Can You Be Prosecuted for Using Gold or Silver? – Liberty Dollar
by Bill Rounds
How to Vanish
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by Bill Rounds:
Avoid Pretexting
The Liberty
Dollar case has had a huge impact on the world of gold and silver
trading, investing, ownership and use. I covered a lot of ground
in Part
I and Part
II, but there is another important aspect of that case that
leaves the legal landscape partly shrouded in ominous
and threatening clouds. What is the risk of criminal prosecution
or criminal conviction to those who make or use gold and silver
rounds of “original design”?
Is There A
Risk Of Prosecution For Trading With Gold And Silver
To answer that,
we have to fully understand the actual law that was broken. We also
need to consider the existing
law that was not at issue in the Liberty Dollar case, the threats
of prosecutors and the effect of potential constitutional challenges
to those laws if a prosecution were undertaken.
Mr. von NotHaus
Violated Fraud Based Statutes
The Liberty
Dollar Trial was about fraud, not a private currency system as prosecutor
Anne
Tomkins falsely implied. The jury was asked to decide if the
elements of fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud were met, nothing
else. No other legal basis for the prosecution was ever presented
to the jury and implying that there was another legal basis
is mis-stating the facts of the case.
Critical Facts
of The Case
Liberty Dollar
made, sold, and used rounds
that had many similarities to official US government coinage. The
rounds were minted with a face value but the FRN value of the silver
in the coins was less than this face value. Liberty Dollar encouraged
exchanging Liberty Dollars with people who were unaware that the
underlying FRN value of the silver was less than the denomination
minted on its face. Liberty Dollar profited from this difference
in value.
Key Elements
Of Fraud
To be guilty
of fraud, a jury must decide that a person has met all of the elements
of that crime. The Jury
Verdict Form contains all of the elements that this particular
jury decided. The critical parts are summarized here.
Count 1 –
Conspiracy
I will not
get into Conspiracy
because it is not in controversy.
Count 2 –
Counterfeit Coin (18 USC 485 and 2)
The core actions
that Liberty Dollar must have taken to be guilty of this crime are:
- To make
coins;
- That resemble
official US government
issued coins;
- And use
those coins;
- With intent
to defraud.
It is undisputed
that Liberty Dollar made and used coins. Their resemblance to official
US government issued coins was a question of fact for the jury to
decide. As described
in detail previously, there were plenty of facts that could
lead a reasonable person to believe that Liberty Dollar rounds resembled
official US coins.
The final necessary
element was the intent to defraud. I personally don't think Mr.
Von NotHaus had the intent to defraud, but intent can only be
inferred by surrounding facts and circumstances. Clearly there were
several facts that could lead a reasonable person to believe that
there was intent to defraud. For example, encouragement to make
change with people
who did not know that there was a difference between the FRN
value of the silver in the round and the face value.
Notice that
nothing in this count requires that the coins be of original design.
Count 3 –
Current Money (18 USC 486)
The core elements
here are:
- Make and
use a silver
coin;
- Intended
to be used as current money;
- Resembling
genuine coins of the US OR coins of original design
Again it is
undisputed that element 1 was met. Their resemblance to US coins
has already been established. The intent can only be supposed from
surrounding facts. The fact that Liberty Dollar encouraged merchants
to make change with unsuspecting people could be the reasonable
basis to find intent to use Liberty Dollars as current money.
It's important
to note the “OR” in Count 3. This means that the statute is violated
whether you violate one, the other, or both of these prongs. As
I have laid out previously, the “resembling genuine coins of the
US” prong could easily stand on its own as having been violated.
The “original design” prong is unnecessary for the conviction.
The “resembling
genuine coins” prong is essentially a case of fraud.
The Liberty Dollar rounds were presented as something that they
were not, to the detriment of unsuspecting individuals. It appears
the jury thought the case was about fraud as well. At least one
person claiming to be a juror in the case left a comment in the
original post stating that my previous analysis correctly reflected
“what went on in court in the Liberty
Dollar Trial.”
Who Was The
Victim?
