Vol. 75, No. 11, November
2002
Problems with the New Truth-in-Sentencing Law
by John A. Birdsall & Raymond M. Dall'Osto
The enactment of the second half of truth-in-sentencing (TIS)
legislation in 2001 Wis. Act 109 has been a long time coming. What
ultimately was included in Act 109 does not include many of the changes
and reforms proposed by the State Bar Criminal Law Section. The
section's proposals would have addressed problems with Wisconsin's "no
parole regime," helped control the increasing prison population, and
provided more resources for rehabilitation of incarcerated persons.
While Wisconsin has become a national leader in incarcerating more
and more people, many other states facing similar substantial budget
deficits are reviewing and changing costly prison and sentencing
policies.
A February 2002 report publicized by the Justice Policy Institute in
Washington, D.C., details a variety of responses by other states to the
nationwide prison budget crunch, including reversal of mandatory and no
parole sentencing laws, early release of nonviolent offenders, and
diverting nonviolent drug offenders to alternative treatment programs.
The report is available online at www.justicepolicy.org
and at www.sentencingproject.org.
The technical application of the new TIS legislation is covered well
in the main article accompanying this sidebar. The charts are
particularly helpful to practitioners in comprehending the new
system.
One of the centerpieces of the second phase of TIS was the creation
of a sentencing commission, which was envisioned as being a neutral
monitor and advisor to state government, not beholden to any specific
interest group. A veto of funding for staff positions for the sentencing
commission, however, will hamper the commission's ability to be an
effective advisor on state sentencing policies. Also vetoed was a
provision that would have set standards for allowing greater appellate
review of sentencing decisions if the circuit court erroneously
exercised its discretion or if there was insufficient evidence in the
record to support the sentence.
Act 109 allows inmates to petition for sentence adjustment under
certain circumstances. The Criminal Law Section proposed and strongly
supported a sentence adjustment provision under which an incarcerated
person or the Department of Corrections could petition the court for
adjustment of the confinement portion of the bifurcated sentence based
on any of the following: 1) a new factor; 2) a person's significant
efforts and good conduct in prison, including treatment, rehabilitation,
education, and so on; 3) the lack of appropriate education, treatment,
or rehabilitation programs in prison that would have effectuated the
judge's original sentence; 4) a disabling medical condition; 5) a change
in sentencing law or procedure since the original sentence was imposed;
and 6) the need to allow the prisoner to serve an out-of-state or
federal sentence or to allow a noncitizen to be deported.
In the course of developing the budget repair bill that became Act
109, the state senate adopted a sentence adjustment provision, similar
to the Criminal Law Section's proposal, that also would have allowed
adjustment after a person served 25 percent of his or her prison
sentence. The assembly version was silent on any adjustment provision.
The ultimate product of the conference committee was the creation of
Wis. Stat. section 973.195, which applies to only some classes of
felonies, requires service of 75 to 85 percent of the sentence before
filing a petition, limits the grounds for the petition (excluding
numbers 1, 3, and 4 cited above), and gives the district attorney (and
in some cases the crime victim) absolute veto power. These restrictions
on the ability to petition severely limit the utility of this
provision.
As to whether the new statute will apply to prisoners sentenced for
crimes occurring between Dec. 31, 1999, and Feb. 1, 2003, the Criminal
Law Section's proposal provided grounds for a petition in light of a
change in the law. This was precisely the group of persons that this
provision was meant to include.
The pre-TIS caselaw on what constitutes a "new factor" will have to
be revisited in sentence modification motions when parole is not
available. Motions to modify sentences are not limited to just the
section 973.195 adjustment petition language. In the authors' view, the
scope of a "new factor" will necessarily have to be interpreted more
broadly, as the ABA Criminal Justice Standards intended, in the absence
of parole consideration in TIS sentences.
John A. Birdsall, U.W.
1989, is the owner of Birdsall Law Offices S.C., Milwaukee, practicing
in criminal defense and small business litigation. He chairs the State
Bar Criminal Law Section.
Raymond M. Dall'Osto,
Marquette 1977, is a partner in the Milwaukee firm of Gimbel, Reilly,
Guerin & Brown. He is the immediate past chair of the Criminal Law
Section. Both authors have been active with TIS reform proposals for
several years.
Wisconsin
Lawyer