Jail Overcrowding in Lansing Michigan Spurs Calls for Early Release of Convicted Criminal Defendants and Prisoners

February 9, 2010
By The Reeves Law Group on February 9, 2010 7:18 PM |

Let's face it - the easy way out is for Lansing Criminal Defense Lawyers to blame overzealous prosecution as the primary reason for excessive jail sentences. The hard part is admitting that the Criminal Defense bar shoulders an important portion of that responsibility.

Day in and day out, in court rooms all across Michigan - from Detroit, to Pontiac to Grand Rapids and back - Defense attorneys routinely contribute to imposition of excessive sentences through inadequate preparation, lack-luster advocacy, inattention to detail and incomplete knowledge.

Michigan Criminal Law and Procedure has long required that most felony sentences comport with the Michigan Sentencing Guidelines. In a nutshell, the Guidelines are a complex formula which assess both the Criminal Defendant's prior criminal record as well as the unique facts of the crime. The final outcome of that analysis is a numerical score.

The Defendant's score tells the Judge what sentence to impose. Under the law, the Judge may only depart from the recommended sentence if he finds substantial and compelling reasons that would support a different outcome.

A body of Michigan case law exists which interprets many of the sentencing criteria included in the Sentencing Guidelines. Those cases shed more light on some of the more confusing sentencing considerations.

A commonly misunderstood sentencing criteria is Prior Record Variable #7. That variable assesses points for "subsequent or concurrent" felony convictions. Courts have been known to confuse that variable with the criteria relating to the Defendant's prior conviction history - and to assess additional, unjustified points.

Those additional points can translate into additional years in prison for the the Criminal Defendant. And that is yet another reason why the Criminal Defendant must ensure that he has an adept, alert and knowledgeable Defense Lawyer at his side, at every stage of the process.

Commissioner: Closing jail post means inmates 'should be cheering plan', Lansing State Journal, February 6, 2010