Stop Ignoring Double Jeopardy

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Dave70968

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http://reason.com/archives/2018/12/05/stop-ignoring-double-jeopardy

No one disputes that Terance Gamble, who was convicted of second-degree robbery in 2008, broke the law by possessing the pistol that a police officer found in his car during a traffic stop in Mobile, Alabama, seven years later. In fact, he broke two laws, since both Alabama and the federal government bar people with felony records from owning guns.

Does that mean Gamble committed two offenses? That's the question at the heart of a case that gives the Supreme Court an opportunity to reconsider a longstanding but misbegotten exception to the constitutional ban on double jeopardy.

Gamble, whose case the Court will hear on Thursday, was prosecuted and sentenced twice for illegal gun possession, once in state court and once in federal court. As a result, he will remain in prison until February 2020, which is three years later than he would have been released if his punishment had been limited to the state sentence.


On the face of it, Gamble's double punishment violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, which prohibits trying someone twice "for the same offense." But according to a doctrine the Supreme Court first enunciated in 1852, Gamble was punished for two distinct offenses: one against the state of Alabama and one against the federal government.

As Gamble's lawyers show in their Supreme Court brief, this "separate sovereigns" or "dual sovereignty" doctrine contradicts the original public understanding of the Double Jeopardy Clause, which embodies an ancient principle with deep roots in English common law. The relevant English cases, early legal commentary in the United States, and two 1820 decisions by the Court "unequivocally rejected the notion that two sovereigns could punish a defendant for the same crime."

As a brief filed by University of Utah law professor Paul Cassell and three other legal scholars explains, "there was no dual sovereignty doctrine before the mid-19th century." The Court initially embraced the idea in defense of slavery and later used it to shore up Prohibition.

"The Court invented dual sovereignty largely to prevent free states from blocking the recapture of fugitive slaves," Cassell et al. write. The justices worried that free states would undermine the Fugitive Slave Act by giving abolitionists a slap on the wrist for harboring runaways, thereby preventing federal prosecution.

In the 1920s, the justices had similar concerns about state resistance to enforcement of the 18th Amendment. "If a state were to punish the manufacture, transportation and sale of intoxicating liquor by small or nominal fines," the Court worried in a 1922 decision reaffirming the dual sovereignty doctrine, "the race of offenders to the courts of that state to plead guilty and secure immunity from federal prosecution for such acts would not make for respect for the federal statute."

Thanks to the Court's ahistorical, result-oriented invention of the dual sovereignty doctrine, defendants like Gamble can be punished twice for the same crime, while others who are acquitted in one court can be tried again in another. The arbitrary power that option gives prosecutors is especially dangerous in light of the bloated federal criminal code, which has expanded so much during the last 60 years that no one has managed to count the offenses it includes.

Overlap between state and federal crimes, once rare, is now commonplace. "Given this explosion of federal crimes," Gamble's lawyers note, "nearly every crime can be charged both in state court and in federal court."

Justice Department guidelines are supposed to ensure that prosecutors are selective in deciding when federal interests have not been sufficiently vindicated in state court. But if a run-of-the-mill gun case like Gamble's qualifies, anything can, and the finality of state criminal proceedings is subject to the untrammeled whims of federal prosecutors.

The Trump administration argues that "any concerns of potential unfairness from particular separate prosecutions are best addressed by policymakers." But that unfairness has already been addressed by the Double Jeopardy Clause, if only the Supreme Court would stop pretending otherwise.​

The article obviously has an agenda, but the idea is an interesting one, and a long-standing one (note the reference to the original 1852 precedent). We've discussed here many times the fact that marijuana remains illegal at the federal level despite being legalized in several states (to varying degrees and purposes). This is the root behind a lot of that: the idea that two (or more) different levels of government can criminalize the same act and each may try a defendant. It's not necessarily just high-level crimes, either; I don't find anything that would prevent a state- and local-level prosecution for the same crime (think of two jurisdictions, state and local, who both have traffic laws--one could easily piggyback off of the other to write a second traffic citation after the first one was prosecuted, making easy revenue).

