Not Guilty but Punished Anyway
Sentencing defendants based on acquitted conduct violates basic notions of justice.

When Willonte Yates, Malik Perry, Dayonta McClinton, and three other young men arrived at a CVS on College Avenue in Indianapolis on a Tuesday night in October 2015, they were there to rob the pharmacy at gunpoint. It did not go as planned.
McClinton helped guard customers. Yates, who dubbed himself the "mastermind" of a string of similar robberies, led the charge with Perry. But their target, the safe, was equipped with a timed lock, meaning they would not be able to access the drugs inside for several minutes. Each passing moment meant the police could be drawing closer. So the group made off with a small bottle of hydrocodone—a sacrificial offering set aside by the pharmacy for situations like this one—along with kidney medication and cough syrup containing codeine.
A getaway driver brought the group to a residential area. Perry, dismayed at how little they had to show for their efforts, allegedly declined to share the paltry proceeds. He exited the car.
Perry would not get very far. Someone followed him and shot him in the back of the head at close range. It is still unclear who that was.
The government zeroed in on McClinton, who was 17 at the time but was tried as an adult. At his trial in September 2019, prosecution witnesses testified that he and Perry were "like brothers…real close." The witnesses said McClinton was Perry's "best friend." The same could not be said for Yates, the robbery ringleader: His girlfriend was "two-timing" him with Perry, according to testimony from Clevon Williams, who had participated in other robberies with Yates. But Yates, who was cooperating with prosecutors, had implicated McClinton. So had Williams, after spending a year housed in the same detention facility as Yates.
A jury didn't believe them. It convicted McClinton for his role in the armed robbery but found him not guilty of killing Perry.
Then a judge sentenced McClinton for the murder anyway.
"The driving force in this sentence is not what he's been convicted of, actually," U.S. District Judge Tanya Walton Pratt said during McClinton's sentencing at the federal courthouse in Indianapolis. The main factor in McClinton's punishment, she said, was Perry's murder, even though a jury had explicitly considered and rejected the charge that McClinton had caused Perry's death. Based on his convictions alone, federal sentencing guidelines would recommend that Pratt give McClinton a prison sentence of somewhere from 57 to 71 months, or about five to six years. Instead she sentenced him to 19 years.
That result likely offends most people's understanding of how the U.S. criminal justice system is supposed to operate. When a defendant hears "not guilty," he can expect to avoid punishment for that offense, or so we're told. But the reality is that criminal defendants can be sentenced based on "acquitted conduct," meaning charges that a jury rejected.
Although the U.S. Supreme Court approved acquitted-conduct sentencing in 1997, it has flown almost entirely under the public's radar. But in April 2024, amid pressure from various lawyers, judges, and advocates, the U.S. Sentencing Commission, the judicial-branch agency that writes the federal sentencing guidelines, unanimously voted to limit the practice. It remains to be seen how much effect that decision will have.
A cohort of left-leaning legal scholars, constitutional conservatives, and libertarian think-tankers is watching. In a time when political tribalism defines many aspects of American life, that transpartisan alliance has at least one thing in common: a desire to eliminate outcomes like the one Pratt imposed on McClinton, who was partially vindicated at trial but punished as if he had been convicted on all counts.
'Facts That the Jury Necessarily Rejected'
State and federal judges have sentenced defendants based on acquitted conduct for many decades. But the Supreme Court's blessing of that practice can be traced to half a kilogram of crack cocaine that Sacramento police found in a kitchen cabinet and two guns they discovered in a bedroom closet.
Vernon L. Watts admitted the drugs and guns were his. In December 1993, he was convicted of possessing crack with the intent to distribute it. The jury did not agree beyond a reasonable doubt, however, that he had used a firearm in furtherance of that offense. The federal judge who sentenced Watts nevertheless took the gun charge into account when he imposed a prison term of 262 months, or nearly 22 years, which was significantly longer than the sentence he probably would have received for the crack offense alone.
Watts appealed that sentence—and won. "A district court sentencing a criminal defendant for the offense of conviction cannot reconsider facts that the jury necessarily rejected by its acquittal of the defendant on another count," said the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. The court ordered that Watts be resentenced.
About five months later, the same court heard a similar appeal. A federal jury in Honolulu had convicted Cheryl Ann Putra of selling an ounce of cocaine but acquitted her of another drug sale, which the government alleged had taken place the next day. Again, the judge sentenced her as if she had been found guilty of everything. Again, the 9th Circuit reversed.
