
How Sentencing Works FAQ
From the Nolo.com Criminal Law Center
These frequently asked questions explain how judges
decide what a convicted defendant's punishment will be.
Who determines what punishment a convicted defendant receives?
Judges, not juries, almost always determine the punishment, even following
jury trials. In fact, a common jury instruction warns jurors not to consider
the question of punishment when deciding a defendant's guilt or innocence.
In a very few situations, juries do take part in sentencing decisions. For
example, in capital punishment cases in some states, a judge cannot impose
the death penalty in a jury trial unless the jury recommends death rather
than life in prison.
Where can the prescribed punishment for crimes be found?
Typically, the law a defendant is charged with violating also identifies
the punishment. For example, a statute identifying specific behavior as
a misdemeanor might go on to state, "For a first-time offense, an offender
may be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned for not more than six months,
or both." Another statute might describe particular behavior as a misdemeanor
without specifying the punishment. In this situation, the punishment can
be found in a separate statute that sets forth the punishment either for
that particular misdemeanor, or, in some states, for all misdemeanors.
Do people convicted of the same or similar crimes receive similar sentences?
Some state and all federal criminal statutes include "mandatory sentences,"
which require judges to impose specific and identical sentences on all defendants
who violate those laws. Mandatory sentencing laws are a response by state
legislatures or Congress to their perception of the public's desire to end
judicial leniency and treat alike all people who break the same law.
More commonly, criminal statutes do not carry mandatory sentences. Rather,
judges can take a number of factors into account when deciding on an appropriate
punishment. For instance, judges may consider the defendant's past criminal
record, age, sophistication, the circumstances under which the crime was
committed and whether the defendant genuinely feels remorse. In short,
mandatory sentence laws "fit the punishment to the crime"; whereas
judges prefer to "fit the punishment to the offender.
What factors do judges use in determining sentences?
If the judge has discretion to determine the sentence, the defense may bring
to a judge's attention an infinite number of factual circumstances that
may move the judge to impose a lighter sentence. The following are examples
of such circumstances (called "mitigating" factors):
- the offender has little or no history of criminal conduct
- the offender was an accessory (helped the main offender) to the crime
but was not the main actor
- the offender committed the crime when under great personal stress,
for example, had lost a job, rent was due and had just been in a car
wreck, or
- no one was hurt, and the crime was committed in a manner that was
unlikely to have hurt anyone.
Just as mitigating circumstances can sway a judge to lessen a sentence,
"aggravating" circumstances can compel a judge to "throw
the book at" an offender. A previous record of the same type of offense
is the most common aggravating factor. Often, aggravating circumstances
grow out of the way a crime was committed, as when an offender is particularly
cruel to a victim. Sometimes, laws themselves specify aggravating factors,
such as the use of a weapon.
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