For myself, I find the idea distasteful, but for the more fundamental reason Sullum addresses: fed.gov is supposed to have very limited subject-matter jurisdiction, and most of these dual-sovereignty cases simply wouldn't arise if the feds would just stay within their lane. Absent a miracle, though, that seems vanishingly unlikely.

What think y'all?
 

okierider

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Do not know who gets first crack at prosecution but once the guilty verdict came in either state or federal, why spend the Peoples money to prosecute again........ waste that money fools.
 

C_Hallbert

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http://reason.com/archives/2018/12/05/stop-ignoring-double-jeopardy

No one disputes that Terance Gamble, who was convicted of second-degree robbery in 2008, broke the law by possessing the pistol that a police officer found in his car during a traffic stop in Mobile, Alabama, seven years later. In fact, he broke two laws, since both Alabama and the federal government bar people with felony records from owning guns.

Does that mean Gamble committed two offenses? That's the question at the heart of a case that gives the Supreme Court an opportunity to reconsider a longstanding but misbegotten exception to the constitutional ban on double jeopardy.

Gamble, whose case the Court will hear on Thursday, was prosecuted and sentenced twice for illegal gun possession, once in state court and once in federal court. As a result, he will remain in prison until February 2020, which is three years later than he would have been released if his punishment had been limited to the state sentence.


On the face of it, Gamble's double punishment violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, which prohibits trying someone twice "for the same offense." But according to a doctrine the Supreme Court first enunciated in 1852, Gamble was punished for two distinct offenses: one against the state of Alabama and one against the federal government.

As Gamble's lawyers show in their Supreme Court brief, this "separate sovereigns" or "dual sovereignty" doctrine contradicts the original public understanding of the Double Jeopardy Clause, which embodies an ancient principle with deep roots in English common law. The relevant English cases, early legal commentary in the United States, and two 1820 decisions by the Court "unequivocally rejected the notion that two sovereigns could punish a defendant for the same crime."

As a brief filed by University of Utah law professor Paul Cassell and three other legal scholars explains, "there was no dual sovereignty doctrine before the mid-19th century." The Court initially embraced the idea in defense of slavery and later used it to shore up Prohibition.

"The Court invented dual sovereignty largely to prevent free states from blocking the recapture of fugitive slaves," Cassell et al. write. The justices worried that free states would undermine the Fugitive Slave Act by giving abolitionists a slap on the wrist for harboring runaways, thereby preventing federal prosecution.

In the 1920s, the justices had similar concerns about state resistance to enforcement of the 18th Amendment. "If a state were to punish the manufacture, transportation and sale of intoxicating liquor by small or nominal fines," the Court worried in a 1922 decision reaffirming the dual sovereignty doctrine, "the race of offenders to the courts of that state to plead guilty and secure immunity from federal prosecution for such acts would not make for respect for the federal statute."

Thanks to the Court's ahistorical, result-oriented invention of the dual sovereignty doctrine, defendants like Gamble can be punished twice for the same crime, while others who are acquitted in one court can be tried again in another. The arbitrary power that option gives prosecutors is especially dangerous in light of the bloated federal criminal code, which has expanded so much during the last 60 years that no one has managed to count the offenses it includes.

Overlap between state and federal crimes, once rare, is now commonplace. "Given this explosion of federal crimes," Gamble's lawyers note, "nearly every crime can be charged both in state court and in federal court."

Justice Department guidelines are supposed to ensure that prosecutors are selective in deciding when federal interests have not been sufficiently vindicated in state court. But if a run-of-the-mill gun case like Gamble's qualifies, anything can, and the finality of state criminal proceedings is subject to the untrammeled whims of federal prosecutors.

