(Slip Opinion)
OCTOBER TERM, 2003
1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co ., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF WASHINGTON
No. 02-1632. Argued March 23, 2004�Decided June 24, 2004
Petitioner pleaded guilty to kidnaping his estranged wife. The facts
admitted in his plea, standing alone, supported a maximum sentence
of 53 months, but the judge imposed a 90-month sentence after finding
that petitioner had acted with deliberate cruelty, a statutorily
enumerated ground for departing from the standard range. The
Washington Court of Appeals affirmed, rejecting petitioner's argument
that the sentencing procedure deprived him of his federal constitutional
right to have a jury determine beyond a reasonable doubt
all facts legally essential to his sentence.
Held: Because the facts supporting petitioner's exceptional sentence
were neither admitted by petitioner nor found by a jury, the sentence
violated his Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury. Pp. 5-18.
(a) This case requires the Court to apply the rule of Apprendi v.
New Jersey, 530 U. S. 466, 490, that, "[o]ther than the fact of a prior
conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the
prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and
proved beyond a reasonable doubt." The relevant statutory maximum
for Apprendi purposes is the maximum a judge may impose
based solely on the facts reflected in the jury verdict or admitted by
the defendant. Here, the judge could not have imposed the 90-month
sentence based solely on the facts admitted in the guilty plea, because
Washington law requires an exceptional sentence to be based
on factors other than those used in computing the standard-range
sentence. Petitioner's sentence is not analogous to those upheld in
McMillan v. Pennsylvania, 477 U. S. 79, and Williams v. New York, 337
U. S. 241, which were not greater than what state law authorized based
on the verdict alone. Regardless of whether the judge's authority to impose
the enhanced sentence depends on a judge's finding a specified
fact, one of several specified facts, or any aggravating fact, it remains
2
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Syllabus
the case that the jury's verdict alone does not authorize the sentence.
Pp. 5-9.
(b) This Court's commitment to Apprendi in this context reflects
not just respect for longstanding precedent, but the need to give intelligible
content to the fundamental constitutional right of jury trial.
Pp. 9-12.
(c) This case is not about the constitutionality of determinate sentencing,
but only about how it can be implemented in a way that respects
the Sixth Amendment. The Framers' paradigm for criminal
justice is the common-law ideal of limited state power accomplished
by strict division of authority between judge and jury. That can be
preserved without abandoning determinate sentencing and at no sacrifice
of fairness to the defendant. Pp. 12-17.
111 Wash. App. 851, 47 P. 3d 149, reversed and remanded.
SCALIA , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which STEVENS ,
SOUTER , T HOMAS , and GINS BURG , JJ., joined. O'CONN OR , J., filed a dissenting
opinion, in which B REYER , J., joined, and in which R EHNQUIST ,
C. J., and KENNEDY , J., joined except as to Part IV-B. KENNEDY , J.,
filed a dissenting opinion, in which BREYER , J., joined. BREYER , J., filed
a dissenting opinion, in which O'C
ONNOR
, J., joined.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington,
D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 02-1632
_________________
RALPH HOWARD BLAKELY, JR ., PETITIONER v.
WASHINGTON
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
WASHINGTON
, DIVISION 3
[June 24, 2004]
JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner Ralph Howard Blakely, Jr., pleaded guilty to
the kidnaping of his estranged wife. The facts admitted in
his plea, standing alone, supported a maximum sentence
of 53 months. Pursuant to state law, the court imposed an
"exceptional" sentence of 90 months after making a judicial
determination that he had acted with "deliberate
cruelty." App. 40, 49. We consider whether this violated
petitioner's Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury.
I
Petitioner married his wife Yolanda in 1973. He was
evidently a difficult man to live with, having been diagnosed
at various times with psychological and personality
disorders including paranoid schizophrenia. His wife
ultimately filed for divorce. In 1998, he abducted her from
their orchard home in Grant County, Washington, binding
her with duct tape and forcing her at knifepoint into a
wooden box in the bed of his pickup truck. In the process,
he implored her to dismiss the divorce suit and related
trust proceedings.
When the couple's 13-year-old son Ralphy returned
2
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
home from school, petitioner ordered him to follow in
another car, threatening to harm Yolanda with a shotgun
if he did not do so. Ralphy escaped and sought help when
they stopped at a gas station, but petitioner continued on
with Yolanda to a friend's house in Montana. He was
finally arrested after the friend called the police.
The State charged petitioner with first-degree kidnaping,
Wash. Rev. Code Ann. �9A.40.020(1) (2000).1 Upon
reaching a plea agreement, however, it reduced the charge
to second-degree kidnaping involving domestic violence
and use of a firearm, see ��9A.40.030(1), 10.99.020(3)(p),
9.94A.125.2 Petitioner entered a guilty plea admitting the
elements of second-degree kidnaping and the domestic-
violence and firearm allegations, but no other relevant
facts.
The case then proceeded to sentencing. In Washington,
second-degree kidnaping is a class B felony.
�9A.40.030(3). State law provides that "[n]o person convicted
of a [class B] felony shall be punished by confinement
. . . exceeding . . . a term of ten years."
�9A.20.021(1)(b) . Other provisions of state law, however,
further limit the range of sentences a judge may impose.
Washington's Sentencing Reform Act specifies, for petitioner's
offense of second-degree kidnaping with a firearm,
a "standard range" of 49 to 53 months. See �9.94A.320
(seriousness level V for second-degree kidnaping); App. 27
(offender score 2 based on �9.94A.360); �9.94A.310(1), box
2-V (standard range of 13-17 months); �9.94A.310(3)(b)
������
1
Parts of Washington's criminal code have been recodified and
amended. We cite throughout the provisions in effect at the time of
sentencing.
2
Petitioner further agreed to an additional charge of second-degree
assault involving domestic violence, Wash. Rev. Code Ann.
��9A.36.021(1)(c), 10.99.020(3)(b) (2000) . The 14-month sentence on
that count ran concurrently and is not relevant here.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
3
Opinion of the Court
(36-month firearm enhancement).3 A judge may impose a
sentence above the standard range if he finds "substantial
and compelling reasons justifying an exceptional sentence."
�9.94A.120(2). The Act lists aggravating factors
that justify such a departure, which it recites to be illustrative
rather than exhaustive. �9.94A.390. Nevertheless,
"[a] reason offered to justify an exceptional sentence can
be considered only if it takes into account factors other
than those which are used in computing the standard
range sentence for the offense." State v. Gore , 143 Wash.
2d 288, 315-316, 21 P. 3d 262, 277 (2001). When a judge
imposes an exceptional sentence, he must set forth findings
of fact and conclusions of law supporting it.
�9.94A.120(3). A reviewing court will reverse the sentence
if it finds that "under a clearly erroneous standard there is
insufficient evidence in the record to support the reasons
for imposing an exceptional sentence." Gore, supra, at
315, 21 P. 3d, at 277 (citing �9.94A.210(4)).
Pursuant to the plea agreement, the State recommended
a sentence within the standard range of 49 to 53 months.
After hearing Yolanda's description of the kidnaping,
however, the judge rejected the State's recommendation
and imposed an exceptional sentence of 90
months�37 months beyond the standard maximum.
He justified the sentence on the ground that petitioner
had acted with "deliberate cruelty," a statutorily enumerated
ground for departure in domestic-violence cases.
�9.94A.390(2)(h) (iii).4
������
3
The domestic-violence stipulation subjected petitioner to such
measures as a "no-contact" order, see �10.99.040, but did not increase
the standard range of his sentence.
4
The judge found other aggravating factors, but the Court of Appeals
questioned their validity under state law and their independent sufficiency
to support the extent of the departure. See 111 Wash. App. 851,
868-870, and n. 3, 47 P. 3d 149, 158-159, and n. 3 (2002). It affirmed
4
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
Faced with an unexpected increase of more than three
years in his sentence, petitioner objected. The judge accordingly
conducted a 3-day bench hearing featuring
testimony from petitioner, Yolanda, Ralphy, a police officer,
and medical experts. After the hearing, he issued 32
findings of fact, concluding:
"The defendant's motivation to commit kidnapping
was complex, contributed to by his mental condition
and personality disorders, the pressures of the divorce
litigation, the impending trust litigation trial and anger
over his troubled interpersonal relationships with
his spouse and children. While he misguidedly intended
to forcefully reunite his family, his attempt to
do so was subservient to his desire to terminate lawsuits
and modify title ownerships to his benefit.
"The defendant's methods were more homogeneous
than his motive. He used stealth and surprise, and
took advantage of the victim's isolation. He immediately
employed physical violence, restrained the victim
with tape, and threatened her with injury and
death to herself and others. He immediately coerced
the victim into providing information by the threatening
application of a knife. He violated a subsisting
restraining order." App. 48-49.
The judge adhered to his initial determination of deliberate
cruelty.
Petitioner appealed, arguing that this sentencing procedure
deprived him of his federal constitutional right to
have a jury determine beyond a reasonable doubt all facts
legally essential to his sentence. The State Court of Appeals
affirmed, 111 Wash. App. 851, 870-871, 47 P. 3d
149, 159 (2002), relying on the Washington Supreme
������
the sentence solely on the finding of domestic violence with deliberate
cruelty. Ibid. We therefore focus only on that factor.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
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Opinion of the Court
Court's rejection of a similar challenge in Gore, supra, at
311-315, 21 P. 3d, at 275-277. The Washington Supreme
Court denied discretionary review. 148 Wash. 2d 1010, 62
P. 3d 889 (2003). We granted certiorari. 540 U. S. 965
(2003).
II
This case requires us to apply the rule we expressed in
Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U. S. 466, 490 (2000): "Other
than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases
the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory
maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond
a reasonable doubt." This rule reflects two longstanding
tenets of common-law criminal jurisprudence: that the
"truth of every accusation" against a defendant "should
afterwards be confirmed by the unanimous suffrage of
twelve of his equals and neighbours," 4 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries on the Laws of England 343 (1769), and
that "an accusation which lacks any particular fact which
the law makes essential to the punishment is . . . no accusation
within the requirements of the common law, and it
is no accusation in reason," 1 J. Bishop, Criminal Procedure
�87, p. 55 (2d ed. 1872).5 These principles have been
������
5
JUSTICE BREYER cites J USTICE O'CONNOR 's Apprendi dissent for the
point that this Bishop quotation means only that indictments must
charge facts that trigger statutory aggravation of a common-law offense.
Post , at 14 (dissenting opinion). Of course, as he notes, JUSTICE
O'CONNOR was referring to an entirely different quotation, from Arch-
bold's treatise. See 530 U. S., at 526 (citing J. Archbold, Pleading and
Evidence in Criminal Cases 51, 188 (15th ed. 1862)). J
US TI CE
BREYER
claims the two are "similar, " post , at 14, but they are as similar as
chalk and cheese. Bishop was not "addressing" the "problem" of stat-
ut es that aggravate common-law offenses. Ibid . Rather, the entire
chapter of his treatise is devoted to the point that "every fact which is
legally essential to the punishment" must be charged in the indictment
and proved to a jury. 1 J. Bishop, Criminal Procedure, ch. 6, pp. 50-56
(2d ed. 1872). As one "example" of this principle (appearing several
6
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
acknowledged by courts and treatises since the earliest
days of graduated sentencing; we compiled the relevant
authorities in Apprendi , see 530 U. S., at 476-483, 489-
490, n. 15; id. , at 501-518 (T
HOMAS
, J., concurring), and
need not repeat them here.6
Apprendi involved a New Jersey hate-crime statute that
authorized a 20-year sentence, despite the usual 10-year
maximum, if the judge found the crime to have been committed
"'with a purpose to intimidate . . . because of race,
color, gender, handicap, religion, sexual orientation or
ethnicity.'" Id. , at 468-469 (quoting N. J. Stat. Ann.