Many have claimed
that there
were no victims because the underlying value of the silver would
eventually (and in hindsight has) become more valuable than the
FRN that people gave up to get Liberty Dollars. Even people who
mistakenly accepted Liberty Dollars, they claim, would
have actually benefited.
This argument
defies reason. The FRN price of silver changes. Sometimes it goes
up and sometimes it goes down. Although I
bet money that it will go up over time, it is impossible to
predict the future. Nobody knows for sure if or when the price will
change, how much it will change, and in which direction.
What must be
understood is that to get someone to unknowingly accept Liberty
Dollars instead of FRN is to unknowingly accept the risk that silver
would appreciate in value instead of the risk that the FRN will
decline in value. This is a risk unwitting acceptors of Liberty
Dollars did not agree to bear.
Another problem
is that the person who takes the discounted Liberty Dollar could
have taken their $10 FRN and bought more silver somewhere else had
they been paid in FRN instead of the Liberty Dollar round. Thus
if the price of silver rises, they would have been prevented from
realizing gains on a larger amount of silver. Thus people who unknowingly
accepted Liberty Dollars instead of FRNs unknowingly suffered real
or potential losses.
Tips To Avoid
Prosecution For Fraud
So now that
it is clear that the elements of fraud were met, what can honest
traders do to avoid innocently coming too close to the line of fraud,
which I think Mr. Von NotHaus did. Everyone should talk to a lawyer
directly for legal advice, but a general principle is to avoid anything
that would give the impression of fraud to investigators
and clearly include things that would help eliminate the impression
of fraud. Avoid making, using or trading rounds, medallions or tokens
that in any way resemble official government currency of any
country.
Avoid:
- Using the
$ symbol
- Putting
the name of a country on it like “USA”
- Putting
any word on it that appears on official currency like “Liberty”
- Using denominations
that match the same denominations used in the official government
coin
- Putting
images on them that are similar to images used on official government
currency
- Offering
them as change in FRN transactions
Some things
that can be helpful are:
- Use fictional
characters, like Disney
Dollars or Ithaca
Hours do
- Display
the weight and fineness of the metal rather than a numbered value
like $10
- Be extremely
clear when using them that they are not official US coins
Likelihood
Of Prosecution
There are a
handful of private mints, thousands of coin dealers and millions
of people that make, use and trade rounds, medallions and tokens.
If they follow many of these guidelines they are probably not at
risk of prosecution for fraud.
Prosecution
For Fraud Is Legitimate
Libertarian
principles allow the use of force to protect against fraud. Dr.
Viera concedes, in Pieces
of Eight (pg. 1533) that Congress may have the Constitutional
authority to legislate the “resembling genuine coin” prong. Since
it is clearly shown that people were, or there was an imminent threat
of being, defrauded, prosecution under this part of the statute
is likely to withstand any philosophical or constitutional challenges.
Prosecution
For “Original Design”
Anne
Tompkins inferred that she intended to prosecute people under
the “original design” prong. She was obviously relying on dicta
from a few lower court cases as the broad basis of her threat.
Dicta
is not the law. Dicta is a statement in a court ruling that
is usually made by a judge in passing with little to no research
or analysis. At best she can hope that dicta maybe, possibly, someday
becomes the law. Thus she is threatening to fly us head on into
the brooding
storm clouds of untested areas of law.
What This
Threat Of Prosecution Means To Honest People
There are real
implications to this kind of threat. First of all is the cost of
legal defense. Even a person who is ultimately found innocent will
probably incur legal costs in the tens of thousands of dollars.
If there are constitutional challenges, which might require multiple
appeals, the cost could easily rise to the hundreds of thousands.
Overzealous
Prosecutors Regularly Disregard The Intent Behind A Law (To Punish
Real Criminals) And Target Anyone Who Accidentally Crosses The Line
While most
people find prosecution of people with innocent intent deplorable,
overzealous
prosecutors have been known to disregard the reason for a law
and use their discretion to prosecute anyone who violates the letter
of the law, even if the defendant's intent and actions are otherwise
completely innocent.
