebutable it is, the roles of safe harbors and individual judges' policy disagreements, and the importance of Justices Stevens and Ginsburg as the swing Justices in this area. This line of cases has drifted far from its roots in a Sixth Amendment concern for juries. Though the resulting sentencing policies may be substantively desirable, the Court cannot articulate how they are rooted in the Sixth Amendment's concern for juries.
Date of Authorship for this Version
October 2007
Keywords
Criminal sentences, Federal Sentencing Guidelines, maximum sentences, juries, Sentencing Reform Act, Apprendi, Blakely, Booker, Sixth Amendment
Recommended Citation
Bibas, Stephanos, "Rita v. United States Leaves More Open Than it Answers" (2007). Scholarship at Penn Law. Paper 261.
http://lsr.nellco.org/upenn_wps/261