Both cases attracted the Supreme Court's attention. On January 6, 1997, without hearing oral arguments, the Court published its 7–2 decision in United States v. Watts, reversing the 9th Circuit's rulings and officially greenlighting what some judges had long been doing. When sentencing defendants, the majority said, the government need not be deterred by an acquittal if the defendant received a split verdict—i.e., if he was convicted of at least one charge.
"The Court of Appeals failed to appreciate the significance of the different standards of proof that govern at trial and sentencing," the majority said in an unsigned opinion. At trial, the jury is instructed to consider whether a given charge has been proven "beyond a reasonable doubt." But at sentencing, the justices said, a judge can apply the much less demanding "preponderance of the evidence" standard. In other words, judges can override acquittals if they think it more likely than not that the defendants are guilty.
The Court's decision was based on "what an acquittal [actually] means,"says Bill Otis, a former federal prosecutor who supports mandatory minimum sentencing laws and other tough-on-crime policies. "An acquittal doesn't mean the jury has concluded the defendant didn't do it….What it means is only that the jury has failed to find unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed every level of the offense." In Otis' view, which seven justices endorsed in Watts, acquittals are not binding, meaning judges have discretion to disregard them based on a lower standard of proof.
Justices John Paul Stevens and Anthony Kennedy wrote separate dissents in Watts. Kennedy's opinion was concise and technical, emphasizing that the case should have received a full briefing. But Stevens took special umbrage at Putra's plight, calling the decision "repugnant" to longstanding constitutional jurisprudence.
The right to a trial by jury is enshrined in both the Sixth Amendment and Article III of the U.S. Constitution. Critics of acquitted-conduct sentencing say the practice is irreconcilable with that constitutional guarantee and with the Fifth Amendment's assurance of due process, because it permits the government to renege on those promises if it doesn't like the result of a trial. "Our Founders fought a revolution, and we enshrined in our Constitution this commitment to jury trial rights that was very much based in the idea that the people, in the form of the jury, serve as a check on the government," says sentencing expert Douglas Berman, a professor at the Ohio State University's Moritz College of Law.
It is hard to say exactly how many people are sentenced each year based on acquitted conduct. In FY 2021, according to data from the U.S. Sentencing Commission, 157 federal defendants received a split verdict, meaning they were acquitted of at least one charge and thus were vulnerable to acquitted-conduct sentencing.
The main reason the number is so small is that nearly all federal convictions—about 97 percent in FY 2023—are based on guilty pleas rather than trials. That situation is largely due to the fact that prosecutors can coerce guilty pleas by threatening to file additional charges against defendants who insist on a trial, which can dramatically increase the penalties they face. Acquitted-conduct sentencing raises the pressure to plead guilty. A defendant weighing a plea offer knows he will go free if a jury acquits him of all charges. But if he is acquitted of most charges and found guilty of just one, he could be sentenced as if the jury convicted him of everything.
"What makes acquitted-conduct [sentencing] so pernicious," Berman says, "is that a competent defense attorney has to sit down with his client and say, 'OK. Are you guilty of any of these 10 things you were charged with? We could go to trial, and we could prevail and get you acquitted on all the other nine. But if you get convicted on this one…you're not only going to be sentenced on that. You're going to get triple-hammered.'"
Why triple? On average, according to the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, trial sentences in federal court are "roughly three times higher than plea sentences for the same crime."
Despite its implications, the Supreme Court's decision in Watts attracted little attention at the time. But acquitted-conduct cases began piling up in federal courts.
In April 2002, Roger Clayton White waited in a car outside Security Bank and Trust Company in Maysville, Kentucky, while his brother and his brother's girlfriend robbed the bank. During his 2003 trial, White, who did not have a criminal record, testified that he had been forced to drive the getaway car. The jurors didn't buy it. They convicted him of armed robbery and possessing a rifle with an obliterated serial number. But the jury found him not guilty of four other charges, including for conduct related to a gun that was fired inside the bank while he was in the car.
Based solely on the conduct for which White was convicted, the federal guidelines recommended a sentence of 51 to 63 months—about four to five years. But U.S. District Judge David Bunning took into account the acquitted conduct and sentenced White to 264 months, or 22 years. In 2008, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ruled that the sentence did not violate White's Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury because it was less than the 25-year statutory maximum for armed robbery.
