The Supreme Court granted cert this morning in Hill v. U.S., an appeal from the Seventh Circuit to address whether the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 can be applied to sentencing for an offense that occurred before the statute’s effective date.

The Fair Sentencing Act, which became effective August 3, 2010, raised the amount of crack cocaine necessary to trigger the 10-year mandatory minimum term from 50 to 280 grams, and the amount needed to trigger a 5-year mandatory minimum from 5 to 28 grams.

While oral arguments have not yet been set, Hill will attempt to persuade the Supreme Court that the Fair Sentencing Act should apply to any defendant sentenced after its enactment, regardless of when the underlying crime was committed.

The Court consolidated Hill v. U.S. with a second Seventh Circuit mandatory minimum appeal, Dorsey v. U.S.

Hill isn’t the only petitioner to earn a day before The Nine this week; the Court granted cert in three other cases as well:

  • Vasquez v. U.S.
  • Southern Union Company v. U.S.
  • Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.

For updates on these petitions, and other cases pending before the Supreme Court, add FindLaw’s Supreme Court blog to your RSS Feed.

Related Resources:

  • Hill v. U.S. (Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals)
  • No Injury in Fact, No Problem? SCOTUS Talks RESPA Rules (FindLaw’s Supreme Court blog)
  • Looking Ahead: Supreme Court December Oral Arguments (FindLaw’s Supreme Court blog)
  • No Surprise: Supreme Court Grants Individual Mandate Writs (FindLaw’s Supreme Court blog)

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