Pursuant to a plea bargain agreement, defendant pled guilty on April 13, 1988, to delivery of more than 50 grams but less than 225 grams of cocaine, MCL 333.7401(2)(a)(iii); MSA 14.15(7401)(2)(a)(iii). The factual basis of the plea was defendant’s admission that on February 2, 1988, he delivered a package of cocaine to an undercover police officer in exchange for $4,500. The package contained over eighty grams of cocaine. Defendant was sentenced on May 20, 1988, to from ten to twenty years imprisonment. He appeals as of right seeking resentencing. We affirm.
At sentencing, defendant and his attorney asserted that the life probation sentence authorized by the statute would be an appropriate penalty for defendant’s offense. However, the trial court con- *142 eluded from a consideration of defendant’s background, which included three prior felony convictions, the circumstances of the offense and other sentencing factors that the alternative penalty authorized by the statute should be imposed. Accordingly, defendant was sentenced to the statutory mandatory minimum of ten years imprisonment.
For the first time on appeal, defendant claims he should have been sentenced under the amendment to the statute, effective March 30, 1988, which eliminated the life probation option, reduced the mandatory minimum prison term to five years, and also gave the trial court discretion to depart from the mandatory minimum when there are substantial and compelling reasons to do so. See
Defendant also contends that the mandatory minimum prison term under the former statute constituted cruel and unusual punishment. Defendant asserts that the amendment to the statute *143 signals recognition by the Legislature that the mandatory minimum of ten years was cruel and unusual punishment. We disagree.
In
People v Regelin,
An analysis of the bill prepared by the Senate Fiscal Agency indicates the prime concern of the legislature was that many drug dealers were avoiding imprisonment by selling only a small quantity to a buyer upon the initial contact in case it turned out the buyer was an undercover narcotics officer. Hence, the law was amended to mandate imprisonment for the sale of even small quantities of illegal drugs as well as removing the option of lifetime probation for the sale of large quantities. In a concluding sentence, it was observed that some criticized the law for excessive rigidity in its prescription of mandatory prison terms. While the Legislature may have recognized the sentence under the existing statute to be excessively rigid, this is a far cry from concluding they acknowledged the existing provisions to be violative of the constitutional guarantees against cruel and unusual punishment.
This Court favors indeterminate sentencing and subscribes to the Socratic expression that "there is no greater injustice than to treat unequal things equally.” Hence, a sentencing court should be allowed wide latitude to fashion a sentence that will take into account whether the offender is a youthful first-time offender or a repeatedly convicted hard-core felon. Nevertheless, it is a legislative prerogative to prescribe sentences and, unless constitutional boundaries are crossed, it must be honored by the courts. People v Harmon [124 Mich App; 93;333 NW2d 591 (1983), lv den417 Mich 1100 .45 (1983)]; People v Piasecki,333 Mich 122 ;52 NW2d 626 (1952); Attorney General v Recorder’s Court Judge,341 Mich 461 ;67 NW2d 708 (1954).
*144
The Court went on to hold that the mandatory prison term under the statute at issue here (prior to amendment) did not constitute cruel and unusual punishment. Contrast
People v Schultz,
Affirmed.