�2C:44-3(e) (West Supp. 1999-2000)). In Ring v. Arizona,
536 U. S. 584, 592-593, and n. 1 (2002), we applied Ap-
prendi to an Arizona law that authorized the death penalty
if the judge found one of ten aggravating factors. In
each case, we concluded that the defendant's constitutional
rights had been violated because the judge had
imposed a sentence greater than the maximum he could
������
pages before the language we quote in text above), he notes a statute
aggravating common-law assault. Id., �82, at 51-52. But nowhere is
there the slightest indication that his general principle was limited to
that example. Even JUSTICE BREYER 's academic supporters do not
make that claim. See Bibas, Judicial Fact-Finding and Sentence Enhancements
in a World of Guilty Pleas, 110 Yale L. J. 1097, 1131-1132
(2001) (conceding that Bishop's treatise supports Apprendi , while
criticizing its "natural-law theorizing").
6
As to JUSTICE O'CONNOR 's criticism of the quantity of historical support
for the Apprendi rule, post , at 10 (dissenting opinion) : It bears
repeating that the issue between us is not whether the Constitution
limits States' authority to reclassify elements as sentencing factors (we
all agree that it does); it is only which line, ours or hers, the Constitution
draws. Criticism of the quantity of evidence favoring our alternative
would have some force if it were accompanied by any evidence
favoring hers. JUSTICE O'CONNOR does not even provide a coherent
alternative meaning for the jury-trial guarantee, unless one considers
"whatever the legislature chooses to leave to the jury, so long as it does
not go too far" coherent. See infra , at 9-12.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
7
Opinion of the Court
have imposed under state law without the challenged
factual finding. Apprendi , supra , at 491-497; Ring , supra ,
at 603-609.
In this case, petitioner was sentenced to more than
three years above the 53-month statutory maximum of the
standard range because he had acted with "deliberate
cruelty." The facts supporting that finding were neither
admitted by petitioner nor found by a jury. The State
nevertheless contends that there was no Apprendi violation
because the relevant "statutory maximum" is not 53
months, but the 10-year maximum for class B felonies in
�9A.20.021(1)(b) . It observes that no exceptional sentence
may exceed that limit. See �9.94A.420. Our precedents
make clear, however, that the "statutory maximum" for
Apprendi purposes is the maximum sentence a judge may
impose solely on the basis of the facts reflected in the jury
verdict or admitted by the defendant . See Ring , supra, at
602 ("'the maximum he would receive if punished accord
-
ing to the facts reflected in the jury verdict alone'" (quoting
Apprendi , supra , at 483)); Harris v. United States, 536
U. S. 545, 563 (2002) (plurality opinion) (same); cf. Ap-
prendi , supra , at 488 (facts admitted by the defendant). In
other words, the relevant "statutory maximum" is not the
maximum sentence a judge may impose after finding
additional facts, but the maximum he may impose without
any additional findings. When a judge inflicts punishment
that the jury's verdict alone does not allow, the jury has
not found all the facts "which the law makes essential to
the punishment," Bishop, supra, �87, at 55, and the judge
exceeds his proper authority.
The judge in this case could not have imposed the exceptional
90-month sentence solely on the basis of the facts
admitted in the guilty plea. Those facts alone were insufficient
because, as the Washington Supreme Court has
explained, "[a] reason offered to justify an exceptional
sentence can be considered only if it takes into account
8
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
factors other than those which are used in computing the
standard range sentence for the offense," Gore, 143 Wash.
2d, at 315-316, 21 P. 3d, at 277, which in this case included
the elements of second-degree kidnaping and the
use of a firearm, see ��9.94A.320, 9.94A.310(3)(b).7 Had
the judge imposed the 90-month sentence solely on the
basis of the plea, he would have been reversed. See
�9.94A.210(4). The "maximum sentence" is no more 10
years here than it was 20 years in Apprendi (because that
is what the judge could have imposed upon finding a hate
crime) or death in Ring (because that is what the judge
could have imposed upon finding an aggravator).
The State defends the sentence by drawing an analogy
to those we upheld in McMillan v. Pennsylvania, 477 U. S.
79 (1986), and Williams v. New York, 337 U. S. 241 (1949).
Neither case is on point. McMillan involved a sentencing
scheme that imposed a statutory minimum if a judge
found a particular fact. 477 U. S., at 81. We specifically
noted that the statute "does not authorize a sentence in
excess of that otherwise allowed for [the underlying] offense."
Id. , at 82; cf. Harris , supra , at 567. Williams
involved an indeterminate-sentencing regime that allowed
a judge (but did not compel him) to rely on facts outside
the trial record in determining whether to sentence a
defendant to death. 337 U. S., at 242-243, and n. 2. The
judge could have "sentenced [the defendant] to death
giving no reason at all." Id. , at 252. Thus, neither case
involved a sentence greater than what state law authorized
on the basis of the verdict alone.
Finally, the State tries to distinguish Apprendi and
Ring by pointing out that the enumerated grounds for
������
7
The State does not contend that the domestic-violence stipulation
alone supports the departure. That the statute lists domestic violence
as grounds for departure only when combined with some other aggravating
factor suggests it could not. See ��9.94A.390(2)(h)(i)-(iii).
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
9
Opinion of the Court
departure in its regime are illustrative rather than exhaustive.
This distinction is immaterial. Whether the
judge's authority to impose an enhanced sentence depends
on finding a specified fact (as in Apprendi ), one of several
specified facts (as in Ring ), or any aggravating fact (as
here), it remains the case that the jury's verdict alone does
not authorize the sentence. The judge acquires that
authority only upon finding some additional fact.8
Because the State's sentencing procedure did not comply
with the Sixth Amendment, petitioner's sentence is
invalid.9
III
Our commitment to Apprendi in this context reflects not
just respect for longstanding precedent, but the need to
give intelligible content to the right of jury trial. That
right is no mere procedural formality, but a fundamental
reservation of power in our constitutional structure. Just
as suffrage ensures the people's ultimate control in the
legislative and executive branches, jury trial is meant to
ensure their control in the judiciary. See Letter XV by the
Federal Farmer (Jan. 18, 1788), reprinted in 2 The Complete
Anti-Federalist 315, 320 (H. Storing ed. 1981) (describing
the jury as "secur[ing] to the people at large, their
������
8
Nor does it matter that the judge must, after finding aggravating
facts, make a judgment that they present a compelling ground for
departure. He cannot make that judgment without finding some facts
to support it beyond the bare elements of the offense. Whether the
judicially determined facts require a sentence enhancement or merely
allow it, the verdict alone does not authorize the sentence.
9
The United States, as amicus curiae, urges us to affirm. It notes
differences between Washington's sentencing regime and the Federal
Sentencing Guidelines but questions whether those differences are
constitutionally significant. See Brief for United States as Amicus
Curiae 25-30. The Federal Guidelines are not before us, and we
express no opinion on them.
10
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
just and rightful controul in the judicial department");
John Adams, Diary Entry (Feb. 12, 1771), reprinted in 2
Works of John Adams 252, 253 (C. Adams ed. 1850)
("[T]he common people, should have as complete a control
. . . in every judgment of a court of judicature" as in the
legislature); Letter from Thomas Jefferson to the Abb�
Arnoux (July 19, 1789), reprinted in 15 Papers of Thomas
Jefferson 282, 283 (J. Boyd ed. 1958) ("Were I called upon
to decide whether the people had best be omitted in the
Legislative or Judiciary department, I would say it is
better to leave them out of the Legislative"); Jones v.
United States, 526 U. S. 227, 244-248 (1999). Apprendi
carries out this design by ensuring that the judge's
authority to sentence derives wholly from the jury's ver
-
dict. Without that restriction, the jury would not exercise
the control that the Framers intended.
Those who would reject Apprendi are resigned to one of
two alternatives. The first is that the jury need only find
whatever facts the legislature chooses to label elements of
the crime, and that those it labels sentencing factors�no
matter how much they may increase the punishment�
may be found by the judge. This would mean, for example,
that a judge could sentence a man for committing murder
even if the jury convicted him only of illegally possessing
the firearm used to commit it�or of making an illegal lane
change while fleeing the death scene. Not even Apprendi 's
critics would advocate this absurd result. Cf. 530 U. S., at
552-553 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting). The jury could not
function as circuitbreaker in the State's machinery of
justice if it were relegated to making a determination that
the defendant at some point did something wrong, a mere
preliminary to a judicial inquisition into the facts of the
crime the State actually seeks to punish.10
������
10
JUSTICE O'CONN OR believes that a "built-in political check" will
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
11
Opinion of the Court
The second alternative is that legislatures may establish
legally essential sentencing factors within limits �limits
crossed when, perhaps, the sentencing factor is a "tail
which wags the dog of the substantive offense." McMillan,
477 U. S., at 88. What this means in operation is that the
law must not go too far �it must not exceed the judicial
estimation of the proper role of the judge.
The subjectivity of this standard is obvious. Petitioner
argued below that second-degree kidnaping with deliberate
cruelty was essentially the same as first-degree kidnaping,
the very charge he had avoided by pleading to a
lesser offense. The court conceded this might be so but
held it irrelevant. See 111 Wash. App., at 869, 47 P. 3d, at
158.11 Petitioner's 90-month sentence exceeded the 53-
month standard maximum by almost 70%; the Washington
Supreme Court in other cases has upheld exceptional
sentences 15 times the standard maximum. See State v.
Oxborrow , 106 Wash. 2d 525, 528, 533, 723 P. 2d 1123,
1125, 1128 (1986) (15-year exceptional sentence; 1-year
standard maximum sentence); State v. Branch , 129 Wash.
2d 635, 650, 919 P. 2d 1228, 1235 (1996) (4-year exceptional
sentence; 3-month standard maximum sentence).
������
prevent lawmakers from manipulating offense elements in this fashion.
Post , at 10. But the many immediate practical advantages of judicial
factfinding, see post , at 5-7, suggest that political forces would, if
anything, pull in the opposite direction. In any case, the Framers'
decision to entrench the jury-trial right in the Constitution shows that
they did not trust government to make political decisions in this area.
11
Another example of conversion from separate crime to sentence
enhancement that JUSTICE O'CONNOR evidently does not consider going
"too far" is the obstruction-of-justice enhancement, see post , at 6-7.
Why perjury during trial should be grounds for a judicial sentence
enhancement on the underlying offense, rather than an entirely separate
offense to be found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt (as it has
been for centuries, see 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of
England 136-138 (1769)), is unclear.
12
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
Did the court go too far in any of these cases? There is no
answer that legal analysis can provide. With too far as
the yardstick, it is always possible to disagree with such
judgments and never to refute them.
Whether the Sixth Amendment incorporates this manipulable
standard rather than Apprendi 's bright-line rule
depends on the plausibility of the claim that the Framers
would have left definition of the scope of jury power up to
judges' intuitive sense of how far is too far . We think that
claim not plausible at all, because the very reason the
Framers put a jury-trial guarantee in the Constitution is
that they were unwilling to trust government to mark out
the role of the jury.
IV
By reversing the judgment below, we are not, as the
State would have it, "find[ing] determinate sentencing
schemes unconstitutional." Brief for Respondent 34. This
case is not about whether determinate sentencing is constitutional,
only about how it can be implemented in a way
that respects the Sixth Amendment. Several policies
prompted Washington's adoption of determinate sentencing,
including proportionality to the gravity of the offense
and parity among defendants. See Wash. Rev. Code Ann.
