My Recent Letter to a Federal Judge
by
William L. Anderson
by
William L. Anderson
Recently by William L. Anderson: Hi!
I’m an Evangelical With the U.S. Department of Justice, and I’m
Here to Lie to You
I recently
wrote this letter to a judge who will be sentencing a man who recently
was convicted of "honest services fraud," which is based upon a
"law" that I believe is unjust and immoral. (I have written about
this "law" here.)
The names of the judge and the man being sentenced have been omitted.
Your Honor:
I am writing
in connection with the recent conviction of "Mr. X" on
the charges of "honest services fraud" and "money
laundering." While I am an economist (I am an associate professor
of economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland), I also
have spent many years writing specifically on federal criminal law
and especially so-called white-collar crime. My work has been published
in academic journals and magazines such as Reason.
First, I need
to say that any conviction for "honest services fraud"
troubles me. If there is a vague criminal statute on the books,
this is it. If there is a criminal statute on the books that is,
de facto, an ex post facto law, this is it. About
a week ago, "Mr. X," after reading some of my work on
"honest services fraud," emailed me and asked if I would
write this letter. I’m not receiving a penny of compensation for
this, but am doing it, instead, because I am fully convinced that
any conviction under "honest services fraud" is
unjust and is an affront to our Constitution and the rule of law.
I say this
because there is no real hard and fast definition of "honest
services fraud." For example, I am writing this letter in my
university office on a university computer. I am using my university
stationery and letterhead, and one can argue this falls into the
scope of what I do, given I have published academic articles on
the subject of federal law. A prosecutor who wished to indict me
for "honest services fraud" could jump on this and say
that I am providing "dishonest services" to my employer.
Have you ever
made a personal call while at work? Have you "surfed"
the Internet while at your desk to find sports scores or to purchase
something for your private use? If so, an enterprising federal prosecutor
could try to indict you, although I doubt that would be the case.
For that matter,
I highly doubt that your representative in Congress has fully read
any of the bills on which he or she has voted, yet I have
seen people indicted and convicted for "honest services fraud"
because those people had not read every word in every legal document
they had signed. Why is no one from Congress indicted? Let’s call
it, "professional courtesy."
Second, the
U.S. Supreme Court has decided to hear an "honest services
fraud" case (involving Conrad Black), and at least some of
the justices have publicly said they are troubled by the implications
of this very, very vague law (if we can call it "law,"
as it goes against every principle for which people like William
Blackstone stood).
In other words,
"Mr. X" very well might have been convicted of a law that
really is not a law and might be struck down by the court, which
should trouble everyone involved. (Of course, the "money laundering"
statutes automatically kick in when there is a "fraud"
case involving money. The idea that the feds pile one law upon another
for a single act also troubles me and I believe such actions also
are affronts to the Constitution and everything for which the rule
of law once stood.)
All too often,
federal criminal law is little more than a conviction awaiting someone
to be charged. As the economy tanks, we now see federal prosecutors
effectively criminalizing business failure when, in reality, much
of what we see in many cases such as that of "Mr. X" is
a situation in which the financial risks that might have made sense
when taken in a financial boom turn into huge liabilities in a downturn.
An economist already has testified to you that as much as anything,
"Mr. X’s" business failure was more due to the general
economy than any "fraud" on his part – if there was any
fraud at all.
When recessions
happen, unfortunately, enterprising federal prosecutors are all-too-eager
to claim that a normal business failure really was the result of
fraud, and because they have "laws" that permit them to
criminalize just about anything, they usually win what I believe
are unjust convictions in court. Thus, a case in which people were
up front about their finances suddenly turns into "fraud,"
not because real-live fraud was committed, but rather because the
failure was more spectacular.
Now, let me
give you another example. This past year, my pension, which is run
by administrators in charge of our pension system, lost 25 percent
of its value. Now, this is a major loss to many of us in the Maryland
university system, yet I don’t see any federal prosecutors hauling
our pension administrators off in handcuffs and chains. Substantively,
there really is no difference between our pension losses and the
losses suffered by "Mr. X" and others in this particular
set of business deals. Both sets of losses were due to the steep
economic downturn.
So why do prosecutors
go after one person and not another? It is that modern phenomenon
we know as "selective prosecution." As one trained in
the law for many years, you know that historically, "selective
prosecution" has been looked down upon by those people who
truly cared about rule of law. As a layperson, all I can say is
that a regime of "selective prosecution" is an immoral
regime. It is not right; it goes against everything we have been
taught in our lives about rightness and fairness and the law itself.
Yes, I know
that when "Mr. X" was doing well, he spent a lot of money,
drove nice cars, and went to Las Vegas. Yet, college professors
also go to conferences in Las Vegas and spend university money.
(I have gone to a couple conferences there, myself.) Does traveling
to Las Vegas make someone a criminal or somehow demonstrates that
a person who did so should be sentenced to a long prison term? As
far as I am concerned, what "Mr. X" did with the money
he made in previous deals is a non sequitur when it comes
to dealing with the issues at hand, even if the press makes a big
deal out of it.
As
I have stated before, I do not know "Mr. X," nor is he paying me
to write this letter. I am doing it because I do not want to see
one human being going to prison after being convicted of breaking
a law that is so vague and so expansive that every one of us could
be put in the dock for violating it.
The great civil
libertarian and attorney Harvey Silverglate recently published a
new book, Three Felonies a Day, and if you have not read
it, I would highly recommend it to you. Mr. Silverglate is a friend
and has been a mentor to me for many years, and he takes a very
jaundiced view of "honest services fraud" and all that
it entails, which means that I have some very wise company in expressing
my views against this unjust law.
Thank you for
taking time to read this letter. I do hope that it will influence
you as you face the very difficult task of sending "Mr. X"
to prison.
Sincerely,
William
L. Anderson
September
17, 2009
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. He
also is a consultant with American Economic Services. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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