Open source traffic analysis

ABA Home
Sentencing/Post Conviction

‘Libby Motions’ Likely

Posted Jul 5, 2007, 10:26 am CST
By Debra Cassens Weiss

President Bush sounded a lot like a criminal defense lawyer when he gave his reasons for commuting the sentence of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby.

They are typical complaints about the federal system, Adam Liptak writes for the New York Times: Sentences are too long. Judges are allowed to consider facts that haven’t been proven to a jury. The defendant’s good contributions to society are overlooked.

Now defense lawyers will use those same arguments in their own cases, Alabama lawyer Susan James told the Times.

“What you’re going to see is people like me quoting President Bush in every pleading that comes across every federal judge’s desk,” said James. She represents former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman, sentenced to more than seven years in prison following a bribery conviction.

Law professor Ellen Podgor of Stetson University in St. Petersburg, Fla., said defense lawyers’ sentencing filings will probably be dubbed “Libby motions.” In effect, they will say, “My client should have got what Libby got, and here’s why.”

E-Mail This Story


(Separate multiple addresses with a comma.)




Share This Story

URL to share: http://www.abajournal.com/news/libby_motions_likely/

Title: ‘Libby Motions’ Likely


Comments

    Be the first to comment.


Commenting has expired on this post.



Subscribe

Get the ABA Journal the way you want it — in print, online, by e-mail — and when you want it — monthly, weekly, daily or as news breaks.



Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe to the mobile edition
Subscribe to the monthly magazine


Return to top