A good example
of that is the prosecution
of an Ohio woman under anti-drug laws for buying 2 packages
of cold medicine in 1 week, one for two separate members of her
family who were ill. The uphill evidentiary battle that defendants
face makes it easy for prosecutors to convince juries that a defendant
should be convicted in these kinds of cases.
If That Were
The Law It Would Be Completely Unworkable
If this dicta
were adopted as law, cautious people would have to avoid making
or using anything that could potentially be used to barter because
such an item could conceivably be used to compete with official
government issued currency. That could include millions of rounds,
commemorative medallions, or tokens. That is obviously a ridiculous
outcome.
There are a
few cases where clearly marked tokens such as Chuck
E. Cheese tokens or batting cage tokens are outside of the purview
of the “original design” prong. Hence prosecution of those special
purpose tokens is very unlikely.
A case centered
around the “original design” prong would not be about fraud at all.
It would be about the right of people to use whatever medium of
exchange they choose. Preventing private parties from trading what
they want in such a manner is complete tyranny. In Argentina and
other places around the world, the people purchase
vehicles as a hedge against inflation. Under Anne Tomkins' erroneous
definition of the law, vehicles would be illegal because they compete
with the national currency. Another ridiculous outcome.
18 USC 486
Is Probably Unconstitutional
The arguments
supporting the unconstitutionality of the “original design” language
are quite strong.
Art. I Section
8, clause 5 of the US
Constitution states in part:
“The
Congress shall have Power To… coin Money, regulate the Value thereof,
and of foreign Coin.” On its face this gives the Congress the power
to regulate the value of its own coinage, and that of foreign coins.
There is absolutely no mention of the ability of Congress to do
anything regarding private coinage.”
Clause
6 continues stating:
[Congress
shall have power to...] “provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting
the… current Coin of the United States.” This clearly gives Congress
the power to punish counterfeiting the coins that they themselves
produce, and probably to punish coins resembling genuine US coins.
Again, there is absolutely no mention of private coinage. In fact,
the definition of private coinage is that it is not the current
coin of the US. Therefore Congress has no authority over private
coinage at all and neither does any other branch.
The Ninth
Amendment to the US Constitution states
“The
enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed
to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”
The Tenth
Amendment:
“The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively,
or to the people.”
Since no Congressional
power over private coinage is delegated, or even implied, nor is
that power reserved to another branch of government, private coinage
must be a power and right reserved to the states or the people under
the 9th and/or 10th Amendments.
There are many,
many, many, many, many, many examples of private coinage used throughout
the US, under these same Constitutional provisions, for centuries.
See What
Has Government Done To Our Money by
Murray Rothbard for a full discussion and historical examples.
What Is So
Unconstitutional About 18 USC 486?
18 USC 486
states:
Whoever, except
as authorized by law, makes or utters or passes, or attempts to
utter or pass, any coins of gold or silver or other metal, or alloys
of metals, intended for use as current money, whether in the resemblance
of coins of the United States or of foreign countries, or
of original design, shall be fined under this title or
imprisoned not more than five years, or both. (emphasis added)
The constitutionality
of the “original design” clause is clearly eviscerated by Dr. Viera
in Pieces of Eight pg. 1533 (criticizing 18 USC 486):
“This
prohibition [on private coinage] is plainly not grounded in Congress's
power “To provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the current
coin of the Unites States” because a person… who makes… coins… of
original design is not doing anything with relation to the “current
coin of the United States” by definition.”
The power to
regulate coins of original design is clearly not within Article
I Section 8 clauses 5 or 6. It is thus a clear violation of the
Ninth and Tenth Amendments to the US Constitution.
Dicta that
claim legitimacy of this language shows that judges have clearly
failed to consult legislative history, constitutional authority,
American history, or case law dealing with it. Thorough research
and analysis would likely reveal the error in these statements of
unauthoritative opinion.