Five years after the Kentucky bank robbery, a federal jury in Washington, D.C., convicted three men of selling small amounts of crack cocaine. Under the guidelines, the defendants —Joseph Jones, Desmond Thurston, and Antwuan Ball—faced about two to six years in prison. Instead, Jones got 15 years, Thurston got just over 16, and Ball got almost 19. U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts settled on those sentences after concluding that the defendants had participated in a much broader conspiracy asalleged members of the Congress Park Crew, a street gangaccused of selling drugs in Southeast D.C. But the jury had rejected that very allegation.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit nevertheless upheld the sentences. "Although we understand why appellants find sentencing based on acquitted conduct unfair," it said in June 2014, "binding precedent of this court establishes that the practice does not violate the Sixth Amendment when the conduct is established by a preponderance of the evidence and the sentence does not exceed the statutory maximum for the crime."
That October, the Supreme Court declined to consider the case. But by that point, at least three justices were troubled by Watts and thought the Court should have taken the opportunity to revisit its approval of acquitted-conduct sentencing. "This has gone on long enough," Justice Antonin Scalia wrote. "We should grant certiorari to put an end to the unbroken string of cases disregarding the Sixth Amendment—or to eliminate the Sixth Amendment difficulty by acknowledging that all sentences below the statutory maximum are substantively reasonable." Scalia's dissent was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Clarence Thomas, forming an unlikely trio. They were one vote short of the number required to take up the case.
The defendants were not the only ones dismayed by the sentences that Jones, Thurston, and Ball had received. The year after the trial, one of the jurors in the case had written a letter to Judge Roberts, who had sentenced the men, expressing his disbelief. "Can this be true?" he asked. "Through every hour-long tape of a single drug sale, hundreds of pages of transcripts, ballistics evidence, and photos, we delivered to you our verdicts. What does it say to our contribution as jurors when we see our verdicts, in my personal view, not given their proper weight?" He added: "It appears to me that these defendants are being sentenced not on the charges for which they have been found guilty, but on the charges for which the District Attorney's office would have liked them to have been found guilty."
'Not Guilty Means Not Guilty'
In June 2023, the Supreme Court declined to hear Dayonta McClinton's argument that he had been unconstitutionally punished for murder after a jury acquitted him of that crime. But that did not mean the Court was ignoring the issue.
"The Court's denial of certiorari today should not be misinterpreted," wrote Justice Sonia Sotomayor. "The Sentencing Commission, which is responsible for the Sentencing Guidelines, has announced that it will resolve questions around acquitted-conduct sentencing in the coming year. If the Commission does not act expeditiously or chooses not to act, however, this Court may need to take up the constitutional issues presented." In a separate statement, Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett agreed that "it is appropriate for this Court to wait for the Sentencing Commission's determination before the Court decides whether to grant certiorari in a case involving the use of acquitted conduct."
Six months later, the commission unveiled several proposed amendments aimed at curtailing the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing. In April 2024, the commission's seven members—four Democrats and three Republicans—unanimously approved an amendment that says "relevant conduct" at sentencing "does not include conduct for which the defendant was criminally charged and acquitted in federal court, unless such conduct also establishes, in whole or in part, the instant offense of conviction."
A note to that amendment explains: "There may be cases in which certain conduct underlies both an acquitted charge and the instant offense of conviction. In those cases, the court is in the best position to determine whether such overlapping conduct establishes, in whole or in part, the instant offense of conviction and therefore qualifies as relevant conduct."
U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves, the commission's chair, explained the rationale for the amendment: "Not guilty means not guilty. By enshrining this basic fact within the federal sentencing guidelines, the Commission is taking an important step to protect the credibility of our courts and criminal justice system."
The amendment took effect on November 1. But it is hard to predict its impact on future cases for two reasons. First, the caveat about "overlapping conduct" seems to leave some wiggle room. Second, the sentencing guidelines are advisory, not binding. So while the amendment may send a stern message, judges are not obligated to heed it.
Whether the commission has the legal authority to impose any such restriction at all is a matter of debate. Skeptics cite a federal law that says "no limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence." It's not clear whether the defendant's "conduct" includes behavior underlying charges that a jury rejected.
"I think this has to be the Supreme Court," says Easha Anand, a professor at Stanford Law School and a former attorney at the MacArthur Justice Center, where she represented several people who were sentenced based on acquitted conduct. "The sentencing commission is making a policy determination about how it's appropriate for courts to impose a sentence to ensure uniformity. Now, that's an incredibly important policy determination, but that's [still] a policy determination. It's not a determination about what is constitutional and what isn't….It's the Supreme Court that should be the arbiter of the Fifth and Sixth amendments."