�9.94A.010 (2000). Nothing we have said impugns those
salutary objectives.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR argues that, because determinate
sentencing schemes involving judicial factfinding entail
less judicial discretion than indeterminate schemes, the
constitutionality of the latter implies the constitutionality
of the former. Post , at 1-10. This argument is flawed on a
number of levels. First, the Sixth Amendment by its
terms is not a limitation on judicial power, but a reservation
of jury power. It limits judicial power only to the
extent that the claimed judicial power infringes on the
province of the jury. Indeterminate sentencing does not do
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
13
Opinion of the Court
so. It increases judicial discretion, to be sure, but not at
the expense of the jury's traditional function of finding the
facts essential to lawful imposition of the penalty. Of
course indeterminate schemes involve judicial factfinding,
in that a judge (like a parole board) may implicitly rule on
those facts he deems important to the exercise of his sentencing
discretion. But the facts do not pertain to whether
the defendant has a legal right to a lesser sentence�and
that makes all the difference insofar as judicial impingement
upon the traditional role of the jury is concerned. In
a system that says the judge may punish burglary with 10
to 40 years, every burglar knows he is risking 40 years in
jail. In a system that punishes burglary with a 10-year
sentence, with another 30 added for use of a gun, the
burglar who enters a home unarmed is entitled to no more
than a 10-year sentence�and by reason of the Sixth
Amendment the facts bearing upon that entitlement must
be found by a jury.
But even assuming that restraint of judicial power
unrelated to the jury's role is a Sixth Amendment objective,
it is far from clear that Apprendi disserves that goal.
Determinate judicial-factfinding schemes entail less judicial
power than indeterminate schemes, but more judicial
power than determinate jury -factfinding schemes.
Whether Apprendi increases judicial power overall depends
on what States with determinate judicial-
factfinding schemes would do, given the choice between
the two alternatives. JUSTICE O'CONNOR simply assumes
that the net effect will favor judges, but she has no empirical
basis for that prediction. Indeed, what evidence we
have points exactly the other way: When the Kansas
Supreme Court found Apprendi infirmities in that State's
determinate-sentencing regime in State v. Gould, 271
Kan. 394, 404-414, 23 P. 3d 801, 809-814 (2001), the
legislature responded not by reestablishing indeterminate
sentencing but by applying Apprendi 's requirements to its
14
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
current regime. See Act of May 29, 2002, ch. 170, 2002
Kan. Sess. Laws pp. 1018-1023 (codified at Kan.
Stat. Ann. �21-4718 (2003 Cum. Supp.)); Brief for Kansas
Appellate Defender Office as Amicus Curiae 3-7. The
result was less, not more, judicial power.
JUSTICE BREYER argues that Apprendi works to the
detriment of criminal defendants who plead guilty by
depriving them of the opportunity to argue sentencing
factors to a judge. Post , at 4-5. But nothing prevents a
defendant from waiving his Apprendi rights. When a
defendant pleads guilty, the State is free to seek judicial
sentence enhancements so long as the defendant either
stipulates to the relevant facts or consents to judicial
factfinding. See Apprendi , 530 U. S., at 488; Duncan v.
Louisiana, 391 U. S. 145, 158 (1968). If appropriate waivers
are procured, States may continue to offer judicial
factfinding as a matter of course to all defendants who
plead guilty. Even a defendant who stands trial may
consent to judicial factfinding as to sentence enhancements,
which may well be in his interest if relevant evidence
would prejudice him at trial. We do not understand
how Apprendi can possibly work to the detriment of those
who are free, if they think its costs outweigh its benefits,
to render it inapplicable.12
������
12
JUSTICE BREYER responds that States are not required to give defendants
the option of waiving jury trial on some elements but not
others. Post , at 8-9. True enough. But why would the States that he
asserts we are coercing into hard-heartedness�that is, States that
want judge-pronounced determinate sentencing to be the norm but we
won't let them�want to prevent a defendant from choosing that regime?
JUSTICE BREYER claims this alternative may prove "too expensive
and unwieldy for States to provide," post , at 9, but there is no
obvious reason why forcing defendants to choose between contesting all
elements of his hypothetical 17-element robbery crime and contesting
none of them is less expensive than also giving them the third option of
pleading guilty to some elements and submitting the rest to judicial
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
15
Opinion of the Court
Nor do we see any merit to JUSTICE BREY ER 's contention
that Apprendi is unfair to criminal defendants because, if
States respond by enacting "17-element robbery crime[s],"
prosecutors will have more elements with which to bargain.
Post , at 4-5, 9 (citing Bibas, Judicial Fact-Finding
and Sentence Enhancements in a World of Guilty Pleas,
110 Yale L. J. 1097 (2001)). Bargaining already exists
with regard to sentencing factors because defendants can
either stipulate or contest the facts that make them appli
-
cable. If there is any difference between bargaining over
sentencing factors and bargaining over elements, the
latter probably favors the defendant. Every new element
that a prosecutor can threaten to charge is also an element
that a defendant can threaten to contest at trial and make
the prosecutor prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Moreover,
given the sprawling scope of most criminal codes, and
the power to affect sentences by making (even nonbinding)
sentencing recommendations, there is already no shortage
of in terrorem tools at prosecutors' disposal. See King &
Klein, Apprendi and Plea Bargaining, 54 Stan. L. Rev.
295, 296 (2001) ("Every prosecutorial bargaining chip
mentioned by Professor Bibas existed pre- Apprendi ex
-
actly as it does post- Apprendi ").
Any evaluation of Apprendi 's "fairness" to criminal
defendants must compare it with the regime it replaced, in
which a defendant, with no warning in either his indictment
or plea, would routinely see his maximum potential
sentence balloon from as little as five years to as much as
life imprisonment, see 21 U. S. C. ��841(b)(1)(A), (D),13
������
factfinding. JUSTICE BREYER 's argument rests entirely on a speculative
prediction about the number of defendants likely to choose the first
(rather than the second) option if denied the third.
13
To be sure, JUSTICE BREYER and the other dissenters would forbid
those increases of sentence that violate the constitutional principle that
tail shall not wag dog. The source of this principle is entirely unclear.
16
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
based not on facts proved to his peers beyond a reasonable
doubt, but on facts extracted after trial from a report
compiled by a probation officer who the judge thinks more
likely got it right than got it wrong. We can conceive of no
measure of fairness that would find more fault in the
utterly speculative bargaining effects JUSTICE BREYER
identifies than in the regime he champions. Suffice it to
say that, if such a measure exists, it is not the one the
Framers left us with.
The implausibility of J USTICE BREYER 's contention that
Apprendi is unfair to criminal defendants is exposed by
the lineup of amici in this case. It is hard to believe that
the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers was
somehow duped into arguing for the wrong side. JUSTICE
BREYER 's only authority asking that defendants be protected
from Apprendi is an article written not by a criminal
defense lawyer but by a law professor and former
prosecutor. See post , at 4-5 (citing Bibas, supra); Association
of American Law Schools Directory of Law Teachers
2003-2004, p. 319.
JUSTICE BREYER also claims that Apprendi will attenuate
the connection between "real criminal conduct and real
punishment" by encouraging plea bargaining and by restricting
alternatives to adversarial factfinding. Post , at
7-8, 11-12. The short answer to the former point (even
assuming the questionable premise that Apprendi does
encourage plea bargaining, but see supra, at 14, and n. 12)
is that the Sixth Amendment was not written for the
benefit of those who choose to forgo its protection. It
������
Its precise effect, if precise effect it has, is presumably to require that
the ratio of sentencing-factor add-on to basic criminal sentence be no
greater than the ratio of caudal vertebrae to body in the breed of canine
with the longest tail. Or perhaps no greater than the average such
ratio for all breeds. Or perhaps the median. Regrettably, Apprendi has
prevented full development of this line of jurisprudence.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
17
Opinion of the Court
guarantees the right to jury trial. It does not guarantee
that a particular number of jury trials will actually take
place. That more defendants elect to waive that right
(because, for example, government at the moment is not
particularly oppressive) does not prove that a constitutional
provision guaranteeing availability of that option is
disserved.
JUSTICE BREYER 's more general argument�that Ap-
prendi undermines alternatives to adversarial factfind-
ing�is not so much a criticism of Apprendi as an assault
on jury trial generally. His esteem for "non-adversarial"
truth-seeking processes, post , at 12, supports just as well
an argument against either. Our Constitution and the
common-law traditions it entrenches, however, do not
admit the contention that facts are better discovered by
judicial inquisition than by adversarial testing before a
jury. See 3 Blackstone, Commentaries, at 373-374, 379-
381. J
USTICE
BREYER may be convinced of the equity of
the regime he favors, but his views are not the ones we are
bound to uphold.
Ultimately, our decision cannot turn on whether or to
what degree trial by jury impairs the efficiency or fairness
of criminal justice. One can certainly argue that both
these values would be better served by leaving justice
entirely in the hands of professionals; many nations of the
world, particularly those following civil-law traditions,
take just that course. There is not one shred of doubt,
however, about the Framers' paradigm for criminal justice:
not the civil-law ideal of administrative perfection,
but the common-law ideal of limited state power accomplished
by strict division of authority between judge and
jury. As Apprendi held, every defendant has the right to
insist that the prosecutor prove to a jury all facts legally
essential to the punishment. Under the dissenters' alternative,
he has no such right. That should be the end of the
matter.
18
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
Opinion of the Court
* * *
Petitioner was sentenced to prison for more than three
years beyond what the law allowed for the crime to which
he confessed, on the basis of a disputed finding that he
had acted with "deliberate cruelty." The Framers would
not have thought it too much to demand that, before depriving
a man of three more years of his liberty, the State
should suffer the modest inconvenience of submitting its
accusation to "the unanimous suffrage of twelve of his
equals and neighbours," 4 Blackstone, Commentaries, at
343, rather than a lone employee of the State.
The judgment of the Washington Court of Appeals is
reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
1
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 02-1632
_________________
RALPH HOWARD BLAKELY, JR ., PETITIONER v.
WASHINGTON
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
WASHINGTON
, DIVISION 3
[June 24, 2004]
JUSTICE O'CONNOR , with whom JUSTICE BREYER joins,
and with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
KENNEDY join as to all but Part IV-B, dissenting.
The legacy of today's opinion, whether intended or not,
will be the consolidation of sentencing power in the State
and Federal Judiciaries. The Court says to Congress and
state legislatures: If you want to constrain the sentencing
discretion of judges and bring some uniformity to sentencing,
it will cost you�dearly. Congress and States,
faced with the burdens imposed by the extension of Ap-
prendi to the present context, will either trim or eliminate
altogether their sentencing guidelines schemes and, with
them, 20 years of sentencing reform. It is thus of little
moment that the majority does not expressly declare
guidelines schemes unconstitutional, ante , at 12; for, as
residents of " Apprendi -land" are fond of saying, "the relevant
inquiry is one not of form, but of effect." Apprendi v.
New Jersey, 530 U. S. 466, 494 (2000); Ring v. Arizona ,
536 U. S. 584, 613 (2002) (SCALIA , J., concurring). The
"effect" of today's decision will be greater judicial discretion
and less uniformity in sentencing. Because I find it
implausible that the Framers would have considered such
a result to be required by the Due Process Clause or the
Sixth Amendment, and because the practical consequences
of today's decision may be disastrous, I respectfully dis-
2
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
sent.