The Trump administration argues that "any concerns of potential unfairness from particular separate prosecutions are best addressed by policymakers." But that unfairness has already been addressed by the Double Jeopardy Clause, if only the Supreme Court would stop pretending otherwise.​

The article obviously has an agenda, but the idea is an interesting one, and a long-standing one (note the reference to the original 1852 precedent). We've discussed here many times the fact that marijuana remains illegal at the federal level despite being legalized in several states (to varying degrees and purposes). This is the root behind a lot of that: the idea that two (or more) different levels of government can criminalize the same act and each may try a defendant. It's not necessarily just high-level crimes, either; I don't find anything that would prevent a state- and local-level prosecution for the same crime (think of two jurisdictions, state and local, who both have traffic laws--one could easily piggyback off of the other to write a second traffic citation after the first one was prosecuted, making easy revenue).

For myself, I find the idea distasteful, but for the more fundamental reason Sullum addresses: fed.gov is supposed to have very limited subject-matter jurisdiction, and most of these dual-sovereignty cases simply wouldn't arise if the feds would just stay within their lane. Absent a miracle, though, that seems vanishingly unlikely.

What think y'all?

Double Jeopardy should be prohibited in accordance with the US Constitution.


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Dave70968

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Do not know who gets first crack at prosecution but once the guilty verdict came in either state or federal, why spend the Peoples money to prosecute again........ waste that money fools.

I agree this, this is a misappropriation of resources

What is the incentive for the federal government to bring charges that duplicate state charges?

First to file, though the feds could no doubt assert superiority. I agree with the idea of not wasting resources on duplicate convictions--for instance, Timothy McVeigh never stood trial on his 168 counts of murder, just on 19 federal counts. Given the sentence he got from the feds, anything in state court would have been a waste of taxpayer dollars.

A more insidious case, though, is where the defendant is acquitted, then tried again for the same acts under a different sovereign. The officers who beat Rodney King went through that--acquitted in state court, tried (and convicted) on federal charges. Regardless of your opinion of the outcome of that one (I'll refrain from mine, as it's not germane), it seems to fly directly in contravention to the idea of a prohibition on double jeopardy. The history of the dual-sovereignty doctrine is an ugly one as well, as the article points out (though there's no question that the feds did have the authority to prosecute on alcohol charges, given the Eighteenth Amendment).

It swings the other way, too--states often criminalize things that the feds criminalized first. State-level bans on convicted felons having guns generally arose after the federal prohibition, and state-level bans on having unregistered NFA items by definition followed the federal law--they couldn't have been enacted prior to the enactment of the NFA because that's what created the registration in the first place. It's nothing more than formalized charge-stacking.

Interestingly, charging multiple offenses--including lesser included offenses--under the same sovereign for the same overt acts do fall within the ambit of the Double Jeopardy Clause. In order to convict on two different crimes, the two crimes must each have at least one element that the other lacks. Lesser included offenses can both be charged, but are an either-or proposition for conviction; conviction on the greater offense includes all of the elements of the lesser, plus something additional, foreclosing the option of convicting on the lesser in addition to the greater, and convicting on the lesser and acquitting the greater closes the door on the greater forever.

But let two charges be brought by different sovereigns, even with identical elements (very common for drug charges), and the High Court (pun fully intended) thinks that's just fine.
 

C_Hallbert

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First to file, though the feds could no doubt assert superiority. I agree with the idea of not wasting resources on duplicate convictions--for instance, Timothy McVeigh never stood trial on his 168 counts of murder, just on 19 federal counts. Given the sentence he got from the feds, anything in state court would have been a waste of taxpayer dollars.

A more insidious case, though, is where the defendant is acquitted, then tried again for the same acts under a different sovereign. The officers who beat Rodney King went through that--acquitted in state court, tried (and convicted) on federal charges. Regardless of your opinion of the outcome of that one (I'll refrain from mine, as it's not germane), it seems to fly directly in contravention to the idea of a prohibition on double jeopardy. The history of the dual-sovereignty doctrine is an ugly one as well, as the article points out (though there's no question that the feds did have the authority to prosecute on alcohol charges, given the Eighteenth Amendment).

It swings the other way, too--states often criminalize things that the feds criminalized first. State-level bans on convicted felons having guns generally arose after the federal prohibition, and state-level bans on having unregistered NFA items by definition followed the federal law--they couldn't have been enacted prior to the enactment of the NFA because that's what created the registration in the first place. It's nothing more than formalized charge-stacking.

