Title 18 › Part PART II— - CRIMINAL PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 227— - SENTENCES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER A— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 3559
Sorts crimes by the longest jail time the law allows and gives each a letter class. If the maximum is life or death, it is a Class A felony. If 25 years or more, Class B. If less than 25 but 10 or more years, Class C. If less than 10 but 5 or more years, Class D. If less than 5 but more than 1 year, Class E. If 1 year or less but more than 6 months, Class A misdemeanor. If 6 months or less but more than 30 days, Class B misdemeanor. If 30 days or less but more than 5 days, Class C misdemeanor. If 5 days or less, or no jail time is allowed, it is an infraction. Crimes put into a class get the usual rules that go with that class, but the top jail time used for any case is the maximum that the specific crime allows. Requires life sentences in several serious situations. A person gets life if convicted of a “serious violent felony” and already has final convictions on separate earlier occasions for either (A) two or more serious violent felonies, or (B) one or more serious violent felonies plus one or more serious drug offenses, and each later offense happened after the prior conviction. “Serious violent felony” includes murder, manslaughter (not involuntary), assault with intent to murder, certain sexual crimes, abusive sexual contact, kidnapping, aircraft piracy, robbery, carjacking, extortion, arson, using or possessing firearms in certain crimes, attempts or conspiracies to commit those crimes, and any other crime punishable by 10 years or more that involves use or risk of physical force. Robbery and some other crimes do not count toward this life rule if the defendant proves clearly that no weapon or threat was used and no one died or suffered serious injury. Arson does not count if the defendant proves clearly it posed no risk to human life and they reasonably believed that. Federal rules about giving notice of prior drug convictions (21 U.S.C. 851(a)) apply. The death penalty can still be used where allowed. People whose only federal connection is crimes on Indian land are not covered unless the tribe agrees. If a prior conviction used to trigger life is later overturned because it was unconstitutional or the person is found innocent, the sentence must be redone to any sentence that was possible when first sentenced. There are other special life or minimum sentences. If the victim was under 14, died, and the defendant did the severe conduct listed in section 3591(a)(2), the defendant gets life unless death is imposed; the court may lower the sentence for substantial help or other good cause. A federal sex offense against a minor leads to life if the defendant has a earlier sex conviction also involving a minor; “minor” means under 17. Some offenses (like certain enticement or transport crimes) do not count if the defendant proves the act was consensual, would not be punishable by more than one year under the state law where it happened, or no sexual act occurred. For crimes of violence against someone under 18, murder carries life or at least 30 years (death possible in certain cases), kidnapping or maiming carries life or at least 25 years, and crimes causing serious bodily injury or involving a dangerous weapon carry life or at least 10 years. If a person knowingly registers a domain name in a way that hides who registered it and then uses that name in a felony, the maximum prison for that felony is doubled or increased by 7 years, whichever is less. “Falsely registers” means hiding or blocking effective identification or contact with the registrant. The term “domain name” uses the usual definition from the Trademark Act of 1946.
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Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 3559
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73