« Some notable new commentary on the apparent great crime decline of 2025 | Main | Rounding up some news and commentary concerning prisons and jails in the US »

April 21, 2025

"Sentencing Immigrants"

The title of this post is the title of this new article authored by Eric Fish now available via SSRN. Here is its abstract:

The federal government has created a separate and unequal sentencing system for undocumented immigrants.  Over a third of all federal felony cases involve immigrants charged with the crime of entering the United States.  With Donald Trump returning to the White House, that number will increase significantly.  Under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, defendants in these cases have their criminal history counted against them twice.  U.S. citizen defendants only have their criminal history counted once.  This results in immigrants suffering significantly larger recidivist enhancements for the exact same prior convictions.  And these double enhancements are determined in a confusing and irrational manner, with multi-year swings turning on minor details like the timing of a deportation order or probation violation. Furthermore, under the First Step Act, undocumented defendants are barred from in-custody programs that can reduce sentences by up to one-third.  They therefore serve a significantly higher portion of their prison terms than do U.S. citizens.

This article details how federal sentencing law explicitly discriminates against undocumented immigrants.  It traces the history of their unequal treatment over the last three decades.  It also proposes a framework for judges to remedy this discrimination: sentencing constitutionalism.  When judges make discretionary sentencing decisions, they can and should enforce constitutional anti-discrimination principles to a greater degree than they do while reviewing legislation.  In keeping with this principle, judges should decline to follow the Sentencing Guidelines in double-counting illegal reentry defendants’ past convictions.  They should also reduce immigrants’ sentences to account for the fact that they serve a higher portion of their prison terms than do citizens.  Equal Protection doctrine erects numerous obstacles to challenging these discriminatory rules.  But judges’ discretionary sentencing decisions need not be constrained by the deference principles built into formal doctrine.  They can and should adhere to a higher standard of equality.  The principle of sentencing constitutionalism is illustrated by federal judges’ widespread rejection of federal crack cocaine sentencing guidelines.  Like crack cocaine sentencing, reentry sentencing is racially discriminatory in design and effect.  And, like they have with crack cocaine sentencing, judges should work to counteract that discrimination.

April 21, 2025 at 04:02 PM | Permalink

Comments

Aliens who come here illegally and commit additional crimes are horrendous people and deserve, in each and every case, to be maxed out. There's a very simple solution to this problem--don't come here illegally and commit crimes. I personally believe that a previously deported immigrant (for serious crime) who commits a serious violent crime should be summarily executed.

Posted by: federalist | Apr 21, 2025 4:24:40 PM

federalist: I believe this article is focused only on the federal sentencing rules for just the crime of illegal reentry, not on sentencing for, as you put it, "additional crimes." Indeed, some particulars of your comment suggest you might generally agree with the chief themes of the article.

Posted by: Doug B | Apr 21, 2025 4:31:00 PM

What the article is getting at (correct me if I am wrong) is that illegal entry after conviction here enhances the underlying illegal entry crime and then can be used as criminal history. No?

Posted by: federalist | Apr 22, 2025 1:29:07 PM

federalist: Yes, though some sentenced for illegal reentry may get initial criminal history when here legally and/or after having been brought here illegally as children. I thought your "maxed out" comment was focused on folks who, as adults, enter "illegally and commit additional crime" thereafter. Apologies if I did not understand the full scope of your "maxed out" recommendation.

Posted by: Doug B | Apr 22, 2025 1:52:45 PM

It looks like that illegal immigrant who killed two young adults in California is going to get a taste of Tom Homan justice.

https://nypost.com/2025/04/24/us-news/gov-newsom-to-help-trump-pursue-federal-charges-against-illegal-migrant-who-killed-teens-while-driving-drunk/

Surprised you're not interested in the Tesla vandal and diversion. Would be curious your thoughts on that.

Posted by: federalist | Apr 24, 2025 10:31:42 AM

Post a comment

In the body of your email, please indicate if you are a professor, student, prosecutor, defense attorney, etc. so I can gain a sense of who is reading my blog. Thank you, DAB