AFTER REMAND
This case was previously remanded for a resentencing.
People v Fisher,
On remand, the sentencing judge merely reread part of the original sentencing transcript and "reaffirmed” defendant’s original sentence of forty to sixty years. Our review of the transcript indicates that the sentencing court adopted the prosecutor’s recommended sentence of forty to sixty years. The court recited the following justification for this severe sentence:
*318 The note I made to myself before coming to court was that the defendant should either be sentenced for life or for a period of years whereby he would be incarcerated beyond the age of violence. That age normally that we look to where we find extremely seldom violent acts of this kind would be about 60 years of age, or somewhere in that range.
The defendant is 27 years old. In order for society to have some degree of assurance that the defendant would not do a like act under like circumstances, the defendant would have to be put in for a minimum of 33 years. That would get him to age 60. Forty years would get him to age 67.
This rationale is totally inappropriate, and derogates the bases for sentence reform which underlie the promulgation of the sentencing guidelines. The purpose of the sentencing guidelines is to ensure that criminal sentences are determined according to a consistent set of legally relevant factors which should be assigned equitable importance to all offenders.
People v Coles,
Remanded for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