I
One need look no further than the history leading up to
and following the enactment of Washington's guidelines
scheme to appreciate the damage that today's decision will
cause. Prior to 1981, Washington, like most other States
and the Federal Government, employed an indeterminate
sentencing scheme. Washington's criminal code separated
all felonies into three broad categories: "class A," carrying
a sentence of 20 years to life; "class B," carrying a sentence
of 0 to 10 years; and "class C," carrying a sentence of 0 to 5
years. Wash. Rev. Code Ann. �9A.20.020 (2000); see also
Sentencing Reform Act of 1981, 1981 Wash. Laws, ch. 137,
p. 534. Sentencing judges, in conjunction with parole
boards, had virtually unfettered discretion to sentence
defendants to prison terms falling anywhere within the
statutory range, including probation� i.e. , no jail sentence
at all. Wash. Rev. Code Ann. ��9.95.010-.011; Boerner &
Lieb, Sentencing Reform in the Other Washington, 28
Crime and Justice 71, 73 (M. Tonry ed. 2001) (hereinafter
Boerner & Lieb) ("Judges were authorized to choose between
prison and probation with few exceptions, subject
only to review for abuse of discretion"). See also D.
Boerner, Sentencing in Washington �2.4, pp. 2-27 to 2-28
(1985).
This system of unguided discretion inevitably resulted
in severe disparities in sentences received and served by
defendants committing the same offense and having
similar criminal histories. Boerner & Lieb 126-127; cf.
S. Rep. No. 98-225, p. 38 (1983) (Senate Report on precursor
to federal Sentencing Reform Act of 1984) ("[E]very
day Federal judges mete out an unjustifiably wide range of
sentences to offenders with similar histories, convicted of
similar crimes, committed under similar circumstances.
. . . These disparities, whether they occur at the time of
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
3
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
the initial sentencing or at the parole stage, can be traced
directly to the unfettered discretion the law confers on
those judges and parole authorities responsible for imposing
and implementing the sentence"). Indeed, rather
than reflect legally relevant criteria, these disparities too
often were correlated with constitutionally suspect variables
such as race. Boerner & Lieb 126-128. See also
Breyer, The Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Key Compromises
Upon Which They Rest, 17 Hofstra L. Rev. 1, 5
(1988) (elimination of racial disparity one reason behind
Congress' creation of the Federal Sentencing Commission).
To counteract these trends, the state legislature passed
the Sentencing Reform Act of 1981. The Act had the
laudable purposes of "mak[ing] the criminal justice system
accountable to the public," and "[e]nsur[ing] that the
punishment for a criminal offense is proportionate to the
seriousness of the offense . . . [and] commensurate with
the punishment imposed on others committing similar
offenses." Wash. Rev. Code Ann. �9.94A.010 (2000). The
Act neither increased any of the statutory sentencing
ranges for the three types of felonies (though it did eliminate
the statutory mandatory minimum for class A felonies),
nor reclassified any substantive offenses. 1981
Wash. Laws ch. 137, p. 534. It merely placed meaningful
constraints on discretion to sentence offenders within the
statutory ranges, and eliminated parole. There is thus no
evidence that the legislature was attempting to manipulate
the statutory elements of criminal offenses or to circumvent
the procedural protections of the Bill of Rights.
Rather, lawmakers were trying to bring some much-
needed uniformity, transparency, and accountability to an
otherwise "'labyrinthine' sentencing and corrections system
that 'lack[ed] any principle except unguided discretion.'"
Boerner & Lieb 73 (quoting F. Zimring, Making the
Punishment Fit the Crime: A Consumers' Guide to Sentencing
Reform, Occasional Paper No. 12, p. 6 (1977)).
4
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
II
Far from disregarding principles of due process and the
jury trial right, as the majority today suggests, Washington's
reform has served them. Before passage of the Act, a
defendant charged with second degree kidnaping, like
petitioner, had no idea whether he would receive a 10-year
sentence or probation. The ultimate sentencing determination
could turn as much on the idiosyncracies of a particular
judge as on the specifics of the defendant's crime or
background. A defendant did not know what facts, if any,
about his offense or his history would be considered relevant
by the sentencing judge or by the parole board. After
passage of the Act, a defendant charged with second degree
kidnaping knows what his presumptive sentence will
be; he has a good idea of the types of factors that a sentencing
judge can and will consider when deciding
whether to sentence him outside that range; he is guaranteed
meaningful appellate review to protect against an
arbitrary sentence. Boerner & Lieb 93 ("By consulting one
sheet, practitioners could identify the applicable scoring
rules for criminal history, the sentencing range, and the
available sentencing options for each case"). Criminal
defendants still face the same statutory maximum sentences,
but they now at least know, much more than before,
the real consequences of their actions.
Washington's move to a system of guided discretion has
served equal protection principles as well. Over the past
20 years, there has been a substantial reduction in racial
disparity in sentencing across the State. Id., at 126 (Racial
disparities that do exist "are accounted for by differences
in legally relevant variables�the offense of conviction
and prior criminal record"); id ., at 127 ("[J]udicial
authority to impose exceptional sentences under the
court's departure authority shows little evidence of
disparity correlated with race"). The reduction is directly
traceable to the constraining effects of the guidelines�
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
5
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
namely, its "presumptive range[s]" and limits on the
imposition of "exceptional sentences" outside of those
ranges. Id., at 128. For instance, sentencing judges still
retain unreviewable discretion in first-time offender cases
and in certain sex offender cases to impose alternative
sentences that are far more lenient than those contemplated
by the guidelines. To the extent that unjustifiable
racial disparities have persisted in Washington, it has
been in the imposition of such alternative sentences: "The
lesson is powerful: racial disparity is correlated with
unstructured and unreviewed discretion." Ibid .; see also
Washington State Minority and Justice Commission, R.
Crutchfield, J. Weis, R. Engen, & R. Gainey, Racial/Ethnic
Disparities and Exceptional Sentences in Washington
State, Final Report 51-53 (1993) ("[E]xceptional sentences
are not a major source of racial disparities in sentencing").
The majority does not, because it cannot, disagree that
determinate sentencing schemes, like Washington's, serve
important constitutional values. Ante , at 12. Thus, the
majority says: "[t]his case is not about whether determinate
sentencing is constitutional, only about how it can be
implemented in a way that respects the Sixth Amendment."
Ibid . But extension of Apprendi to the present
context will impose significant costs on a legislature's
determination that a particular fact, not historically an
element, warrants a higher sentence. While not a constitutional
prohibition on guidelines schemes, the majority's
decision today exacts a substantial constitutional tax.
The costs are substantial and real. Under the majority's
approach, any fact that increases the upper bound on a
judge's sentencing discretion is an element of the offense.
Thus, facts that historically have been taken into account
by sentencing judges to assess a sentence within a broad
range�such as drug quantity, role in the offense, risk of
bodily harm�all must now be charged in an indictment
and submitted to a jury, In re Winship, 397 U. S. 358
6
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
(1970), simply because it is the legislature, rather than the
judge, that constrains the extent to which such facts may
be used to impose a sentence within a pre-existing statutory
range.
While that alone is enough to threaten the continued
use of sentencing guidelines schemes, there are additional
costs. For example, a legislature might rightly think that
some factors bearing on sentencing, such as prior bad acts
or criminal history, should not be considered in a jury's
determination of a defendant's guilt�such "character
evidence" has traditionally been off limits during the guilt
phase of criminal proceedings because of its tendency to
inflame the passions of the jury. See, e.g. , Fed. Rule Evid.
404; 1 E. Imwinkelried, P. Giannelli, F. Gilligan, & F.
Leaderer, Courtroom Criminal Evidence 285 (3d ed. 1998) .
If a legislature desires uniform consideration of such
factors at sentencing, but does not want them to impact a
jury's initial determination of guilt, the State may have to
bear the additional expense of a separate, full-blown jury
trial during the penalty phase proceeding.
Some facts that bear on sentencing either will not be
discovered, or are not discoverable, prior to trial. For
instance, a legislature might desire that defendants who
act in an obstructive manner during trial or post-trial
proceedings receive a greater sentence than defendants
who do not. See, e.g. , United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual, �3C1.1 (Nov. 2003) (hereinafter
USSG) (2-point increase in offense level for obstruction of
justice). In such cases, the violation arises too late for the
State to provide notice to the defendant or to argue the
facts to the jury. A State wanting to make such facts
relevant at sentencing must now either vest sufficient
discretion in the judge to account for them or bring a
separate criminal prosecution for obstruction of justice or
perjury. And, the latter option is available only to the
extent that a defendant's obstructive behavior is so severe
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
7
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
as to constitute an already-existing separate offense,
unless the legislature is willing to undertake the unlikely
expense of criminalizing relatively minor obstructive
behavior.
Likewise, not all facts that historically have been relevant
to sentencing always will be known prior to trial. For
instance, trial or sentencing proceedings of a drug distribution
defendant might reveal that he sold primarily to
children. Under the majority's approach, a State wishing
such a revelation to result in a higher sentence within a
pre-existing statutory range either must vest judges with
sufficient discretion to account for it (and trust that they
exercise that discretion) or bring a separate criminal
prosecution. Indeed, the latter choice might not be available�a
separate prosecution, if it is for an aggravated
offense, likely would be barred altogether by the Double
Jeopardy Clause. Blockburger v. United States, 284 U. S.
299 (1932) (cannot prosecute for separate offense unless the
two offenses both have at least one element that the other
does not).
The majority may be correct that States and the Federal
Government will be willing to bear some of these costs.
Ante , at 13-14. But simple economics dictate that they
will not, and cannot, bear them all. To the extent that
they do not, there will be an inevitable increase in judicial
discretion with all of its attendant failings.1
������
1
The paucity of empirical evidence regarding the impact of extending
Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U. S. 466 (2000), to guidelines schemes
should come as no surprise to the majority. Ante , at 13. Prior to today,
only one court had ever applied Apprendi to invalidate application of a
guidelines scheme. Compare State v. Gould , 271 Kan. 394, 23 P. 3d 801
(2001), with, e. g. , United States v. Goo dine , 326 F. 3d 26 (CA1 2003);
United States v. Luciano , 311 F. 3d 146 (CA2 2002); United States v.
DeSumma , 272 F. 3d 176 (CA3 2001); United States v. Kinter , 235 F. 3d
192 (CA4 2000); United States v. Randle , 304 F. 3d 373 (CA5 2002);
United States v. Helton , 349 F. 3d 295 (CA6 2003); United States v.
8
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
III
Washington's Sentencing Reform Act did not alter the
statutory maximum sentence to which petitioner was
exposed. See Wash. Rev. Code Ann. �9A.40.030 (2003)
(second degree kidnaping class B felony since 1975); see
also State v. Pawling, 23 Wash. App. 226, 228-229, 597
P. 2d 1367, 1369 (1979) (citing second degree kidnapping
provision as existed in 1977). Petitioner was informed in
the charging document, his plea agreement, and during
his plea hearing that he faced a potential statutory maximum
of 10 years in prison. App. 63, 66, 76. As discussed
above, the guidelines served due process by providing
notice to petitioner of the consequences of his acts; they
vindicated his jury trial right by informing him of the
stakes of risking trial; they served equal protection by
ensuring petitioner that invidious characteristics such as
race would not impact his sentence.
Given these observations, it is difficult for me to discern
what principle besides doctrinaire formalism actually
motivates today's decision. The majority chides the Ap-
prendi dissenters for preferring a nuanced interpretation
of the Due Process Clause and Sixth Amendment jury trial
guarantee that would generally defer to legislative labels
while acknowledging the existence of constitutional constraints�what
the majority calls the "the law must not go
too far" approach. Ante , at 11 (emphasis deleted). If
������
Johnson , 335 F. 3d 589 (CA7 2003) (per curiam); United States v.
