Our Insane 'Justice' System
by
Andrew S. Fischer
by Andrew S. Fischer
DIGG THIS
Yesterday,
ABC's morning "news" show Good Morning America ran a story
about a San Francisco woman named Karen Lodrick, a victim of identity
theft. This particular case was different than most because, by
chance, the victim encountered the perpetrator and actually chased
her through the streets, until the police finally appeared and made
an arrest. The full story was reported in the S.F. Chronicle,
and can be found here.
In essence, the perp had a key to the victim's mailbox, then:
"Using the
stolen keys, Lodrick believes, [the perpetrator] made off with an
unsolicited mailing from [her] bank. Lodrick said it contained two
debit/credit cards she had not requested and, worse, a statement
for a certificate of deposit that included her Social Security number.
Personal identification numbers for the cards were in a separate
envelope."
While the bank's
mailing was idiotic in the extreme, the government's actions strike
me as being ultra-idiotic,
even for our incompetent bumblecrats. First, shortly before the
credit card thefts began, Lodrick's postman informed her that the
master keys to the "neighborhood's" mailboxes had been stolen. Not
lost, but stolen. This would seem to be a pretty serious
problem, since a known thief would now have access to the mail of
scores of residents.
Did the postal
service formally inform all its affected customers that their mailboxes
were no longer secure? This is not mentioned in the story, but it
can be inferred that the answer is that it did not. Did the postal
service at least change the locks on the mailboxes and issue new
keys to residents? This also goes unmentioned; however, in this
case the answer is a definite "no," since the story does state that
"Lodrick changed bank accounts and identification numbers, only
to find that [the perpetrator] had again broken into her mail and
stolen the new information and was still after her accounts." This
was after the victim had already lost $9,000 in phony withdrawals
and credit card purchases. (She would later estimate that she also
lost $30,000 in self-employment income during the five months before
the perp's capture, due to time spent trying to clean up the mess.)
Possibly, the
Postal Service was negligent in allowing its master keys to be stolen.
Clearly, it was negligent in not changing the locks immediately
after the theft was discovered. (Naturally, P.O. regulations prohibit
customers from installing their own locks on mailboxes.) If these
had been the actions of a private company, it would either be insured
against such things or sued for damages. But the government-run
P.O. is apparently immune from such mundane problems.
About six weeks
after her arrest, the perpetrator pleaded guilty to one felony count
of "using another person's identification fraudulently." As part
of a plea agreement, she received a jail sentence of 44 days for
time already served in custody, plus three years of probation. She
was also ordered to make financial restitution; the amount is "to
be determined by the court." The story noted that the guilty party
had been "chastised" by the judge for her lack of remorse and frivolous
attitude, and also that she was already on probation for "one of
eight previous fraud convictions," and had been previously convicted
of theft.
Is our justice
system insane? The guilty party had already committed at least nine
prior frauds/thefts, was already on probation when
she committed the new crime, yet she gets sentenced to... more
probation! Does anyone seriously think such a wrist-slap is going
to be a deterrent? Additionally, why wasn't this nonchalant recidivist
prosecuted for other crimes, such as felony theft of property and
mail? (One youthful summer I worked at a P.O. processing center,
and we were warned that if we so much as pocketed a loose 10-cent
stamp we'd be sent to prison for twenty years!)
A more sensible
justice system would have sentenced this criminal, as Rothbard proposed,
to triple-restitution in this case, approximately $120,000. Should
the amount not be forthcoming, the guilty party would have to work
it off in prison, assembling toys or something, until the debt was
paid and probably assume the costs of her confinement, as well.
This would take around a dozen years or so. Yep, triple-restitution:
now that is a deterrent.
According to
the Chronicle's story, there were 8.4 million victims of
identity fraud in 2006. This number will doubtless increase
in the years to come, due to several factors not the least
of which is the government's ridiculous handling of convicted perpetrators
of this hard-to-prevent crime.
December
8, 2007
Andrew
S. Fischer [send him mail] is
a controller for an investment advisory firm in Pennsylvania.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Andrew
S. Fischer
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