The Outcome
Of A Constitutional Challenge Is Unknown
Unfortunately,
the current state of monetary law in the United States is nonsensical
so it's tough to know how persuasive these constitutional arguments
would be to an uneducated
judiciary. Thus a constitutional challenge is not guaranteed
to have the logical outcome of invalidating the offensive language
of the statute.
Someone Else
Must Be Convicted Before A Constitutional Challenge Can Be Made
Without getting
into some very intricate rules on “redressability,” it is doubtful
that anyone could even challenge the clearly unconstitutional parts
of 18 USC 486 until someone is convicted under the relevant part
of that section. That is because a person can't appeal a decision
unless the outcome would change if they win the appeal. (Allen
v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737 (1984)).
Here, Mr. von
NotHaus was convicted. His conviction would stand under the fraud
prong of the statute alone and does not need the “original design”
prong. Even if the “original design” language was declared unconstitutional
on appeal, it wouldn't change the outcome for him. Therefore he
is unlikely to be able to challenge its constitutionality.
Another Legal
Guinea Pig Is Needed
To challenge
the constitutionality of the “original design” prong, another individual
will have to be convicted. This time, their conviction must clearly
be under the “original design” prong and not at all under the resemblance
prong. This means that the constitutionality of this law will probably
remain unresolved for many years.
Practicality
of Enforcement
When innocent
people might be wrongly prosecuted because it looks like they are
committing a crime when in fact they aren't, they must determine
how likely it would be for them to be prosecuted for their innocent
behavior. Part of this calculation is determining how likely it
is that they would be prosecuted based on the practicality of enforcing
the law that could mistakenly be used against them.
Private Mints
A mint, the
company actually making rounds, medallions and tokens, is at the
most risk of prosecution. Their operation is probably fairly large,
easy to find and hard to move.
Fortunately
that risk is still very low, even after the von NotHaus conviction.
The Sunshine
Mint that produced the Liberty Dollars was not a defendant in
the case and there have been no prosecutions of the many other private
mints throughout the country. Thus prosecution of private minters
under the original design prong is unlikely.
Individuals
It would be
very difficult and expensive to prosecute individuals for using
rounds medallions and tokens in private transactions. It would be
incredibly difficult to detect and investigate. Unless people feel
they have been defrauded upon accepting them, there is unlikely
to be any investigation of individuals for using metal to pay for
goods and services.
This is important
for the millions of innocent people who will be trading things that
are not illegal because they should know the risk of erroneous prosecution.
It is extremely low because of these difficulties in detection and
investigation of the transactions.
Risk Of Prosecution
For Fraud
There are millions
of rounds, medallions or tokens existing in the US that follow the
guidelines mentioned earlier. To prosecute every maker, holder or
user of them would be completely outrageous. It would also be practically
impossible to prosecute everyone because it is impossible to monitor
that many private transactions effectively, even with dictatorial
control. Therefore, someone making or bartering with gold or silver
who is following these guidelines has very little risk of mistaken
prosecution for fraud.
Conclusion
Barter with
metal has not been ruled by a court of law to be illegal. Barter
is constitutional, whether it is for chickens, potatoes, FRN, gold
or silver rounds or anything else you want. There is a cloud over
the issue of bartering with gold or silver rounds, medallions or
tokens because of the generalized and remote possibility of being
prosecuted if you do. Bartering with metal is so common and widespread
it would insanely expensive to systematically investigate and impractical
to enforce such a policy. Thus, the threat is not nearly as great
as the threat posed to Liberty Dollar. Plus, the “original design”
language that smacks of dictatorial control is likely to be overturned
because it is probably unconstitutional. For more ways to protect
your right to private exchange of goods and prevent being mistakenly
prosecuted, get the book How
To Vanish and sign up for the email list.
Reprinted
with permission from How to
Vanish.
May
11, 2011
Bill
Rounds, J.D. is a California attorney. He holds a degree in Accounting
from the University of Utah and a law degree from California
Western School of Law. He practices civil litigation, domestic
and foreign business entity formation and transactions, criminal
defense and privacy law. He is a strong advocate of personal and
financial freedom and civil liberties.
Copyright
© 2011 How
to Vanish
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