Piggie , 316 F. 3d 789 (CA8 2003); United States v. Toliver , 351 F. 3d
423 (CA9 2003); United States v. Mendez-Zamora , 296 F. 3d 1013
(CA10 2002); United States v. Sanchez , 269 F. 3d 1250 (CA11 2001);
United States v. Fields , 251 F. 3d 1041 (CADC 2001); State v. Dilts , 336
Ore. 158, 82 P. 3d 593 (2003); State v. Gore , 143 Wash. 2d 288, 21 P. 3d
262 (2001); State v. Lucas , 353 N. C. 568, 548 S. E. 2d 712 (2001); State
v. Dean , No. C4-02-1225, 2003 WL 21321425 (Minn. Ct. App., June 10,
2003) (unpublished opinion). Thus, there is no map of the uncharted
territory blazed by today's unprecedented holding.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
9
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
indeed the choice is between adopting a balanced case-by-
case approach that takes into consideration the values
underlying the Bill of Rights, as well as the history of a
particular sentencing reform law, and adopting a rigid
rule that destroys everything in its path, I will choose the
former. See Apprendi, 530 U. S., at 552-554 (O'CONNOR ,
J., dissenting) ("Because I do not believe that the Court's
'increase in the maximum penalty' rule is required by the
Constitution, I would evaluate New Jersey's sentence-
enhancement statute by analyzing the factors we have
examined in past cases" (citation omitted)).
But even were one to accept formalism as a principle
worth vindicating for its own sake, it would not explain
Apprendi 's, or today's, result. A rule of deferring to legislative
labels has no less formal pedigree. It would be more
consistent with our decisions leading up to Apprendi , see
Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U. S. 224 (1998)
(fact of prior conviction not an element of aggravated
recidivist offense); United States v. Watts , 519 U. S. 148
(1997) (per curiam) (acquittal of offense no bar to consideration
of underlying conduct for purposes of guidelines
enhancement); Witte v. United States, 515 U. S. 389 (1995)
(no double jeopardy bar against consideration of uncharged
conduct in imposition of guidelines enhancement);
Walt on v. Arizona , 497 U. S. 639 (1990) (aggravating
factors need not be found by a jury in capital case); Mis-
tret ta v . United States, 488 U. S. 361 (1989) (Federal
Sentencing Guidelines do not violate separation of powers);
McMillan v. Pennsylvania , 477 U. S. 79 (1986) (facts
increasing mandatory minimum sentence are not necessarily
elements); and it would vest primary authority for
defining crimes in the political branches, where it belongs.
Apprendi , supra, at 523-554 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting).
It also would be easier to administer than the majority's
rule, inasmuch as courts would not be forced to look behind
statutes and regulations to determine whether a
10
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
particular fact does or does not increase the penalty to
which a defendant was exposed.
The majority is correct that rigid adherence to such an
approach could conceivably produce absurd results, ante ,
at 10; but, as today's decision demonstrates, rigid adherence
to the majority's approach does and will continue to
produce results that disserve the very principles the majority
purports to vindicate. The pre- Apprendi rule of
deference to the legislature retains a built-in political
check to prevent lawmakers from shifting the prosecution
for crimes to the penalty phase proceedings of lesser included
and easier-to-prove offenses� e.g. , the majority's
hypothesized prosecution of murder in the guise of a traffic
offense sentencing proceeding. Ante, at 10. There is no
similar check, however, on application of the majority's
"'any fact that increases the upper bound of judicial discretion'"
by courts.
The majority claims the mantle of history and original
intent. But as I have explained elsewhere, a handful of
state decisions in the mid-19th century and a criminal
procedure treatise have little if any persuasive value as
evidence of what the Framers of the Federal Constitution
intended in the late 18th century. See Apprendi, 530
U. S., at 525-528 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting). Because
broad judicial sentencing discretion was foreign to the
Framers, id ., at 478-479 (citing J. Archbold, Pleading and
Evidence in Criminal Cases 44 (15th ed. 1862)), they were
never faced with the constitutional choice between submitting
every fact that increases a sentence to the jury
or vesting the sentencing judge with broad discretionary
authority to account for differences in offenses and
offenders.
IV
A
The consequences of today's decision will be as far
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
11
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
reaching as they are disturbing. Washington's sentencing
system is by no means unique. Numerous other States
have enacted guidelines systems, as has the Federal Government.
See, e.g. , Alaska Stat. �12.55.155 (2003); Ark.
Code Ann. �16-90-804 (Supp. 2003); Fla. Stat. �921.0016
(2003); Kan. Stat. Ann. �21-4701 et seq . (2003); Mich.
Comp. Laws Ann. �769.34 (West Supp. 2004); Minn. Stat.
�244.10 (2002); N. C. Gen. Stat. �15A-1340.16 (Lexis
2003); Ore. Admin. Rule �213-008-0001 (2003); 204 Pa.
Code �303 et seq. (2004), reproduced following 42 Pa. Cons.
Stat. Ann. �9721 (Purden Supp. 2004); 18 U. S. C. �3553;
28 U. S. C. �991 et seq. Today's decision casts constitutional
doubt over them all and, in so doing, threatens an
untold number of criminal judgments. Every sentence
imposed under such guidelines in cases currently pending
on direct appeal is in jeopardy. And, despite the fact that
we hold in Schriro v. Summerlin, post , p. ___, that Ring
(and a fortiori Apprendi ) does not apply retroactively on
habeas review, all criminal sentences imposed under the
federal and state guidelines since Apprendi was decided in
2000 arguably remain open to collateral attack. See
Teague v. Lane , 489 U. S. 288, 301 (1989) (plurality opinion)
("[A] case announces a new rule if the result was not
dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant's
conviction became final").2
The practical consequences for trial courts, starting
������
2
The numbers available from the federal system alone are staggering.
On March 31, 2004, there were 8,320 federal criminal appeals
pending in which the defendant's sentence was at issue. Memorandum
from Carl Schlesinger, Administrative Office of the United States
Courts, to Supreme Court Library (June 1, 2004) (available in Clerk of
the Court's case file). Between June 27, 2000, when Apprendi was
decided, and March 31, 2004, there have been 272,191 defendants
sentenced in federal court. Memorandum, supra. Given that nearly all
federal sentences are governed by the Federal Sentencing Guidelines,
the vast majority of these cases are Guidelines cases.
12
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
today, will be equally unsettling: How are courts to mete
out guidelines sentences? Do courts apply the guidelines
as to mitigating factors, but not as to aggravating factors?
Do they jettison the guidelines altogether? The Court
ignores the havoc it is about to wreak on trial courts
across the country.
B
It is no answer to say that today's opinion impacts only
Washington's scheme and not others, such as, for example,
the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. See ante , at 9, n. 9
("The Federal Guidelines are not before us, and we express
no opinion on them"); cf. Apprendi, supra, at 496-497
(claiming not to overrule Walton , supra, soon thereafter
overruled in Ring ); Apprendi, supra, at 497, n. 21 (reserving
question of Federal Sentencing Guidelines). The fact
that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines are promulgated
by an administrative agency nominally located in the
Judicial Branch is irrelevant to the majority's reasoning.
The Guidelines have the force of law, see Stinson v. United
States, 508 U. S. 36 (1993); and Congress has unfettered
control to reject or accept any particular guideline, Mis-
tret ta , 488 U. S., at 393-394.
The structure of the Federal Guidelines likewise does
not, as the Government half-heartedly suggests, provide
any grounds for distinction. Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae 27-29. Washington's scheme is almost
identical to the upward departure regime established by
18 U. S. C. �3553(b) and implemented in USSG �5K2.0. If
anything, the structural differences that do exist make the
Federal Guidelines more vulnerable to attack. The provision
struck down here provides for an increase in the
upper bound of the presumptive sentencing range if the
sentencing court finds, "considering the purpose of [the
Act], that there are substantial and compelling reasons
justifying an exceptional sentence." Wash. Rev. Code Ann.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
13
O'CONNOR , J., dissenting
�9.94A.120 (2000). The Act elsewhere provides a nonex-
haustive list of aggravating factors that satisfy the definition.
�9.94A.390. The Court flatly rejects respondent's
argument that such soft constraints, which still allow
Washington judges to exercise a substantial amount of
discretion, survive Apprendi . Ante , at 8-9. This suggests
that the hard constraints found throughout chapters 2 and
3 of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which require an
increase in the sentencing range upon specified factual
findings, will meet the same fate. See, e.g. , USSG �2K2.1
(increases in offense level for firearms offenses based on
number of firearms involved, whether possession was in
connection with another offense, whether the firearm was
stolen); �2B1.1 (increase in offense level for financial
crimes based on amount of money involved, number of
victims, possession of weapon); �3C1.1 (general increase in
offense level for obstruction of justice).
Indeed, the "extraordinary sentence" provision struck
down today is as inoffensive to the holding of Apprendi as
a regime of guided discretion could possibly be. The list of
facts that justify an increase in the range is nonexhaus-
tive. The State's "real facts" doctrine precludes reliance by
sentencing courts upon facts that would constitute the
elements of a different or aggravated offense. See Wash.
Rev. Code Ann. �9.94A.370(2) (2000) (codifying "real facts"
doctrine). If the Washington scheme does not comport
with the Constitution, it is hard to imagine a guidelines
scheme that would.
*
*
*
What I have feared most has now come to pass: Over 20
years of sentencing reform are all but lost, and tens of
thousands of criminal judgments are in jeopardy. Ap-
prendi , 530 U. S., at 549-559 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting);
Ring , 536 U. S., at 619-621 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting). I
respectfully dissent.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
1
KENNEDY , J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 02-1632
_________________
RALPH HOWARD BLAKELY, JR ., PETITIONER v.
WASHINGTON
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
WASHINGTON
, DIVISION 3
[June 24, 2004]
JUSTICE KENNEDY , with whom JUSTICE BREY ER joins,
dissenting.
The majority opinion does considerable damage to our
laws and to the administration of the criminal justice
system for all the reasons well stated in JUSTICE
O'CONNOR 's dissent, plus one more: The Court, in my
respectful submission, disregards the fundamental principle
under our constitutional system that different
branches of government "converse with each other on
matters of vital common interest." Mistretta v. United
States, 488 U. S. 361, 408 (1989). As the Court in Mistretta
explained, the Constitution establishes a system of government
that presupposes, not just "'autonomy'" and
"'separateness,'" but also "'interdependence'" and
"'reciprocity. '" Id. , at 381 (quoting Youngstown Sheet &
Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U. S. 579, 635 (1952) (Jackson, J. ,
concurring) ) . Constant, constructive discourse between our
courts and our legislatures is an integral and admirable
part of the constitutional design. Case-by-case judicial
determinations often yield intelligible patterns that can be
refined by legislatures and codified into statutes or rules as
general standards. As these legislative enactments are
followed by incremental judicial interpretation, the legisla
-
tures may respond again, and the cycle repeats. This recurring
dialogue, an essential source for the elaboration and
2
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
KENNEDY , J., dissenting
the evolution of the law, is basic constitutional theory in
action.
Sentencing guidelines are a prime example of this collaborative
process. Dissatisfied with the wide disparity in
sentencing, participants in the criminal justice system,
including judges, pressed for legislative reforms. In response,
legislators drew from these participants' shared
experiences and enacted measures to correct the problems,
which, as J USTICE O'CONNOR explains, could sometimes
rise to the level of a constitutional injury. As Mistretta
recognized, this interchange among different actors in the
constitutional scheme is consistent with the Constitution's
structural protections.