Even that policy determination, to the extent that it influences judges, is limited to federal courts. By contrast, a Supreme Court decision that deemed acquitted-conduct sentencing unconstitutional would constrain state as well as federal courts. Although the supreme courts of Hawaii, Michigan, New Hampshire, and New Jersey have deemed the practice inconsistent with state constitutional guarantees, it is still allowed in most states.
In September 2023, Sens. Richard J. Durbin (D–Ill.) and Chuck Grassley (R–Iowa) introduced a bill that would have prohibited acquitted-conduct sentencing in federal courts. It attracted support from several high-profile Democrats, including Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, and Jon Ossoff of Georgia. The co-sponsors also included two Republicans: Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming. Although that bipartisanship might seem encouraging, the legislation failed to gain traction, as did similar proposals in prior Congresses.
If neither Congress nor the Supreme Court intervenes, the sentencing commission's amendment will remain the best hope for critics of acquitted-conduct sentencing. But in addition to the question of whether judges will listen, it remains unclear whether the commission will decide that the amendment should apply retroactively, which would allow resentencing of previously convicted prisoners. Retroactivity could be a lifeline for many defendants—including McClinton, who has now been behind bars longer than the maximum the guidelines recommended based on his convictions.
Jessie Ailsworth was released from federal custody in 2019, but he is still paying close attention to this debate. "I stood with my lawyer and heard 'not guilty' over and over," he told the commission at a March 2024 hearing. His 1996 trial on drug conspiracy charges ended with 28 acquittals and seven convictions: three counts of possessing crack with the intent to sell it, three counts of food stamp fraud, and one count of using a communication facility to distribute drugs. But even though the jury found him not guilty of the most serious charges, the judge relied on those charges in sentencing him to 30 years in prison.
"I learned responsibility, which took some time," Ailsworth explained. "But the hardest lesson I've learned is the lesson I learned at sentencing….Not guilty verdicts are meaningless at sentencing if you have even one guilty verdict. In a system based on justice and fairness, where is the fairness in that?"
It's a question many similarly situated defendants, whose stories often go unnoticed, likely have found themselves asking. It is also a question that jurors, whose mandatory service purportedly serves as a check on the government, may continue to ask themselves.
"Not guilty means not guilty," Judge Reeves said as he unveiled the amendment aimed at curtailing acquitted-conduct sentencing. Time will tell if the government makes good on that promise.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Not Guilty but Punished Anyway."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The effort to eradicate drugs has ushered in a "by any means" mentality that has resulted in the evisceration of the legal rights of Americans. The principle of unalienable rights disappeared in the early 20th Century and, since that time, Progressives and Conservatives have routinely criminalized individual consensual behavior. Those types of laws are entirely incompatible with the Constitution and have only created revenue streams for criminals and a complete breakdown of the American legal system. The depth of failure to uphold our Constitution and our Founding principles is beyond measure because there have no visible benefits from this at all.
In an article about armed robbery and a resulting murder (among non- or anti-prohibitionists), bank robbery, and weapons possession, your take is breathtakingly anti-informative and stupid.
"COMSTOCK CONFISCATED MUH DILDOEZ!" would've been more useful from you.
Welcome to the US Trump Zionist Jew world order.
There is no justice. The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
This is what Jews and Trump think about truth.
Ask the Palestinians in the Israeli holocaust in Gaza. Ask the United Nations about the genocide convention.
What kind of lying genocidal wastes of skin, sign, ratify and renege when caught in the act?
You tell me Kol Nidre boy.
“All vows, obligations, oaths, and anathemas [curses]which we may vow, or swear, or pledge, or whereby we may be bound, from this Day of Atonement until the next we do repent. May they be deemed absolved, forgiven, annulled, and void, and made of no effect: they shall not bind us nor have any power over us. The vows shall not be reckoned vows; the obligations shall not be obligations; nor the oaths be oaths.”
You can't fool me. That reference to Trump is just to disguise the Jews reference.
Nazi scum refuted.
And retarded.
RM;DR
Refuted.
You need something to keep you busy Misek, do they make a Herman Goering real doll?
Stuff your Nazi propaganda up your ass, shit-bag.
Was there no forensic evidence or investigation into the murder beyond hearsay. It seems to me like there should be way more relevant details here. I hope they all are in jail for many years for their robbery(ies). I'm not particularly bothered by everyone involved catching murder charges for a death in the comission of a crime. Binion's narrative has significant gaps and I have zero faith that he is accurately portraying anything and thus don't care about whatever issue he is advocating for.
