The charge of racketeering carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years, and there is no indication just how much time, if any, that the Randallstown woman will receive. Sentencing has been set off until January of next year for the first time offender. A deferred sentencing date is not uncommon in federal court, especially for a first time offender, but setting sentencing off for 5 months is a little out of the ordinary. The defense lawyer for the former jail guard stated that the 5-month layoff would allow her time to establish mitigating factors that will be presented at sentencing. What the defense lawyer did not mention was probably that the woman has agreed to testify against her piers and the inmate co-conspirators should any of these cases go to trial. Federal prosecutors typically offer better plea bargains to whoever first agrees to plead guilty in a conspiracy case. The one condition is usually that the defendant agrees to testify as a witness for the government if called upon.
The judge presiding over this specific case has already stated in open court that the woman may face a harsher than normal sentence because she was in a position of authority, and took advantage of that authority. On the other hand the judge added that she might receive a break for pleading guilty so quickly. All in all it seems that the federal judge has not tipped her hand one way or another on a possible sentence. The other 12 female guards have yet to change their pleas of not guilty, but in the next month or two we may see most of them plead guilty. The evidence described in the indictment certainly appears to be both significant and credible. The blog will follow these numerous cases as they play out in federal court, although it may be months before each of the defendant’s cases come to a conclusion.
Benjamin Herbst is a federal criminal defense lawyer practicing in both Baltimore and Greenbelt. Contact Benjamin at The Herbst Firm for a free consultation about your case.
Resources
Baltimore guard pleads guilty to racketeering in jail scandal, washingtonpost.com.