Court
News Ohio
New
Felony Sentencing Guidelines
Take Effect
By Jenna Gant
April 1, 2013
Senate
Bill 160 clears up ambiguity
in sentencing those who commit fourth and fifth degree felonies.
Ohio
judges can now sentence those
who commit fourth and fifth degree felonies, the lowest felony levels,
to
prison for a first time offense in more cases. The new Ohio bill went
into
effect on March 22.
In
September 2010, Senate Bill 86
limited the ability of judges to send many first-time felons to prison
for
committing fourth and fifth degree felonies. Those typically include
drug
possession, various thefts, and some assaults.
“This
became controversial because
certain sexual offenders and persons who betrayed the public trust,
like theft
in office, were no longer eligible for prison,” said David Diroll,
criminal
sentencing commission director.
The
Ohio General Assembly then
passed Senate Bill 160 in December 2012.
Diroll said the new legislation means
judges can now directly sentence
an offender with a fourth or fifth degree felony to prison on a first
offense
if the crime involves a firearm, physical harm in many situations, a
bail or
bond violation, a violation of a community sanction imposed earlier,
any sexual
offense, any criminal act done for hire, or if the offender abused
certain
positions of trust such as in public office or law enforcement.
Ohio
Common Pleas Judges
Association President Howard “Hank” Harcha said the new bill clears up
a lot of
questions judges had with the previous legislation. He said some judges
would
send low felony offenders for certain crimes to prison while others
would not.
“It
clears up some of the ambiguity
created by Senate Bill 86,” Judge Harcha said. “Many judges found the
language
of this statute prevented the imposition of a prison sentence for the
lower
felony offenders.”
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