What She [Sally Q. Yates] Said….
I have written often about the need to reform the Sentencing Guideline for antitrust violations. U.S.S.G. 2R1.1. (here)(here)(here). My major beef is that the antitrust guideline measures culpability primarily by the volume of commerce subject to the agreement, to the exclusion of many other very relevant factors. The cartel boss who engages the firm in the illegal conduct is tagged with the same volume of commerce as the employee who is assigned the task of going to cartel meetings to work out the details.
Sally Q. Yates served in the Justice Department from 1989 to 2017 as an assistant U.S. attorney, U.S. attorney, deputy attorney general and, briefly this year, as acting attorney general. Ms. Yates described the problem with overweighting a quantifiable factor better than I ever have, though in a slightly different context:
“But there’s a big difference between a cartel boss and a low-level courier. As the Sentencing Commission found, part of the problem with harsh mandatory-minimum laws passed a generation ago is that they use the weight of the drugs involved in the offense as a proxy for seriousness of the crime — to the exclusion of virtually all other considerations, including the dangerousness of the offender.”
Sally Yates, Making America Scared Won’t Make us Safer. Washington Post, June 23, 2017
For the record, the issue of mandatory minimums is a far more serious issue than the problem of sentencing individual criminal antitrust offenders. While I hope for antitrust sentencing reform, it is not really a “need.” The antitrust sentencing guidelines are so divorced from actual culpability that virtually no individual–even a cartel boss–is sentenced to a guideline range term of imprisonment.
Thanks for reading.