Sentencing Commission Proposes Restricting Judges' Use of Acquitted Conduct
It may sound bizarre, but yes, you can be punished at sentencing for an offense you were acquitted of by a jury.

The U.S. Sentencing Commission released proposed amendments to federal sentencing guidelines last week that would, among other things, limit judges' ability to enhance defendants' sentences based on conduct they were acquitted of by a jury.
It may sound bizarre and antithetical to what everyone is taught about the U.S. justice system, but defendants can be punished for crimes even when a jury finds them not guilty of the charges. At the sentencing phase of a trial, federal judges can enhance defendants' sentences for conduct they were acquitted of if the judge decides it's more likely than not—a lower standard of evidence than "beyond a reasonable doubt"—that the defendant committed those offenses. What this does in practice is raise defendants' scores under the federal sentencing guidelines, leading to significantly longer prison sentences.
For example, Reason covered the case of Dickie Lynn, a former Florida Keys drug smuggler who was convicted and sentenced to seven life sentences, thanks to the use of acquitted conduct by the judge and a stiff recommendation from federal prosecutors. Lynn was the only defendant out of the 21 charged in the sprawling drug conspiracy who was sentenced to life in prison. The judge added points to Lynn's score under the federal sentencing guidelines for being the leader of the drug enterprise, which he was acquitted of, and possessing a firearm, which he was also never convicted of.
The Sentencing Commission's proposal would amend the federal sentencing guidelines to limit judges from considering acquitted conduct at sentencing unless the conduct was either admitted by the defendant during a guilty plea or found beyond a reasonable doubt. The sentencing guidelines are not binding, but federal judges are required to at least consider them and explain their reasoning if they deviate from them.
The issue has raised outrage among Congress, criminal justice advocacy groups, and even the federal judiciary. Critics argue that such sentences violate defendants' Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights.
For the past several years, bipartisan bills have been introduced in Congress to ban the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing in federal trials, but none have passed.
"A bedrock principle of our criminal justice system is that defendants are innocent until proven guilty," Sen. Chuck Grassley (R–Iowa), who co-sponsored the legislation, said in 2021. "The use of acquitted conduct in sentencing punishes people for what they haven't been convicted of. That's not acceptable and it's not American."
A petition is also currently pending before the Supreme Court in another case involving acquitted conduct, Dayonta McClinton v. United States. Reason's Billy Binion reported:
In 2015, when he was 17, Dayonta McClinton and five accomplices robbed a CVS pharmacy in Indiana at gunpoint. Federal prosecutors also alleged that McClinton shot and killed one of his accomplices, Malik Perry, during a dispute after the robbery. A jury convicted McClinton of robbing the pharmacy and brandishing a gun during that crime but acquitted him of robbing and killing Perry.
U.S. District Judge Tanya Walton Pratt nevertheless granted the government's request that McClinton serve time for causing Perry's death. Taking into account his prior criminal record, the sentencing guidelines recommended a prison term of 57 to 71 months for the convictions. McClinton instead received a sentence of 228 months—19 years. Pratt said Perry's murder was "the driving force in this sentence."
Binion notes that 17 retired federal judges, appointed by both Republicans and Democrats, also filed a brief supporting McClinton's appeal. The case has also attracted amicus briefs from Americans for Prosperity Foundation, the Due Process Institute, and the Cato Institute. The Cato Institute's brief argues that "permitting sentencing based on acquitted conduct not only denies criminal defendants their Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial, but also denies the community their proper role in overseeing the administration of criminal justice."
Although the Court's conservative majority is frequently hostile to expanding the rights of criminal defendants, McClinton's case may cut across the Court's usual divisions. In 2015, future Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, then a judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, wrote that the use of acquitted conduct "seems a dubious infringement of the rights to due process and to a jury trial."
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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The proposed amendment does not prohibit use of acquitted conduct at sentencing. It prohibits use of acquitted conduct to determine the sentencing guidelines range. It permits use of acquitted conduct to determine the final sentence, after giving due consideration to the guidelines range.
It also permits use of acquitted conduct when the jury verdict is inconsistent. If I am convicted of RICO with a predicate offense of Being Evil, but acquitted on the charge of Being Evil, the judge may still consider me to be evil.
Quoting the document: "Acquitted conduct, however, generally shall not be considered relevant conduct for purposes of determining the guideline range. See subsection (c) of §1B1.3 (Relevant Conduct). Acquitted conduct may be considered in determining the sentence to impose within the guideline range, or whether a departure from the guidelines is warranted. See §1B1.4 (Information to be Used in Imposing a Sentence (Selecting a Point Within the Guideline Range or Departing from the Guidelines))."
OK I'm not a lawyer but this sounds like not much of a change and isn't binding in any case. How does it compare to Grassley's bill or the pending SCOTUS case?
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If I am convicted of RICO with a predicate offense of Being Evil, but acquitted on the charge of Being Evil,
so, like the Clinton Global Initiative then?
Let's face it. Juries make mistakes. Sometimes innocent people are found guilty. Sometimes, guilty people are found not guilty. The latter can cause public outrage. Think O.J. Simpson and Casey Anthony.
It seems to me that if a judge legitimately thinks he would have found a defendant guilty during a bench trial, meaning the jury was swayed by theatrics or committed jury nullification, then he should be able to tack on some time.
You would still need a guilty verdict on something to sentence them to any time.
A judge may set aside a guilty verdict if they believe the burden of proof was not met but not the opposite.
Who gave the judge the right to determine guilt in a JURY trial ? Isn't that the jury's job ? If a judge can do that, then why have a farce of a jury trial in the first place ?