WTF?
Excuse me if I've been asleep a long time, but ... the last time I knew, the standard of proof in a criminal case was not "by a preponderance of the evidence", it was "beyond a reasonable doubt". And then the high court refused to hear an appeal?
Somebody just got railroaded here, and if this stands up, it's a very, very dangerous precedent. What's the next step? Presumption of guilt instead of presumption of innocence? Eliminating the jury altogether and going to an inquisitorial court system like, say, Italy's? Perhaps we could allow secret evidence in all trials, not just ones where someone within a half-mile radius said the word "terrorist", and deny all defendants the right to confront their accusers, hear and contest evidence presented against them, or know the charges against them.
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His acquitted conduct was given as a reason to deviate upwards outside of the guidelines, but so far I've found no reporting that says the sentence was above statutory limits.
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That said, I haven't been able to find an actual reference online stating what Wisconsin sentencing limits are for drug offenses, though I was able to find that Wisconsin classifies powder cocaine as a schedule II drug. So I can only go by my recollection of what I read at the time.