Forget the specifics of the case. Should someone get a sentence enhancement for acquitted conduct? IOW a judge can say, well, we're not sure you did it, but to me it seems likely you did it, so I'm going to sentence you as if you did.
There are I think two logical components here that pull in different directions. First, if someone is say 75% likely to have committed this crime as part of the overall criminal endeavour, then they should be acquitted but you can't say you're sure of innocence, so why should they escape enhancement altogether? But, counter to that, if you're only 75% sure, you shouldn't be sentenced as though the judge/jury were 99.5% sure.
You can take the view that if you were involved in the first place, then that's the risk you take, but that strikes me as punishing for criminality, not for the crime, and I'm not sure that's a good idea.
That is the main point, and all the rest is fluff to fill out some word count. Unfortunately, Billy Binion's reputation for leaving out anything counter to his narrative precedes him. Fortunately, the main issue seems clear even if the counter narrative would doom part of the fluff.
Sarc say the cops wouldn’t arrest you if you weren’t guilty.
And he hates cops too.
He hates cops until they murder someone he doesn’t like.
But Junior Judges are the last bastion of Democracy!
As for the murder, since Perry did not shoot himself then at least one of the others present did it. If evidence (or confession) does not indicate any one individual, divide the punishment among the group and put them all in prison.
But logically and objectively justified reactionary opposition spoils my Prisoner's Dillema (im)moral framework!
It also spoils the classic "identical twin" defense.
*But if you get convicted on this one…you're not only going to be sentenced on that. You're going to get triple-hammered. Why triple? On average, according to the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, trial sentences in federal court are "roughly three times higher than plea sentences for the same crime."*
You're conflating two separate things here, Billy. I suppose acquitted-conduct sentencing represents some small percentage of the "triple hammering," or whatever the actual increase is. But mostly srticter sentences are the price you pay for dragging your guilty ass into court, which is a finite resource funded by the taxpayers' dime.
If you know you're guilty and settle for a plea DEAL, the prosecution (who also knows you're guilty) offers you a reduced sentence to not waste everyone's time and money and to mitigate the chances of a sympathetic jury. That's how deals work. Something for you, something for me.
What about threats of contempt for a court the SCOTUS said wasn't allowed?
Those are totally fine under the ‘But Trump!’ precedent.
Perry's death occurred during the commission of a felony. That means McClinton is guilty of murder whether or not he pulled the trigger.
My favorite part is legal instantiation of Schrödinger's Feminist where "She's a lying, two-timing skank." can't be admitted as evidence as to whether or not a woman is lying about her rape or an abortion or sexual harassment or whatever but "She's a lying, two-timing skank." is, apparently not pure hearsay (considering one of the love triangle is a corpse), and is instead credible evidence that one man shot another out of malice... according to the only other person who could've committed the crime.
He would be guilty of felony murder, which is slightly different. However, that would still require a jury to convict him of that charge.
Seems to me this is yet another example of the stunning arrogance of district court judges and the consolidation of their illegitimate power by the appellate and supreme courts. The plain language and intent of the constitution is no impediment. You may have no sympathy for these criminal defendants but we are watching the consequences of the courts self declared authority play out on a grander scale right now. A judge who sentenced misdemeanor defendants to federal prison now finds the president in contempt for violating a vacated order. The court is facing a once in a century challenge to it's legitimacy thanks to the judicial arrogance it spent a century creating and they know it. Reason decided long ago, Judges good when they overstep their authority and go after Trump. Judges bad when they overstep their authority and go after some robber somewhere. They're the same fucking judges and they're due for a good hard slap down.
Yes. The absurdity of claiming sentencing is not part of the trial and does not require proof beyond a reasonable doubt is what happens when lawyers care more about quibbling over ritual than justice or even common sense.
Although to my surprise, when I searched the text of the constitution for "reasonable doubt", I did not find it. Hmmmm. Must be from common law? Which still leaves the question of how any sane judge could think it doesn't also apply to sentencing.
I'd like to know the circumstances of the first case that a judge sentenced for acquitted conduct. Where did this come from?
United States v. Watts, referenced in the article.
YOu defend bastards but attack judge and jury. You don't know it but folks are laughing at you.
Inventions of the supreme court:
Qualified immunity
Asset forfeiture without even being charged, let alone convicted
Acquitted-conduct sentencing
'Historical uses' considerations in infringing the second amendment
The only injustice here is that every one of them wasn't put in front of a firing squad.