Most discussions of criminal justice focus on judges, juries, and sentencing laws. The single most powerful actor in the American criminal system, however, is usually the prosecutor โ and the most consequential decisions they make happen long before a courtroom. Prosecutorial discretion shapes which cases get charged, which charges stick, what pleas are offered, and which defendants effectively walk. Outcomes are determined more by these early choices than by anything that follows.
What discretion actually covers
A prosecutor decides whether to file charges based on the evidence police bring, which specific charges to bring, whether to seek enhancements (such as habitual offender or weapons enhancements), what plea offer to extend, and whether to accept a defense counter-offer. Each of these choices carries enormous weight. Charging a case as a felony rather than a misdemeanor changes the defendant’s eligibility for diversion programs, mandatory minimums, and collateral consequences like immigration status or housing eligibility. Adding a single enhancement can shift a sentencing exposure from probation to a decade in prison. None of these decisions are made in front of a judge, on the record, with adversarial review. They happen in offices, often based on internal guidelines that vary widely across jurisdictions and even between line prosecutors in the same office.
Why discretion produces uneven outcomes
Two defendants with identical conduct can face dramatically different outcomes depending on which county they’re charged in, which prosecutor catches the case, and what office policies are in effect that month. Studies of charging decisions have found significant disparities by race and geography, even after controlling for offense severity and prior history. Some of this reflects implicit bias, some reflects structural factors like which neighborhoods get policed more heavily, and some reflects differences in office priorities โ a DA running on a tough-on-crime platform charges differently than a reform-minded successor. The result is that “the law” as experienced by defendants is less the statute books and more the local prosecutor’s worldview. This is a constitutional system in form but a discretionary one in practice.
Plea bargaining and the trial penalty
Roughly 95 percent of criminal convictions come from plea bargains. Prosecutors structure plea offers to make trial functionally irrational โ accept three years now, or risk fifteen if you go to trial. The “trial penalty” is well-documented across jurisdictions and routinely amounts to a 200 to 500 percent sentencing differential. Defendants with weak cases plead out for the same reason innocent defendants sometimes do: the math of the offer makes refusing it too expensive. Judges have limited tools to police this dynamic, and appellate review of charging or plea decisions is nearly nonexistent. The coercion is structural rather than individual, but the effect is that prosecutors essentially set sentences for the vast majority of cases, with judges ratifying after the fact.
The takeaway
Understanding criminal outcomes means looking at the prosecutor, not the courtroom. Reform efforts that focus on judges, juries, or sentencing laws while ignoring charging discretion address the smaller part of the system. Discretion is where outcomes are made, and where transparency is most lacking.
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