I previously blogged on my review of 100 white collar related cases of Judge Sotomayor here. TRAC reporting now confirms empirically what I found. See here. They conclude that
"A case-by-case examination of the sentences imposed by Judge Sonia Sotomayor during her six years as a trial judge in the Southern District of New York has determined that she was more likely than her colleagues to send a person to prison. . . this was particularly true for convicted white-collar criminals."
They provide charts and numbers that confirm their findings. They used a definition of white collar that may have been more restrictive than I used as they compared only 47 of her cases with a total of 1,570 of all judges in New York's Southern District. They found that
"For this group of criminals, Judge Sotomayor's colleagues sent 43% to prison, with only one out of three of the total receiving a sentence of six months or longer. Judge Sotomayor, in contrast, handed out prison time more often. In her case, a bit more than half (52%) were given some prison time and nearly half (48%) — rather than one-third (34%) — were given a prison sentence of 6 months or more."
Hats off to TRAC for providing this empirical evidence.
(esp) (w/ disclosure that she is a B.S. graduate of Syracuse U.- home of the Trac Reports).
One response to “The Numbers Confirm that Sotomayor is “Tough on White Collar Crime””
White collar crime will continue to grow and become one of the biggest threats to society as the amounts stolen accumulate. The justice system has to address this issue. A transparent justice system with open statistics is a must.
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