News (Media Awareness Project) - US: High Court OKs Conspiracy Law's Broad Reach |
Title: | US: High Court OKs Conspiracy Law's Broad Reach |
Published On: | 2003-01-22 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-29 02:39:58 |
HIGH COURT OKS CONSPIRACY LAW'S BROAD REACH
Justices reverse a 9th Circuit ruling and unanimously agree that even minor
players can be charged with a major crime.
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the government's broad
power to imprison those who join a conspiracy to sell drugs or commit
terrorism, even when these purported conspirators do not carry out the
crime or when the plot has been foiled before they join it.
By law, a conspiracy is a type of guilt by association. It allows the
government to prosecute all those who are involved in a drug gang or
terrorist activity and to charge the minor players with a major crime.
Citing what he called the "vital importance" of conspiracy law in
prosecuting terrorists and drug dealers, U.S. Solicitor Gen. Theodore B.
Olson urged the Supreme Court to affirm the broad reach of conspiracy and
to overturn the narrower rule adopted by the U.S. 9th Circuit of Appeals
for the Western states.
Since 1997, the appeals court has thrown out conspiracy charges against
drug sellers who were picked up after agents had foiled a drug-selling plot.
In this reversal of the 9th Circuit, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously
that unwitting, would-be conspirators can be imprisoned for joining a plot
that has already been broken up.
"The essence of a conspiracy is an agreement to commit an unlawful act,"
said Justice Stephen G. Breyer. "That agreement is a distinct evil, which
may exist and be punished whether or not the substantive crime ensues."
Breyer said the law of conspiracy has been well-established for a long
time. "The view we endorse today is the view of almost all courts and
commentators, but for the 9th Circuit," he said.
Conspiracy charges also have figured prominently in the war on terrorism.
Because of the conspiracy law, federal prosecutors were able to bring
terrorism charges and seek the death penalty against Zacarias Moussaoui,
even though he was in jail in Minnesota when terrorists attacked the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001.
The indictment charged Moussaoui with conspiring to "commit aircraft
piracy" and "to murder U.S. employees." To win a conviction, prosecutors
need only link him to the Al Qaeda operatives in Europe who planned the
terrorist attacks.
Tuesday's Supreme Court decision revives the drug conspiracy convictions of
two men who picked up a truck that had been left in the parking lot of a
shopping mall near Boise, Idaho.
The day before, on Nov. 18, 1997, Nevada state police had stopped the truck
near Las Vegas and found inside 369 pounds of marijuana and 15 pounds of
cocaine. Together, the drugs were said to be worth more than $10 million.
The two drivers claimed to be ignorant of what was in the truck, but one of
them helped police set up a sting.
To keep on schedule, agents used a C-130 cargo plane to fly the drug-laden
truck to the Idaho shopping mall. The cooperating driver called a pager
number, and the person who returned the message promised to "call a
muchacho to come and get the truck," according to court records.
Three hours later as agents watched, Francisco Recio and Adrian Lopez-Meza
drove up in a blue car. Recio drove away in the truck, while Lopez-Meza
drove the car.
The two men were stopped and arrested, and they too claimed to be ignorant
of the drugs.
All four drivers were convicted on drug conspiracy charges.
Recio and Lopez-Meza, the latecomers, were each sentenced to more than 10
years in prison.
But the 9th Circuit, on a 2-1 vote, reversed their convictions, saying
these two "bit players" were probably "hired at the last minute." The
government had not proved the two were part of the drug conspiracy that
existed before the day the plot was foiled, said Judges James Browning of
San Francisco and Betty Fletcher of Seattle.
Nine of the circuit's 24 active judges in the Western region voted to
reconsider the decision, short of the 13 needed to review the panel's ruling.
However, the Supreme Court took up the government's appeal in U.S. vs. Recio.
"In our view, conspiracy law does not contain any 'automatic termination'
rule," Breyer said, so Recio and Lopez-Meza can be convicted even if they
joined the conspiracy after the police had seized the drugs.
