September 14, 2023–Due Process Institute supported today’s reintroduction of bipartisan and bicameral Prohibiting Punishment of Acquitted Conduct Act of 2023 in the Senate (S. 2788) and House (H.R. 5430) that would end the federal practice of sentencing on the basis of conduct for which a jury has acquitted. We applaud Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN-9), Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-ND-At-Large), Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL), and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) for their leadership on this important issue and we thank our many coalition partners for their support of this critical effort.
In short, this bipartisan bill would end the unjust practice of judges increasing sentences based on conduct for which a defendant has been acquitted by a jury. The Fifth and Sixth Amendment guarantee due process and the right to trial by jury but current federal law allows judges to override a jury’s not guilty verdict by sentencing a defendant for the very conduct a jury acquitted them of. Judges are allowed to impose these sentence enhancements because it only requires the preponderance of evidence, a less demanding standard than a jury’s standard to convict only beyond a reasonable doubt.
This practice has been roundly criticized by practitioners, judges, and scholars. Furthermore, allowing acquitted conduct to be considered in sentencing exacerbates the trial penalty, described as the significant difference in sentencing when a defendant accepts a plea bargain opposed to if they are convicted at trial. The trial penalty also contributes to coercive plea bargaining and the frequency of innocent people pleading guilty. Passing this legislation would help alleviate these problems, eliminate unjust practices, and strengthen the protections provided by the Constitution.