Oregon v. Ice was decided today.  (Here at Cornell).  5-4 with  a wacky  split to say that juries do not need to find facts necessary to impose consecutive sentences.  Roberts, Scalia, Souter, and Thomas were the four.
I haven't read the opinions.  The result is certainly disappointing, especially when you consider how close--and weird--the vote was.  I thought Ginsburg and Stevens were true Blakely believers.  (We know after Booker that Justice Breyer is a traitor to the cause.)  And maybe they are and just don't think the principle applies to consecutive sentences.
Although I don't blog about my own cases, I will say that I am going to have to abandon some pending post-conviction claims based on Blakely and consecutive sentences.
This leaves two Blakely shoes to drop--well, a boot and a slipper.  The boot is retroactivity--full, to the beginning of time, or merely to Apprendi.  ("As our precedents make clear . . ." Justice Scalia wrote in Blakely.)
The slipper is whether juvenile adjudications without jury trials are "prior convictions."  Most courts seems to have said, "Yes."  I do not think that can possibly be correct and that the majority of courts that take the position are dodging Blakely similarly to the way they dodged Apprendi for years--except Kansas.
More about Ice after I actually read the opinions.
 
