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   January 2005
   Volume 114, Issue Number 4
Overlooking a Sixth Amendment Framework PDF Print E-mail
114 Yale L.J. 905 (2005)

As the Supreme Court further plunges the world of criminal sentencing into turmoil, state courts in particular are scrutinizing their own statutory sentencing schemes and judicial practices. Ever since the Court's holding in Apprendi v. New Jersey (recently reformulated and expanded in Blakely v. Washington ), states have been called upon to ensure that trial judges do not usurp the jury's exclusive fact-finding power and thereby violate criminal defendants' Sixth Amendment guaranty of a trial by jury. While the legal framework that protected this Sixth Amendment right has been developing for decades, Apprendi formulated a bright-line rule that prohibits a judge from finding by herself during sentencing, instead of submitting to a jury for determination at trial, any fact that increases a defendant's sentence beyond the prescribed statutory maximum absent that fact. Under Apprendi, scores of factual determinations were taken from judges and placed back in the hands of juries.
 
But while courts have continued to occupy themselves with defining the scope of Apprendi and its progeny, they have remained blind to a more fundamental, and increasingly prevalent, problem. By mechanically examining the effect a factor has on the length of a defendant's sentence in determining whether it must be submitted to a jury, courts have permitted the Apprendi bright-line rule to eviscerate the preexisting substantive method for making that determination.
 
Long before Apprendi, the Court applied a less mechanical, more substantive analysis to determine whether a fact must be submitted to a jury. In Mullaney v. Wilbur, the Court analyzed how the presence or absence of a particular fact related to the underlying crime in order to determine whether or not that fact was indeed an essential element of that crime. Apprendi did not replace or eliminate the need for this Mullaney inquiry; it merely short-circuited the inquiry in cases where the finding at issue increased the sentence beyond the otherwise available maximum sentence.
 
The current widespread misapplication of the Apprendi doctrine threatens the very Sixth Amendment and due process protections Apprendi was designed to safeguard. A recent Connecticut Appellate Court case, State v. Kirk R., illustrates this problem. The Kirk R. court, relying primarily on the Apprendi doctrine, failed to conduct a Mullaney analysis and thereby permitted the finding of a particular element of a crime to be removed from the jury's purview, allowing the trial judge to make his own unilateral determination at sentencing.
 
Part I presents the relevant doctrinal background, describing the continuum between "element of a crime" and "sentencing factor" and demonstrating how Apprendi and its progeny do not--and were never intended to--displace the preexisting and entirely discrete element-of-a-crime analysis. Part II discusses the facts and holding of Kirk R. Part III argues that the Connecticut court improperly relied on the Apprendi doctrine as relevant to, and even dispositive of, this issue; in truth, all Apprendi could have done was remove a special protection from the Kirk R. court's arsenal, forcing the court to then apply Mullaney's more basic element-of-a-crime test. Part IV closes by addressing the impact of Blakely on this Comment's thesis.
 

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