To be sure, this case concerns the work of a state legislature,
and not of Congress. If anything, however, this
distinction counsels even greater judicial caution. Unlike
Mistretta, the case here implicates not just the collective
wisdom of legislators on the other side of the continuing
dialogue over fair sentencing, but also the interest of the
States to serve as laboratories for innovation and experiment.
See New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 285 U. S. 262,
311 (1932) (Brandeis, J., dissenting). With no apparent
sense of irony that the effect of today's decision is the
destruction of a sentencing scheme devised by democratically
elected legislators, the majority shuts down alternative,
nonjudicial, sources of ideas and experience. It does
so under a faintly disguised distrust of judges and their
purported usurpation of the jury's function in criminal
trials. It tells not only trial judges who have spent years
studying the problem but also legislators who have devoted
valuable time and resources "calling upon the accu
-
mulated wisdom and experience of the Judicial Branch . . .
on a matter uniquely within the ken of judges," Mistretta ,
supra, at 412, that their efforts and judgments were all for
naught. Numerous States that have enacted sentencing
guidelines similar to the one in Washington State are now
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
3
KENNEDY , J., dissenting
commanded to scrap everything and start over.
If the Constitution required this result, the majority's
decision, while unfortunate, would at least be understandable
and defensible. As J
USTICE
O'CONNOR 's dissent
demonstrates, however, this is simply not the case. For
that reason, and because the Constitution does not prohibit
the dynamic and fruitful dialogue between the judicial
and legislative branches of government that has
marked sentencing reform on both the state and the federal
levels for more than 20 years, I dissent.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
1
BREYER , J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 02-1632
_________________
RALPH HOWARD BLAKELY, JR ., PETITIONER v.
WASHINGTON
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
WASHINGTON
, DIVISION 3
[June 24, 2004]
JUSTICE BREYER , with whom JUSTICE O'CONNOR joins,
dissenting.
The Court makes clear that it means what it said in
Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U. S. 466 (2000) . In its view,
the Sixth Amendment says that "'any fact that increases
the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory
maximum must be submitted to a jury.'" Ante, at 5
(quoting Apprendi, supra, at 490) . "'[P]rescribed statutory
maximum'" means the penalty that the relevant statute
authorizes "solely on the basis of the facts reflected in the
jury verdict." Ante, at 7 (emphasis deleted). Thus, a jury
must find, not only the facts that make up the crime of
which the offender is charged, but also all (punishment-
increasing) facts about the way in which the offender
carried out that crime.
It is not difficult to understand the impulse that produced
this holding. Imagine a classic example�a statute
(or mandatory sentencing guideline) that provides a 10-
year sentence for ordinary bank robbery, but a 15-year
sentence for bank robbery committed with a gun. One
might ask why it should matter for jury trial purposes
whether the statute (or guideline) labels the gun's pres
-
ence (a) a sentencing fact about the way in which the
offender carried out the lesser crime of ordinary bank
robbery, or (b) a factual element of the greater crime of
bank robbery with a gun? If the Sixth Amendment re-
2
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
quires a jury finding about the gun in the latter circumstance,
why should it not also require a jury to find the
same fact in the former circumstance? The two sets of
circumstances are functionally identical. In both instances,
identical punishment follows from identical factual findings
(related to, e.g., a bank, a taking, a thing-of-value,
force or threat of force, and a gun). The only difference
between the two circumstances concerns a legislative (or
Sentencing Commission) decision about which label ("sentencing
fact" or "element of a greater crime") to affix to one
of the facts, namely, the presence of the gun, that will lead
to the greater sentence. Given the identity of circumstances
apart from the label, the jury's traditional fact-
finding role, and the law's insistence upon treating like
cases alike, why should the legislature's labeling choice
make an important Sixth Amendment difference?
The Court in Apprendi, and now here, concludes that it
should not make a difference. The Sixth Amendment's
jury trial guarantee applies similarly to both. I agree with
the majority's analysis, but not with its conclusion. That
is to say, I agree that, classically speaking, the difference
between a traditional sentencing factor and an element of
a greater offense often comes down to a legislative choice
about which label to affix. But I cannot jump from there
to the conclusion that the Sixth Amendment always requires
identical treatment of the two scenarios. That
jump is fraught with consequences that threaten the
fairness of our traditional criminal justice system; it distorts
historical sentencing or criminal trial practices; and
it upsets settled law on which legislatures have relied in
designing punishment systems.
The Justices who have dissented from Apprendi have
written about many of these matters in other opinions.
See 530 U. S., at 523-554 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting); id.,
at 555-566 (BREYER , J., dissenting); Harris v. United
States, 536 U. S. 545, 549-550, 556-569 (2002) (KENNEDY ,
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
3
BREYER , J., dissenting
J.); id., at 569-572 (BREYER , J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment); Jones v. United States, 526 U. S.
227, 254, 264-272 (1999) (KENNEDY , J., dissenting);
Monge v. California, 524 U. S. 721, 728-729 (1998)
(O'CONNOR , J.); McMillan v. Pennsylvania, 477 U. S. 79,
86-91 (1986) (REHNQUIST , C. J. ). At the risk of some
repetition, I shall set forth several of the most important
considerations here. They lead me to conclude that I must
again dissent.
I
The majority ignores the adverse consequences inherent
in its conclusion. As a result of the majority's rule, sentencing
must now take one of three forms, each of which
risks either impracticality, unfairness, or harm to the jury
trial right the majority purports to strengthen. This
circumstance shows that the majority's Sixth Amendment
interpretation cannot be right.
A
A first option for legislators is to create a simple, pure or
nearly pure "charge offense" or "determinate" sentencing
system. See Breyer, The Federal Sentencing Guidelines
and the Key Compromises upon Which They Rest, 17
Hofstra L. Rev. 1, 8-9 (1988). In such a system, an indictment
would charge a few facts which, taken together,
constitute a crime, such as robbery. Robbery would carry
a single sentence, say, five years' imprisonment. And
every person convicted of robbery would receive that sentence�just
as, centuries ago, everyone convicted of almost
any serious crime was sentenced to death. See, e.g., Lill-
quist, The Puzzling Return of Jury Sentencing: Misgivings
About Apprendi , 82 N. C. L. Rev. 621, 630 (2004).
Such a system assures uniformity, but at intolerable
costs. First, simple determinate sentencing systems impose
identical punishments on people who committed their
4
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
crimes in very different ways. When dramatically different
conduct ends up being punished the same way, an
injustice has taken place. Simple determinate sentencing
has the virtue of treating like cases alike, but it simultaneously
fails to treat different cases differently. Some
commentators have leveled this charge at sentencing
guideline systems themselves. See, e.g., Schulhofer, Assessing
the Federal Sentencing Process: The Problem Is
Uniformity, Not Disparity, 29 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 833, 847
(1992) (arguing that the "most important problem under
the [Federal] Guidelines system is not too much disparity,
but rather excessive uniformity" and arguing for adjustments,
including elimination of mandatory minimums, to
make the Guidelines system more responsive to relevant
differences). The charge is doubly applicable to simple
"pure charge" systems that permit no departures from the
prescribed sentences, even in extraordinary cases.
Second, in a world of statutorily fixed mandatory sentences
for many crimes, determinate sentencing gives
tremendous power to prosecutors to manipulate sentences
through their choice of charges. Prosecutors can simply
charge, or threaten to charge, defendants with crimes
bearing higher mandatory sentences. Defendants, knowing
that they will not have a chance to argue for a lower
sentence in front of a judge, may plead to charges that
they might otherwise contest. Considering that most
criminal cases do not go to trial and resolution by plea
bargaining is the norm, the rule of Apprendi , to the extent
it results in a return to determinate sentencing, threatens
serious unfairness. See Bibas, Judicial Fact-Finding and
Sentence Enhancements in a World of Guilty Pleas, 110
Yale L. J. 1097, 1100-1101 (2001) (explaining that the
rule of Apprendi hurts defendants by depriving them of
sentencing hearings, "the only hearings they were likely to
have"; forcing defendants to surrender sentencing issues
like drug quantity when they agree to the plea; and trans-
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
5
BREYER , J., dissenting
ferring power to prosecutors).
B
A second option for legislators is to return to a system of
indeterminate sentencing, such as California had before
the recent sentencing reform movement. See Payne v.
Tennessee, 501 U. S. 808, 820 (1991) ("With the increasing
importance of probation, as opposed to imprisonment, as a
part of the penological process, some States such as California
developed the 'indeterminate sentence,' where the
time of incarceration was left almost entirely to the penological
authorities rather than to the courts"); Thompson,
Navigating the Hidden Obstacles to Ex-Offender
Reentry, 45 Boston College L. Rev. 255, 267 (2004) ("In the
late 1970s, California switched from an indeterminate
criminal sentencing scheme to determinate sentencing"
(footnote omitted)). Under indeterminate systems, the
length of the sentence is entirely or almost entirely within
the discretion of the judge or of the parole board, which
typically has broad power to decide when to release a
prisoner.
When such systems were in vogue, they were criticized,
and rightly so, for producing unfair disparities, including
race-based disparities, in the punishment of similarly
situated defendants. See, e.g., ante, at 2-3 (O'CONNOR , J.,
dissenting) (citing sources). The length of time a person
spent in prison appeared to depend on "what the judge ate
for breakfast" on the day of sentencing, on which judge
you got, or on other factors that should not have made
a difference to the length of the sentence. See Breyer,
supra, at 4-5 (citing congressional and expert studies indicating
that, before the United States Sentencing Commission
Guidelines were promulgated, punishments for
identical crimes in the Second Circuit ranged from 3 to 20
years' imprisonment and that sentences varied depending
upon region, gender of the defendant, and race of the
6
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
defendant). And under such a system, the judge could
vary the sentence greatly based upon his findings about
how the defendant had committed the crime�findings
that might not have been made by a "preponderance of the
evidence," much less "beyond a reasonable doubt." See
McMillan, 477 U. S., at 91 ("Sentencing courts have traditionally
heard evidence and found facts without any prescribed
burden of proof at all" (citing Williams v. New
York, 337 U. S. 241 (1949))).
Returning to such a system would diminish the
"'reason'" the majority claims it is trying to uphold. Ante,
at 5 (quoting 1 J. Bishop, Criminal Procedure �87, p. 55
(2d ed. 1872)). It also would do little to "ensur[e] [the]
control" of what the majority calls "the peopl[e,]" i.e. , the
jury, "in the judiciary," ante, at 9, since "the peopl[e]"
would only decide the defendant's guilt, a finding with no
effect on the duration of the sentence. While "the judge's
authority to sentence" would formally derive from the
jury's verdict, the jury would exercise little or no control
over the sentence itself. Ante, at 10. It is difficult to see
how such an outcome protects the structural safeguards
the majority claims to be defending.
C
A third option is that which the Court seems to believe
legislators will in fact take. That is the option of retaining
structured schemes that attempt to punish similar conduct
similarly and different conduct differently, but modifying
them to conform to Apprendi 's dictates. Judges
would be able to depart downward from presumptive
sentences upon finding that mitigating factors were present,
but would not be able to depart upward unless the
prosecutor charged the aggravating fact to a jury and
proved it beyond a reasonable doubt. The majority argues,
based on the single example of Kansas, that most legislatures
will enact amendments along these lines in the face
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
7
BREYER , J., dissenting
of the oncoming Apprendi train. See ante, at 13-14 (citing
State v. Gould, 271 Kan. 394, 404-414, 23 P. 3d 801, 809-
814 (2001); Act of May 29, 2002, ch. 170, 2002 Kan. Sess.
