When a person is convicted of a ranked felony, the Sentencing Reform Act (SRA) applies and determines a specific sentence range within the statutory maximum. Sentences for felony offenses are determined by reference to a sentencing grid. The sentencing grid provides a standard range of months for the sentence, based on both the severity—seriousness level —of the offense, and the convicted person's offender score, which is based on the offender's criminal history. The offender score may vary from zero to nine plus points depending on certain factors. Some crimes will wash-out over time. That is, if the offender has spent a given amount of time in the community without committing another crime, the conviction will no longer count towards the offender's score. For example:
Under the Uniform Controlled Substances Act (act), controlled substances are defined as a drug, substance, or immediate precursor included in schedules I through V as set forth in federal or state laws, or federal or state board of pharmacy rules. The schedule a substance is placed in depends on its potential for abuse, whether there is a currently accepted medical use in treatment, and the safety substances and risk for dependence, as determined by the Pharmacy Quality Assurance Commission. Substances in schedule I are the most tightly controlled, while those in schedule V are the least tightly controlled. It is unlawful for any person to possess a controlled substance unless the substance was obtained directly from, or pursuant to, a valid prescription or order of a practitioner while acting in the course of the practitioner's professional practice, or except as otherwise authorized by the act. It is also unlawful to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance except as authorized by the act. A violation of the prohibitions is generally punishable as a class C felony.
Except for the crimes of manufacturing, delivering, or possessing with intent to manufacture a controlled substance, or any comparable out of state conviction, any conviction for a violation of the act, or any comparable out of state conviction, may not be included in the offender score if it has been more than ten years since the entry of judgment and sentence.