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89 Tul. L. Rev. 933 (2014-2015)

handle is hein.journals/tulr89 and id is 991 raw text is: 





State v Noble: Mandatory Minimum Madness in Louisiana

I.   O VERV IEW .................................................................................... 933
II.  B ACKGROUND   .............................................................................. 934
1II. CouRT's  D ECISION ...................................................................... 940
IV   A NALY SIS ..................................................................................... 942

I.   OVERVIEW
     Bernard W Noble is currently serving thirteen years and four
months' imprisonment at hard labor for his possession of two
marijuana cigarettes.' Noble is a high school graduate who was
gainfully employed for twenty years while supporting seven children.
In May 2011, Noble was convicted of marijuana possession for the
fourth time, which is considered a felony under Louisiana law
Noble's previous felony convictions for nonviolent drug offenses in
1991 and 2003 allowed the state to prosecute him under Louisiana's
habitual offender law as a third-felony offender, which carries a
mandatory minimum sentence of thirteen years and four months'
imprisonment.' Despite the mandatory minimum, the trial judge
sentenced Noble to five years' imprisonment at hard labor.5 On appeal,
the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the Fourth Circuit (Fourth Circuit)
remanded the matter to the trial court to justify its downward deviation
from the mandatory minimum sentence.6 On remand, the trial judge
maintained Noble's five-year sentence and articulated the reasoning
why a lesser sentence was warranted.7 The state filed a writ
application with the Fourth Circuit, arguing an insufficient showing by
the trial court to warrant a deviation from the mandatory minimum
sentence.! The Fourth Circuit found that Noble had adequately
justified that his mandatory sentence of thirteen years and four months


    1.   State v. Noble, 2013-1109, pp. 3-4 (La. App. 4 Cir. 2/12/14); 133 So. 3d 703,
705-06.
    2.   Id. at p. 3; 133 So. 3d at 705.
    3.   Id. at p. 1; 133 So. 3dat 704.
    4.   Id at pp. 1,3; 133 So. 3dat 704, 705.
    5.   Id. at p. 1; 133 So. 3d at 704.
    6.   Id.
    7.   Id. Judge Terry Alarcon sentenced Noble in 2011 and retired shortly thereafter.
Id. On remand, Judge Franz Zibilich adopted Judge Alarcon's sentence and reasoning. Id.
    8.   Id. at pp. 1-2; 133 So. 3d at 704.
                                933

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