Laws pp. 1018-1023 (codified at Kan. Stat. Ann. �21-4718
(2003 Cum. Supp.)); Brief for Kansas Appellate Defender
Office as Amicus Curiae 3-7). It is therefore worth exploring
how this option could work in practice, as well as
the assumptions on which it depends.
1
This option can be implemented in one of two ways. The
first way would be for legislatures to subdivide each crime
into a list of complex crimes, each of which would be defined
to include commonly found sentencing factors such
as drug quantity, type of victim, presence of violence,
degree of injury, use of gun, and so on. A legislature, for
example, might enact a robbery statute, modeled on robbery
sentencing guidelines, that increases punishment
depending upon (1) the nature of the institution robbed,
(2) the (a) presence of, (b) brandishing of, (c) other use of, a
firearm, (3) making of a death threat, (4) presence of (a)
ordinary, (b) serious, (c) permanent or life threatening,
bodily injury, (5) abduction, (6) physical restraint, (7)
taking of a firearm, (8) taking of drugs, (9) value of property
loss, etc. Cf. United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual �2B3.1 (Nov. 2003) (hereinafter USSG).
This possibility is, of course, merely a highly calibrated
form of the "pure charge" system discussed in Part I-A,
supra. And it suffers from some of the same defects. The
prosecutor, through control of the precise charge, controls
the punishment, thereby marching the sentencing system
directly away from, not toward, one important guideline
goal: rough uniformity of punishment for those who engage
in roughly the same real criminal conduct. The
artificial (and consequently unfair) nature of the resulting
sentence is aggravated by the fact that prosecutors must
8
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
charge all relevant facts about the way the crime was
committed before a presentence investigation examines
the criminal conduct, perhaps before the trial itself, i.e.,
before many of the facts relevant to punishment are
known.
This "complex charge offense" system also prejudices
defendants who seek trial, for it can put them in the untenable
position of contesting material aggravating facts
in the guilt phases of their trials. Consider a defendant
who is charged, not with mere possession of cocaine, but
with the specific offense of possession of more than 500
grams of cocaine. Or consider a defendant charged, not
with murder, but with the new crime of murder using a
machete. Or consider a defendant whom the prosecution
wants to claim was a "supervisor," rather than an ordinary
gang member. How can a Constitution that guarantees
due process put these defendants, as a matter of course, in
the position of arguing, "I did not sell drugs, and if I did, I
did not sell more than 500 grams" or, "I did not kill him,
and if I did, I did not use a machete," or "I did not engage
in gang activity, and certainly not as a supervisor" to a
single jury? See Apprendi, 530 U. S., at 557-558 (B
REYER
,
J., dissenting); Monge, 524 U. S. , at 729 . The system can
tolerate this kind of problem up to a point (consider the
defendant who wants to argue innocence, and, in the
alternative, second-degree, not first-degree, murder). But
a rereading of the many distinctions made in a typical
robbery guideline, see supra, at 7, suggests that an effort
to incorporate any real set of guidelines in a complex
statute would reach well beyond that point.
The majority announces that there really is no problem
here because "States may continue to offer judicial fact-
finding as a matter of course to all defendants who plead
guilty" and defendants may "stipulat[e] to the relevant
facts or consen[t] to judicial factfinding. " Ante, at 14. The
problem, of course, concerns defendants who do not want
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
9
BREYER , J., dissenting
to plead guilty to those elements that, until recently, were
commonly thought of as sentencing factors. As to those
defendants, the fairness problem arises because States
may very well decide that they will not permit defendants
to carve subsets of facts out of the new, Apprendi-required
17-element robbery crime, seeking a judicial determination
as to some of those facts and a jury determination as
to others. Instead, States may simply require defendants
to plead guilty to all 17 elements or proceed with a (likely
prejudicial) trial on all 17 elements.
The majority does not deny that States may make this
choice; it simply fails to understand why any State would
want to exercise it. Ante, at 14, n. 12. The answer is, as I
shall explain in a moment, that the alternative may prove
too expensive and unwieldy for States to provide. States
that offer defendants the option of judicial factfinding as
to some facts ( i.e., sentencing facts), say, because of fairness
concerns, will also have to offer the defendant a second
sentencing jury�just as Kansas has done. I therefore
turn to that alternative.
2
The second way to make sentencing guidelines Ap-
prendi -compliant would be to require at least two juries
for each defendant whenever aggravating facts are present:
one jury to determine guilt of the crime charged, and
an additional jury to try the disputed facts that, if found,
would aggravate the sentence. Our experience with bifurcated
trials in the capital punishment context suggests
that requiring them for run-of-the-mill sentences would be
costly, both in money and in judicial time and resources.
Cf. Kozinski & Gallagher, Death: The Ultimate Run-On
Sentence, 46 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 1, 13-15, and n. 64
(1995) (estimating the costs of each capital case at around
$1 million more than each noncapital case); Tabak, How
Empirical Studies Can Affect Positively the Politics of the
Death Penalty, 83 Cornell L. Rev. 1431, 1439-1440 (1998)
10
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
(attributing the greater cost of death penalty cases in part
to bifurcated proceedings). In the context of noncapital
crimes, the potential need for a second indictment alleging
aggravating facts, the likely need for formal evidentiary
rules to prevent prejudice, and the increased difficulty of
obtaining relevant sentencing information, all will mean
greater complexity, added cost, and further delay. See
Part V, infra. Indeed, cost and delay could lead legislatures
to revert to the complex charge offense system described
in Part I-C-1, supra .
The majority refers to an amicus curiae brief filed by the
Kansas Appellate Defender Office, which suggests that a
two-jury system has proved workable in Kansas. Ante, at
13-14. And that may be so. But in all likelihood, any
such workability reflects an uncomfortable fact, a fact at
which the majority hints, ante, at 14, but whose constitutional
implications it does not seem to grasp. The uncomfortable
fact that could make the system seem workable�
even desirable in the minds of some, including defense
attorneys�is called "plea bargaining." See Bibas, 110
Yale L. J. , at 1150, and n. 330 (reporting that in 1996,
fewer than 4% of adjudicated state felony defendants have
jury trials, 5% have bench trials, and 91% plead guilty).
See also ante, at 14 (making clear that plea bargaining
applies). The Court can announce that the Constitution
requires at least two jury trials for each criminal defendant�one
for guilt, another for sentencing�but only
because it knows full well that more than 90% of defendants
will not go to trial even once, much less insist on two
or more trials.
What will be the consequences of the Court's holding for
the 90% of defendants who do not go to trial? The truthful
answer is that we do not know. Some defendants may
receive bargaining advantages if the increased cost of the
"double jury trial" guarantee makes prosecutors more
willing to cede certain sentencing issues to the defense.
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
11
BREYER , J., dissenting
Other defendants may be hurt if a "single-jury-decides-all"
approach makes them more reluctant to risk a trial�
perhaps because they want to argue that they did not
know what was in the cocaine bag, that it was a small
amount regardless, that they were unaware a confederate
had a gun, etc. See Bibas, 110 Yale L. J. , at 1100 ("Because
for many defendants going to trial is not a desirable
option, they are left without any real hearings at all"); id.,
at 1151 ("The trial right does little good when most defen
-
dants do not go to trial").
At the least, the greater expense attached to trials and
their greater complexity, taken together in the context of
an overworked criminal justice system, will likely mean,
other things being equal, fewer trials and a greater reliance
upon plea bargaining�a system in which punishment
is set not by judges or juries but by advocates acting
under bargaining constraints. At the same time, the
greater power of the prosecutor to control the punishment
through the charge would likely weaken the relation
between real conduct and real punishment as well. See,
e.g., Schulhofer, 29 Am. Crim. L. Rev., at 845 (estimating
that evasion of the proper sentence under the Federal
Guidelines may now occur in 20%-35% of all guilty plea
cases). Even if the Court's holding does not further embed
plea-bargaining practices (as I fear it will), its success
depends upon the existence of present practice. I do not
understand how the Sixth Amendment could require a
sentencing system that will work in practice only if no
more than a handful of defendants exercise their right to a
jury trial.
The majority's only response is to state that "bargaining
over elements . . . probably favors the defendant," ante, at
15, adding that many criminal defense lawyers favor its
position, ante, at 16. But the basic problem is not one of
"fairness" to defendants or, for that matter, "fairness" to
prosecutors. Rather, it concerns the greater fairness of a
12
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
sentencing system that a more uniform correspondence
between real criminal conduct and real punishment helps
to create. At a minimum, a two-jury system, by preventing
a judge from taking account of an aggravating fact
without the prosecutor's acquiescence, would undercut, if
not nullify, legislative efforts to ensure through guidelines
that punishments reflect a convicted offender's real criminal
conduct, rather than that portion of the offender's
conduct that a prosecutor decides to charge and prove.
Efforts to tie real punishment to real conduct are
not new. They are embodied in well-established pre-
guidelines sentencing practices�practices under which a
judge, looking at a presentence report, would seek to tailor
the sentence in significant part to fit the criminal conduct
in which the offender actually engaged. For more than a
century, questions of punishment (not those of guilt or
innocence) have reflected determinations made, not only
by juries, but also by judges, probation officers, and execu
-
tive parole boards. Such truth-seeking determinations
have rested upon both adversarial and non-adversarial
processes. The Court's holding undermines efforts to
reform these processes, for it means that legislatures
cannot both permit judges to base sentencing upon real
conduct and seek, through guidelines, to make the results
more uniform.
In these and other ways, the two-jury system would
work a radical change in pre-existing criminal law. It is
not surprising that this Court has never previously suggested
that the Constitution�outside the unique context
of the death penalty�might require bifurcated jury-based
sentencing. And it is the impediment the Court's holding
poses to legislative efforts to achieve that greater systematic
fairness that casts doubt on its constitutional validity.
D
Is there a fourth option? Perhaps. Congress and state
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
13
BREYER , J., dissenting
legislatures might, for example, rewrite their criminal
codes, attaching astronomically high sentences to each
crime, followed by long lists of mitigating facts, which, for
the most part, would consist of the absence of aggravating
facts. Apprendi, 530 U. S., at 541-542 (O'CONNOR , J.,
dissenting) (explaining how legislatures can evade the
majority's rule by making yet another labeling choice).
But political impediments to legislative action make such
rewrites difficult to achieve; and it is difficult to see why
the Sixth Amendment would require legislatures to undertake
them.
It may also prove possible to find combinations of, or
variations upon, my first three options. But I am unaware
of any variation that does not involve (a) the shift of power
to the prosecutor (weakening the connection between real
conduct and real punishment) inherent in any charge
offense system, (b) the lack of uniformity inherent in any
system of pure judicial discretion, or (c) the complexity,
expense, and increased reliance on plea bargains involved
in a "two-jury" system. The simple fact is that the design
of any fair sentencing system must involve efforts to make
practical compromises among competing goals. The ma
-
jority's reading of the Sixth Amendment makes the effort
to find those compromises�already difficult�virtually
impossible.
II
The majority rests its conclusion in significant part
upon a claimed historical (and therefore constitutional)
imperative. According to the majority, the rule it applies
in this case is rooted in "longstanding tenets of common-
law criminal jurisprudence," ante, at 5: that every accusa
-
tion against a defendant must be proved to a jury and that
"'an accusation which lacks any particular fact which the
law makes essential to the punishment is . . . no accusation
within the requirements of the common law, and it is
no accusation in reason,'" ibid. (quoting Bishop, Criminal
14
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
Procedure �87, at 55). The historical sources upon which
the majority relies, however, do not compel the result it
reaches. See ante, at 10 (O'C ONNOR , J., dissenting); Ap-
prendi, 530 U. S., at 525-528 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting).
