FEDERALSupreme Court of the United States
2007

Gall v. United States

169 L. Ed. 2d 445Supreme Court of the United States • Decided 2007Enforced
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HOLDING

This Supreme Court case established that judges have broad discretion when setting criminal sentences, and appeals courts must use a lenient standard when reviewing them. The ruling means sentences can fall outside federal guidelines without requiring special justification. For construction subcontractors, this matters because it affects how contract disputes involving criminal conduct are handled and how sentencing in fraud or safety violation cases may proceed.

KEY FINDINGS

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Judges have significant flexibility in sentencing decisions and don't need extraordinary reasons to deviate from guidelines

FULL COURT OPINION