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News / Northwest

Court: Man shouldn’t have gotten harsher penalty

The Columbian
Published: June 19, 2013, 5:00pm

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court says a man should not have gotten a harsher penalty for a crime because a judge had investigated his previous offenses.

The 8-1 decision came Thursday in the case of Matthew Descamps, a Washington man convicted of possessing a firearm in 2005. He could have been sentenced to a decade in prison. But since he had been convicted of multiple crimes, he fell under the Armed Career Criminal Act. That requires a sentence of at least fifteen years if the defendant has three prior convictions for violent felonies.

Descamps argued that his 1978 conviction for burglary wasn’t violent and didn’t count. The federal judge decided to investigate the record himself and decided that it did count. Deschamps appealed, and the Supreme Court reversed the decision.

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