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2013-08-01 03:41:19
Bradley Manning faces up to 136 years behind bars after being convicted of 20
charges in the largest ever leak of US government documents. So what's the
point in extending a prison term beyond a person's lifetime, asks Tom
Geoghegan.
Sentencing is not just about determining how long someone should be behind
bars, it also has a symbolic, theatrical function, says Franklin Zimring, a
professor of law at the University of California, who has written extensively
about deterrents.
"In sentencing Bernie Madoff [to 150 years for fraud], what the judge wants to
be telling him is 'you are really a bad person.' And for this purpose, the
number of years can be endlessly elastic."
How much symbolic denunciation plays a part can depend on many things, such as
media coverage or the nature of an offence, but the tension between these two
radically different functions - the symbolic and practical - is a feature of
modern criminal justice systems, he says, and not just in the US. There was a
famous case in Spain where a fraudster received a 2,000-year sentence.
Parole means the sentence can be adjusted at a later date. But it has been
eliminated for life sentences in many parts of the country.
Some long US sentences
Bernie Madoff
150 years: Bernie Madoff (pic), fraud, 2009
835 years: Shalom Weiss, fraud, 2000
957 years: Jeffrey Dahmer, serial killer, 1992
1,000 years: Peter Mallory, child sexual exploitation, 2013
1,000 years: Ariel Castro, abduction, rape, 2013
Most criminal prosecutions in the US are brought by the state, so there can be
huge variations in sentencing. Judges are constrained by a statutory range but,
depending on the crime, that could be very broad or have no maximum sentence at
all.
Fraud against one person can involve multiple crimes like false statements,
wire fraud and theft, so consecutive sentences for each charge can fast add up.
The same goes for crimes involving a computer, like child pornography, because
each image could be a separate count. Minor misdemeanours are more likely to
result in concurrent sentences.
For victims of crime and their loved ones there is nothing problematic about a
very long sentence. Indeed, a sentence that increases with each guilty charge
is a way of telling each victim that they matter.
Cleveland kidnapper and rapist Ariel Castro is beginning a 1,000-year sentance.
He is not due to be released until 3013, in a deal that meant he escaped the
death penalty.
Some long sentences, like his, are an alternative to the death penalty. Dudley
Wayne Kyzer is serving two life terms plus 10,000 years for a triple murder he
committed in the 1970s. After four years on death row, he was given a second
trial because the death penalty in Alabama was at the time deemed
unconstitutional.
Tommy Smith was Tuscaloosa County Assistant District Attorney when he persuaded
the trial judge to impose the long sentence as an alternative. "The jury sent a
message. They don't want him released," he said. Kyzer has been denied parole
nine times.