| | Current law provides for the sentencing enhancement by one | class if the defendant had 2 or more prior convictions of certain | crimes, except for a conviction for stalking if the prior | convictions have already served to enhance the sentencing class. | The bill broadens this exclusion to include any crime in which a | prior conviction has already served to enhance the class of the | crime. |
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| | This bill clarifies that when 2 or more provisions in Title | 17-A, section 1252 are pled and proved by the State to enhance | the class of the crime these provisions may be applied | successively as long as those to be made successive contain | different class enhancement factors. For example, if the State | pled and proved that the Class D crime of reckless conduct was | committed with the use of a dangerous weapon and, at the time of | its commission, the defendant had been convicted of 2 or more | qualifying crimes, the class of the reckless conduct would be | elevated successively from Class D to Class C and from Class C to | Class B because subsections 4 and 4-A constitute enhancement | factors reflecting different public policy concerns. |
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| | This bill removes the current exception for eligibility for | deferred disposition, which is that the crime expressly provides | that one or more punishment alternatives it authorizes may not be | suspended. It also is important to remove this exception in | order to allow the flexibility in sentencing options now | available under Title 17-A, section 1348-B, subsection 1 and to | recognize the fact that the Legislature also recently added a | mandatory minimum fine to the Maine Criminal Code crime for | assault and all drug crimes in Title 17-A, chapter 45. |
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| | The bill removes that portion of the paragraph authorizing | judicial fact-finding at the sentencing hearing and requires | instead that "accompanied by sexual assault" be pleaded and | proved beyond a reasonable doubt to the fact-finder at the trial. | The change is required under both the United States Constitution | and the Constitution of Maine because "accompanied by sexual | assault" is a fact incident to attempted murder or murder that | makes the person a "repeat sexual assault offender" who | consequently is subject to a term of imprisonment for any term of | years rather than a lesser definite term as specified under Title | 17-A, section 1252, subsection 2. See Blakely v. Washington, 542 | U.S. 296 (2004); State v. Schofield, 2005 ME 82, 876 A.2d 43. |
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