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11 Stan. L. & Pol'y Rev. 93 (1999-2000)
A Common Law for This Age of Federal Sentencing: The Opportunity and Need for Judicial Lawmaking

handle is hein.journals/stanlp11 and id is 97 raw text is: A Common Law For This
Age of Federal Sentencing:
The Opportunity and Need
For Judicial Lawmaking
by
Douglas A. Berman

Not long ago, the Sentencing
Reform    Act   (SRA)'    made
sweeping changes to a federal
sentencing  process  which,  in
Congress' view, had     become
arbitrary and capricious and
unfair both to offenders and to the
public.2  But, barely a decade
since the SRA's reforms became
effective,3 many judges, lawyers
and scholars contend that federal
sentencing laws and practices are
now as bad as, or even worse than,
ever.4 Even vocal supporters of
modem       reforms      readily

[lit remains critically
important for federal
judges to embrace
their opportunities to
actively cultivate a
common law of
sentencing.

acknowledge that the federal sentencing system is far
from perfect.5 Meanwhile, sky-rocketing incarceration
rates reveal that the federal system has led the way in
fighting crime with more time.
Taking   stock   of  these   developments,   most
commentators have focused upon the work of Congress
and the Sentencing Commission in developing federal
sentencing law. But of critical import in assessing the
federal system's   struggles  is the   role--or, more
accurately, the absence of a proper role-of the federal
judiciary in the federal sentencing system. Put simply,
since the passage of the SRA, federal judges have not
effectively helped develop the rules which govern federal
sentencing; they have been involved in sentencing, but
largely uninvolved in sentencing lawmaking.
Douglas A. Berman is an Assistant Professor ofLaw at The Ohio
State University College of Law. Professor Berman is an editor
of the Federal Sentencing Reporter (U. Cal. Press). He received
his J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1993 and his A.B. from
Princeton University in 1990. *

Many of the disappointments
in federal sentencing reform, as well
as the federal system's tendency to
fight crime with more time, can be
traced to the failure of the federal
judiciary to be actively involved in
sentencing lawmaking.6 The limited
role  played  by  judges  in the
evolution of federal sentencing law
is especially ironic in the wake of
the SRA's passage and the advent of
the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.
The   SRA    and  the   guideline
sentencing model actually establish
an extremely sound institutional

structure for sentencing reform which provides for a
significant judicial role in federal sentencing lawmaking.
Compounding the irony is the fact that responsibility for
the insignificant judicial role in federal sentencing
lawmaking rests significantly with the federal judiciary
itself.
While federal judges have been among the most
active critics of the SRA and the Federal Sentencing
Guidelines, they have been passive in their sentencing
decision-making under the Guidelines. Under the SRA,
the federal judiciary has considerable power to develop a
meaningful common law of sentencing and thereby shape
the content and direction of federal sentencing law.
Indeed, federal judges have opportunities in every
sentencing case to contribute their insights and wisdom to
the development of the rules governing federal sentencing
policy and practice.
But federal judges have largely failed to make
effective use of the means through which they can
contribute to the development of federal sentencing law.

VOLUME 11:1 1999

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