Davidian's Sentences Set Aside
Associated Press Online-June 05, 2000 10:55
By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court today set aside the lengthy prison sentences
given to five Branch Davidians who survived a 1993 siege at the sect's Waco,
Texas, compound. The court ruled that a federal judge misused an anti-gun law to
increase their punishment.
The unanimous decision makes it harder for courts to find lawbreakers deserve
extra time behind bars because they used or carried machine guns during their
crimes.
A federal law subjects anyone who used or carried a "firearm" during a violent
or drug-related crime to five years in prison. The term jumps to 30 years for
anyone who used or carried a "machine gun" during that same crime.
Federal appeals courts had split on whether determining use of a machine gun is
an element of the offense a jury must find beyond a reasonable doubt, or merely
a sentencing factor a judge gets to determine by a preponderance of the
evidence.
The nation's highest court said use of a firearm must be determined by the jury.
"We believe Congress intended the firearm type-related words it used ... to
refer to an element of a separate, aggravated crime," Justice Stephen G. Breyer
wrote for the court.
Five Davidians were convicted in 1994 in the killings of four federal agents
during a botched Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms raid on the compound
outside Waco.
The raid led to a 51-day standoff that ended when flames swept through the
compound. David Koresh and some 80 followers died during the inferno, some from
the fire and others from gunshot wounds.
A federal jury acquitted the five Davidians of murder and conspiracy-to-murder
charges but convicted them of voluntary manslaughter. Each was sentenced to 10
years in prison for that conviction. The jury also found them guilty of using
firearms.
The presiding judge tacked on 30-year sentences for four of them and a 10-year
sentence for the fifth after finding that each had used a machine gun.
Renos Avraam, Brad Eugene Branch, Jaime Castillo and Kevin Whitecliff drew the
30-year sentences; Graeme Craddock the 10-year term. Craddock also was sentenced
to a consecutive 10 years for using a hand grenade.
The jury never had been asked to determine what types of firearms the five had
used. The judge made that determination during sentencing.
In appealing their sentences, the Davidians relied heavily on a decision in
which the justices last year said carjackers cannot be given tougher sentences
unless a jury, not a judge, determines that victims were seriously injured
during that federal crime.
The case presumably will return to a federal trial court where new sentencing
hearings will be conducted. Today's decision did not suggest appropriate new
sentences.
The case is Castillo vs. U.S., 99-658.
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