The Appellate Division partially premised its conclusion that the trial court’s sentence shocked the judicial conscience on a comparison between defendant’s sentence and sentences recounted in sixteen Appellate Division decisions. It suggested that the sentence was an abuse of discretion because it was not “shown to be in accord” with sentences imposed in similar circumstances
This Court, however, has never imposed on a trial court the obligation to demonstrate that a sentence comports with sentences imposed by other courts in similar cases. The Yarbough guidelines promote proportionality not by a comparative analysis of the sentencing practices of different courts, but by focusing the trial court on the “facts relating to” the defendant’s crimes. Here, the trial court properly focused on the case before it, and on the devastating impact of defendant’s crimes.
We recognize, as the trial court recognized, that defendant may spend the rest of his life in jail. We agree with the trial court, however, that its task was not to ensure defendant’s eventual release, but to devise a sentence commensurate with defendant’s crimes.
Defendant’s consecutive terms do not violate statutory or judicial guidelines for sentencing, and they do not shock the judicial conscience. There was no abuse of the trial court’s sentencing discretion in this case. The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed, and the sentence imposed by the trial court is reinstated.
In writing that there is no requirement that a sentence comport with sentences imposed in similar cases, the Court overlooks their own precedent. In State v. Pillot, 115 N.J. 558, 576 (1989), the Court held that our justice system must embrace an institutional commitment to achieving greater uniformity and parity.