Interestingly, charging multiple offenses--including lesser included offenses--under the same sovereign for the same overt acts do fall within the ambit of the Double Jeopardy Clause. In order to convict on two different crimes, the two crimes must each have at least one element that the other lacks. Lesser included offenses can both be charged, but are an either-or proposition for conviction; conviction on the greater offense includes all of the elements of the lesser, plus something additional, foreclosing the option of convicting on the lesser in addition to the greater, and convicting on the lesser and acquitting the greater closes the door on the greater forever.

But let two charges be brought by different sovereigns, even with identical elements (very common for drug charges), and the High Court (pun fully intended) thinks that's just fine.

When judgements of the high court fly in the face of framed Constitutional limitations, whether it is for expedience or due to transient political bias, it undermines the traditional protections that have marked and sustained the freedoms and system of justice which are the framework, spirit and essence of our heritage.


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dennishoddy

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It's not double jeopardy per se as the OP is commenting on, but I've always had issues where a person is declared innocent of any crime in a court of law, yet civil charges can be brought that don't bring the preponderance of evidence into play like a criminal trial.
An example would be the OJ murder trial, found innocent and sued by the family successfully.
 

Dave70968

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It's not double jeopardy per se as the OP is commenting on, but I've always had issues where a person is declared innocent of any crime in a court of law, yet civil charges can be brought that don't bring the preponderance of evidence into play like a criminal trial.
An example would be the OJ murder trial, found innocent and sued by the family successfully.
At the risk of sounding pedantic, I'm going to clarify something: American courts don't find anybody "innocent," just "not guilty," the latter meaning that "the prosecution didn't meet its burden of proof." I mention it because there are some systems that have three possible outcomes: guilty, not guilty, and innocent. The first and last are declarative, the middle is simply "there's not enough evidence to convict," but isn't actually an exoneration. The American "not guilty" is similarly not an exoneration (we don't have provisions for that in our system).

There's a big difference between civil court and criminal, both substantially and procedurally. Subtantially, the cases are brought by different parties because the "wronged" party is different in each type of case. In civil court, it's individuals who are wronged. You burn down my house, I'm out a house; hit my car, and my car (and maybe me) is damaged. Criminal cases are different: they're brought by the state on behalf of the people (some jurisdictions even style them as "The People vs. So-and-so," instead of "State vs. So-and-so"). The theory is that your wrongful actions are harmful to an orderly society as a whole, which instituted the government to secure and protect its rights. The standards of proof are different ("preponderance" in civil, "beyond a reasonable doubt" in criminal), and the nature of the remedy is different: cash (or certain limited other means) in civil to directly compensate the party harmed, vs. forfeiture to the state and/or incarceration as punishment: the state doesn't draw benefit or compensation from the punishment (in theory), but punishes your misdeed and deters others (again, in theory).

Wikipedia's article on the Double Jeopardy Clause is pretty good, and discusses several well-known cases (OJ Simpson, McVeigh and Nichols, Rodney King). As a personal point of interest, the article also mentions the Petite policy; when my dad* interned in law school for the Assistant U.S. Attorney's office, he wrote a brief in United States v. Bruce Thompson, 579 F.2d 1184 (10th Cir. 1978) that the AUSA presented exactly as he wrote it; his citation to Sullivan v. United States (mentioned in paragraph 22) was what swung Judge Holloway's opinion...and Judge Holloway's own clerk didn't find that case. Again, just a personal story--the issue in Thompson wasn't really a substantive double-jeopardy issue, just an internal DOJ policy.

* Yes, being a lawyer is a genetic disease. And yes, forty years later, dad's still miffed that his brief was presented exactly as he wrote it, and he got absolutely no credit or mention anywhere, even from the AUSA.
 

dennishoddy

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Great explanation. I worded my response wrong, but I'm not in the business, so my bad although the difference in innocent and not guilty seem to be the same.
 

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