Author Topic: Supreme Court Deals Blow to Biden DOJ in Cocaine Sentencing Case  (Read 353 times)

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Supreme Court Deals Blow to Biden DOJ in Cocaine Sentencing Case

In an early setback for the Biden Justice Department’s reform agenda, the Supreme Court on Monday unanimously held that low-level crack cocaine offenders aren’t eligible for lighter sentences under the 2018 First Step Act.

The decision came after Biden appointees at the Justice Department broke with their Trump-appointed predecessors to back small-time drug defendants seeking re-sentencing. Justice Clarence Thomas delivered the majority opinion that eight justices joined in full, a stark rejoinder to the government’s reversal.

The First Step Act made offenders convicted before 2010 of possessing large amounts of crack eligible for new, lessened sentences. Consistent with its criminal justice reform goals, the Biden Justice Department argued in Monday’s case that the First Step Act also covers low-level offenders. The verdict could impact several hundred federal offenders who were convicted before 2010 of possessing a small quantity of crack cocaine.

The Trump Justice Department initially argued that small-time convicts were not eligible for relief under the First Step Act. The Supreme Court agreed to weigh in on that issue on Jan. 8. Once Biden took office and installed new leadership at the Department of Justice, the department flipped positions and backed defendants seeking a lighter sentence under the act. The department notified the Court of its change one month before the argument—prompting a rare change to the Court’s schedule—on the same day it was due to submit its main legal brief.

The change was also notable because it put the Justice Department in the position of arguing for a defendant-friendly interpretation of a sentencing law. The flip prompted the Court to appoint an outside lawyer, Adam Mortara, to argue the position the government formerly held.

The scheduling foul-up made waves among the justices during oral arguments at a special session in May, and Monday’s lopsided result underscored the unusual nature of the department’s conduct.

Monday’s case emerged from a reappraisal of '80s-era drug sentencing practices. Between 1986 and 2010, crack cocaine offenses carried much stiffer mandatory penalties as compared to powder cocaine offenses, even though they are different forms of the same drug. In 2010, Congress passed a law to close the gap between mandatory crack and powder cocaine penalties.......

https://www.conservativereview.com/supreme-court-deals-blow-to-biden-doj-in-cocaine-sentencing-case-2653376321.html
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