The quotation from Bishop, to which the majority attributes
great weight, stands for nothing more than the "unremarkable
proposition" that where a legislature passes a
statute setting forth heavier penalties than were available
for committing a common-law offense and specifying those
facts that triggered the statutory penalty, "a defendant
could receive the greater statutory punishment only if the
indictment expressly charged and the prosecutor proved
the facts that made up the statutory offense, as opposed to
simply those facts that made up the common-law offense."
Id., at 526 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting) (characterizing a
similar statement of the law in J. Archbold, Pleading and
Evidence in Criminal Cases 51, 188 (15th ed. 1862)).
This is obvious when one considers the problem that
Bishop was addressing. He provides as an example "statutes
whereby, when [a common-law crime] is committed
with a particular intent, or with a particular weapon, or
the like, it is subjected to a particular corresponding pun
-
ishment, heavier than that for" the simple common-law
offense (though, of course, his concerns were not " limited
to that example," ante, at 5-6, n. 5). Bishop, supra, �82, at
51-52 (discussing the example of common assault and
enhanced-assault statutes, e.g., "assaults committed with
the intent to rob"). That indictments historically had to
charge all of the statutorily labeled elements of the offense
is a proposition on which all can agree. See Apprendi,
supra, at 526-527 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting). See also J.
Archbold, Pleading and Evidence in Criminal Cases 44
(11th ed. 1849) ("[E]very fact or circumstance which is a
necessary ingredient in the offence must be set forth in the
indictment" so that "there may be no doubt as to the
judgment which should be given, if the defendant be con-
Cite as: 542 U. S. ____ (2004)
15
BREYER , J., dissenting
victed"); 1 T. Starkie, Criminal Pleading 68 (2d ed. 1822)
(the indictment must state "the criminal nature and degree
of the offence, which are conclusions of law from the
facts; and also the particular facts and circumstances
which render the defendant guilty of that offence").
Neither Bishop nor any other historical treatise writer,
however, disputes the proposition that judges historically
had discretion to vary the sentence, within the range
provided by the statute, based on facts not proved at the
trial. See Bishop, supra, �85, at 54 ("[W]ithin the limits of
any discretion as to the punishment which the law may
have allowed, the judge, when he pronounces sentence,
may suffer his discretion to be influenced by matter shown
in aggravation or mitigation, not covered by the allegations
of the indictment"); K. Stith & J. Cabranes, Fear of
Judging: Sentencing Guidelines in the Federal Courts 9
(1998). The modern history of pre-guidelines sentencing
likewise indicates that judges had broad discretion to set
sentences within a statutory range based on uncharged
conduct. Usually, the judge based his or her sentencing
decision on facts gleaned from a presentence report, which
the defendant could dispute at a sentencing hearing. In
the federal system, for example, Federal Rule of Criminal
Procedure 32 provided that probation officers, who are
employees of the Judicial Branch, prepared a presentence
report for the judge, a copy of which was generally given to
the prosecution and defense before the sentencing hearing.
See Stith & Cabranes, supra, at 79-80, 221, note 5. See
also ante, at 2 (O'CONNOR , J., dissenting) (describing the
State of Washington's former indeterminate sentencing
law).
In this case, the statute provides that kidnaping may be
punished by up to 10 years' imprisonment. Wash. Rev.
Code Ann. ��9A.40.030(3), 9A.20.021(1)(b) (2000). Modern
structured sentencing schemes like Washington's do not
change the statutorily fixed maximum penalty, nor do
16
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
they purport to establish new elements for the crime.
Instead, they undertake to structure the previously unfettered
discretion of the sentencing judge, channeling and
limiting his or her discretion even within the statutory
range. (Thus, contrary to the majority's arguments, ante,
at 12-13, kidnapers in the State of Washington know that
they risk up to 10 years' imprisonment, but they also have
the benefit of additional information about how long�
within the 10-year maximum�their sentences are likely
to be, based on how the kidnaping was committed.)
Historical treatises do not speak to such a practice
because it was not done in the 19th century. Cf. Jones,
526 U. S., at 244 ("[T]he scholarship of which we are
aware does not show that a question exactly like this one
was ever raised and resolved in the period before the
framing"). This makes sense when one considers that,
prior to the 19th century, the prescribed penalty for felonies
was often death, which the judge had limited, and
sometimes no, power to vary. See Lillquist, 82 N. C.
L. Rev. , at 628-630. The 19th century saw a movement to
a rehabilitative mode of punishment in which prison terms
became a norm, shifting power to the judge to impose a
longer or shorter term within the statutory maximum.
See ibid. The ability of legislatures to guide the judge's
discretion by designating presumptive ranges, while allowing
the judge to impose a more or less severe penalty in
unusual cases, was therefore never considered. To argue
otherwise, the majority must ignore the significant differences
between modern structured sentencing schemes and
the history on which it relies to strike them down. And
while the majority insists that the historical sources,
particularly Bishop, should not be "limited" to the context
in which they were written, ante, at 5-6, n. 5, it has never
explained why the Court must transplant those discussions
to the very different context of sentencing schemes
designed to structure judges' discretion within a statutory
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17
BREYER , J., dissenting
sentencing range.
Given history's silence on the question of laws that
structure a judge's discretion within the range provided by
the legislatively labeled maximum term, it is not surpris
-
ing that our modern, pre- Apprendi cases made clear that
legislatures could, within broad limits, distinguish between
"sentencing facts" and "elements of crimes." See
McMillan, 477 U. S., at 85-88. By their choice of label,
legislatures could indicate whether a judge or a jury must
make the relevant factual determination. History does not
preclude legislatures from making this decision. And, as I
argued in Part I, supra, allowing legislatures to structure
sentencing in this way has the dual effect of enhancing
and giving meaning to the Sixth Amendment's jury trial
right as to core crimes, while affording additional due
process to defendants in the form of sentencing hearings
before judges�hearings the majority's rule will eliminate
for many .
Is there a risk of unfairness involved in permitting
Congress to make this labeling decision? Of course. As we
have recognized, the "tail" of the sentencing fact might
"wa[g] the dog of the substantive offense." McMillan,
supra, at 88. Congress might permit a judge to sentence
an individual for murder though convicted only of making
an illegal lane change. See ante, at 10 (majority opinion).
But that is the kind of problem that the Due Process
Clause is well suited to cure. McMillan foresaw the possi
-
bility that judges would have to use their own judgment in
dealing with such a problem; but that is what judges are
there for. And, as Part I, supra, makes clear, the alternatives
are worse�not only practically, but, although the
majority refuses to admit it, constitutionally as well.
Historic practice, then, does not compel the result the
majority reaches. And constitutional concerns counsel the
opposite.
18
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
III
The majority also overlooks important institutional
considerations. Congress and the States relied upon what
they believed was their constitutional power to decide,
within broad limits, whether to make a particular fact (a)
a sentencing factor or (b) an element in a greater crime.
They relied upon McMillan as guaranteeing the constitutional
validity of that proposition. They created sentencing
reform, an effort to change the criminal justice system
so that it reflects systematically not simply upon guilt or
innocence but also upon what should be done about this
now-guilty offender. Those efforts have spanned a generation.
They have led to state sentencing guidelines and the
Federal Sentencing Guideline system. E.g., ante, at 2-4
(O'CONNOR , J., dissenting) (describing sentencing reform
in the State of Washington). These systems are imperfect
and they yield far from perfect results, but I cannot believe
the Constitution forbids the state legislatures and
Congress to adopt such systems and to try to improve
them over time. Nor can I believe that the Constitution
hamstrings legislatures in the way that JUSTICE
O'CONNOR and I have discussed.
IV
Now, let us return to the question I posed at the outset.
Why does the Sixth Amendment permit a jury trial right
(in respect to a particular fact) to depend upon a legislative
labeling decision, namely, the legislative decision to
label the fact a sentencing fact , instead of an element of the
crime? The answer is that the fairness and effectiveness
of a sentencing system, and the related fairness and effectiveness
of the criminal justice system itself, depends upon
the legislature's possessing the constitutional authority
(within due process limits) to make that labeling decision.
To restrict radically the legislature's power in this respect,
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19
BREYER , J., dissenting
as the majority interprets the Sixth Amendment to do,
prevents the legislature from seeking sentencing systems
that are consistent with, and indeed may help to advance,
the Constitution's greater fairness goals.
To say this is not simply to express concerns about
fairness to defendants. It is also to express concerns about
the serious practical (or impractical) changes that the
Court's decision seems likely to impose upon the criminal
process; about the tendency of the Court's decision to
embed further plea bargaining processes that lack transparency
and too often mean nonuniform, sometimes arbitrary,
sentencing practices; about the obstacles the Court's
decision poses to legislative efforts to bring about greater
uniformity between real criminal conduct and real punishment;
and ultimately about the limitations that the
Court imposes upon legislatures' ability to make democratic
legislative decisions. Whatever the faults of guidelines
systems�and there are many�they are more likely
to find their cure in legislation emerging from the experience
of, and discussion among, all elements of the criminal
justice community, than in a virtually unchangeable
constitutional decision of this Court.
V
Taken together these three sets of considerations,
concerning consequences, concerning history, concerning
institutional reliance, leave me where I was in Ap-
prendi, i.e., convinced that the Court is wrong. Until now,
I would have thought the Court might have limited Ap-
prendi so that its underlying principle would not undo
sentencing reform efforts. Today's case dispels that illusion.
At a minimum, the case sets aside numerous state
efforts in that direction. Perhaps the Court will distinguish
the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, but I am uncertain
how. As a result of today's decision, federal prosecutors,
like state prosecutors, must decide what to do next,
20
BLAKELY v. WASHINGTON
BREYER , J., dissenting
how to handle tomorrow's case.
Consider some of the matters that federal prosecutors
must know about, or guess about, when they prosecute
their next case: (1) Does today's decision apply in full force
to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines? (2) If so, must the
initial indictment contain all sentencing factors, charged
as "elements" of the crime? (3) What, then, are the evidentiary
rules? Can the prosecution continue to use, say
presentence reports, with their conclusions reflecting
layers of hearsay? Cf. Crawford v. Washington, 541 U. S.
__, __, __-__ (2004) (slip op., at 27, 32-33) (clarifying the
Sixth Amendment's requirement of confrontation with
respect to testimonial hearsay). Are the numerous cases
of this Court holding that a sentencing judge may consider
virtually any reliable information still good law when
juries, not judges, are required to determine the matter?
See, e.g., United States v. Watts, 519 U. S. 148, 153-157
(1997) (per curiam) (evidence of conduct of which the defen
-
dant has been acquitted may be considered at sentencing).
Cf. Witte v. United States, 515 U. S. 389, 399-401 (1995)
(evidence of uncharged criminal conduct used in determining
sentence). (4) How are juries to deal with highly
complex or open-ended Sentencing Guidelines obviously
written for application by an experienced trial judge? See,
e.g., USSG �3B1.1 (requiring a greater sentence when the
defendant was a leader of a criminal activity that involved
four or more participants or was " otherwise extensive"
(emphasis added)); ��3D1.1-3D1.2 (highly complex "multiple
count" rules); �1B1.3 (relevant conduct rules).
Ordinarily, this Court simply waits for cases to arise in
which it can answer such questions. But this case affects
tens of thousands of criminal prosecutions, including
federal prosecutions. Federal prosecutors will proceed
with those prosecutions subject to the risk that all defendants
in those cases will have to be sentenced, perhaps
tried, anew. Given this consequence and the need for
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21
BREYER , J., dissenting
certainty, I would not proceed further piecemeal; rather, I
would call for further argument on the ramifications of the
concerns I have raised. But that is not the Court's view.
For the reasons given, I dissent.