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September 16, 2024

Notable and high-profile example of second-look sentencing reduction in Colorado

Regular readers know I am a fan of second-look sentencing mechanisms, and I was thus intrigued to see this press report out of Colorado seeming to involve a notable sentence reduction in a notable high-profile state case.  Here are the details:

A judge in Adams County District Court on Friday wiped away the 5-year prison sentence being served by a former Aurora paramedic convicted in the death of Elijah McClain.  Judge Mark Warner vacated Peter Cichuniec’s prison term and converted the sentence to four years of probation, a move prosecutors previously said would “undermine the jury’s verdict” in the case.  “The court finds, really, there are unusual and extenuating circumstances and they are truly exceptional in this particular case,” Warner said during a brief hearing.

Cichuniec, 51, was convicted of criminally negligent homicide and assault by drugging in the 2019 killing of McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after Aurora police put him in a neck hold and a paramedic injected him with an overdose of the sedative ketamine.  Cichuniec was supervising the paramedic who injected the drug. He was the only one of the three people convicted on charges stemming from McClain’s death to be sent to prison.

Warner in March sentenced Cichuniec to five years in prison — the mandatory minimum prison time required under Colorado law for the assault conviction — but Cichuniec in June asked the judge to reduce the length of the sentence on the grounds that his case involves “unusual and exceptional” circumstances.

State law allowed Warner to reduce the mandatory minimum prison sentence after Cichuniec spent at least 119 days in prison and after the Colorado Department of Corrections assessed Cichuniec’s risk level and reported back to the judge, which both happened.

Prosecutors opposed Cichuniec’s request, writing in a court filing that lowering Cichuniec’s sentence would be against the interests of justice.  They noted that it is rare for mandatory prison sentences to be reduced under the exception in state law that Cichuniec claimed, with just 203 sentences modified under the statute between 1977 and June 2024....

As he issued his ruling, Warner commented on Cichuniec’s lack of prior criminal history, rehabilitative potential, good character and his prior “pro-social” history, as well as his overall role in the events that led to McClain’s death — Cichuniec was the highest-ranking paramedic at the scene, but was most directly responsible for “the logistics of the call and safety of others involved,” Warner said....

Warner noted as he ruled Friday that Cichuniec needed to make quick decisions that night.  “The court must also, and does today as well, look at the deterrence effect of the sentence,” Warner said.  “…For the most part, the court believes based on the issues that arose in this case, a deterrence effect has been really accomplished and there are unique circumstances to this case.”...

[Former paramedic Jeremy] Cooper and former Aurora police officer Randy Roedema were each convicted of criminally negligent homicide and sentenced to 14 months of work-release.  Two other Aurora police officers, Jason Rosenblatt and Nathan Woodyard, were acquitted by juries of all criminal charges in McClain’s death.

I do not know any of the particulars of Colorado sentencing law, but it seems the state has had a limited form of second-look sentencing in place for many decades. And yet the data reported in this article suggest that each year, on average, fewer than five sentences get modified pursuant to the applicable statute. These details are interesting in general, as is the application of the law in this case.

September 16, 2024 at 10:56 PM | Permalink

Comments

My home state, Kentucky, has a very similar legal possibility, which is called "Shock Probation". See, Kentucky Revised Statute 439.265. The Motion must be filed between 30 and 180 days after the defendant was originally sentenced. The Judge must hear the filed Motion within 60 days, and must render an Order resolving the motion within 10 days after hearing it. If the Judge rules in favor of the defendant, then he is released from jail or prison and his sentence is converted to probation, subject to the usual terms for probation, possibly including drug testing, getting a GED or anger management classes, for example. Shock Probation is available in both misdemeanor and felony cases in Kentucky, and it is granted much more frequently in Kentucky than in Colorado. One place the Kentucky Courts are likely to grant Shock Probation is with non-violent young adult defendants (drug dealers and even DUI manslaughter), 18 to 25, who have not previously served time in prison. The Court recognizes that if these young defendants actually serve a 5-year Class D sentence (the lowest level of a felony) at a young age, it may ruin their ability to get back on the law abiding track of getting an education and a legal job, dooming them to begin revolving in and out of the criminal system for decades.

Posted by: Jim Gormley | Sep 17, 2024 7:47:01 AM

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