"I'm disappointed, but not surprised," said M. Karl Shurtliff, a lawyer in
Boise who represented Recio. " All they got in this case was the four
drivers, not the big shots in Arizona who set this up."
Justices reverse a 9th Circuit ruling and unanimously agree that even minor
players can be charged with a major crime.
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the government's broad
power to imprison those who join a conspiracy to sell drugs or commit
terrorism, even when these purported conspirators do not carry out the
crime or when the plot has been foiled before they join it.
By law, a conspiracy is a type of guilt by association. It allows the
government to prosecute all those who are involved in a drug gang or
terrorist activity and to charge the minor players with a major crime.
Citing what he called the "vital importance" of conspiracy law in
prosecuting terrorists and drug dealers, U.S. Solicitor Gen. Theodore B.
Olson urged the Supreme Court to affirm the broad reach of conspiracy and
to overturn the narrower rule adopted by the U.S. 9th Circuit of Appeals
for the Western states.
Since 1997, the appeals court has thrown out conspiracy charges against
drug sellers who were picked up after agents had foiled a drug-selling plot.
In this reversal of the 9th Circuit, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously
that unwitting, would-be conspirators can be imprisoned for joining a plot
that has already been broken up.
"The essence of a conspiracy is an agreement to commit an unlawful act,"
said Justice Stephen G. Breyer. "That agreement is a distinct evil, which
may exist and be punished whether or not the substantive crime ensues."
Breyer said the law of conspiracy has been well-established for a long
time. "The view we endorse today is the view of almost all courts and
commentators, but for the 9th Circuit," he said.
Conspiracy charges also have figured prominently in the war on terrorism.
Because of the conspiracy law, federal prosecutors were able to bring
terrorism charges and seek the death penalty against Zacarias Moussaoui,
even though he was in jail in Minnesota when terrorists attacked the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001.
The indictment charged Moussaoui with conspiring to "commit aircraft
piracy" and "to murder U.S. employees." To win a conviction, prosecutors
need only link him to the Al Qaeda operatives in Europe who planned the
terrorist attacks.
Tuesday's Supreme Court decision revives the drug conspiracy convictions of
two men who picked up a truck that had been left in the parking lot of a
shopping mall near Boise, Idaho.
The day before, on Nov. 18, 1997, Nevada state police had stopped the truck
near Las Vegas and found inside 369 pounds of marijuana and 15 pounds of
cocaine. Together, the drugs were said to be worth more than $10 million.
The two drivers claimed to be ignorant of what was in the truck, but one of
them helped police set up a sting.
To keep on schedule, agents used a C-130 cargo plane to fly the drug-laden
truck to the Idaho shopping mall. The cooperating driver called a pager
number, and the person who returned the message promised to "call a
muchacho to come and get the truck," according to court records.
Three hours later as agents watched, Francisco Recio and Adrian Lopez-Meza
drove up in a blue car. Recio drove away in the truck, while Lopez-Meza
drove the car.
The two men were stopped and arrested, and they too claimed to be ignorant
of the drugs.
All four drivers were convicted on drug conspiracy charges.
Recio and Lopez-Meza, the latecomers, were each sentenced to more than 10
years in prison.
But the 9th Circuit, on a 2-1 vote, reversed their convictions, saying
these two "bit players" were probably "hired at the last minute." The
government had not proved the two were part of the drug conspiracy that
existed before the day the plot was foiled, said Judges James Browning of
San Francisco and Betty Fletcher of Seattle.
Nine of the circuit's 24 active judges in the Western region voted to
reconsider the decision, short of the 13 needed to review the panel's ruling.
However, the Supreme Court took up the government's appeal in U.S. vs. Recio.
"In our view, conspiracy law does not contain any 'automatic termination'
rule," Breyer said, so Recio and Lopez-Meza can be convicted even if they
joined the conspiracy after the police had seized the drugs.
"I'm disappointed, but not surprised," said M. Karl Shurtliff, a lawyer in
Boise who represented Recio. " All they got in this case was the four
drivers, not the big shots in Arizona who set this up."
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