In his 10-page motion filed two days after the sentence was given, David Heilberg, Kroboth’s attorney, argues that his client’s sentence is in violation of Kroboth’s Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury. Heilberg reasons that, because a jury would not have had the power to sentence Kroboth to a term greater than that which the defense or prosecution had recommended, then a judge does not have that power either. Moreover, Heilberg argues, Kroboth’s Sixth Amendment rights were further violated by the sentence because it was based on “facts not established by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt or admitted by the Defendant.”
According to Heilberg, this is the first time such an issue has been raised in Virginia.
Albemarle Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Cynthia Murray, who is prosecuting the case, has not yet responded, but did say after sentencing that the Commonwealth was “pleased with the outcome” of the case.—Nell Boeschenstein