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Adam Liptak on the “honest services” bribery cases before the US Supreme Court

As I posted a while ago, the U.S. Supreme Court has accepted cert in a case involving the “honest services” bribery statute.  There are actually two cases before the court, one involving an Alaska legislator and the other Canadian newspaperman Conrad Black.  The issue of the scope of federal statute criminalizing the denial of “honest services” of a state official to its citizens was going to be an issue in the DeLaughter case before the guilty plea; it was pretty clear that one of the reasons Chicago lawyer Tom Durkin got in the case was his experience in that area, particularly in a case in which the Supreme Court denied cert in March over a dissent by Justice Scalia.

Adam Liptak writes about this issue before the U.S. Supreme Court today in the New York Times:

In February, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that federal prosecutors had developed an unseemly crush on a particularly vague law, one that “has been invoked to impose criminal penalties upon a staggeringly broad swath of behavior.”

Justice Scalia was writing to protest the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear an appeal from three city officials in Chicago who had been convicted of violating the law, which makes it a crime “to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.”

If you can make sense of that phrase, you have achieved something that has so far eluded the nation’s appeals courts.

“How can the public be expected to know what the statute means when the judges and prosecutors themselves do not know, or must make it up as they go along?” Judge Dennis Jacobs of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York, asked in a 2003 dissent.

The “honest services” law, Justice Scalia explained, says that “officeholders and employees owe a duty to act only in the best interests of their constituents and employers.” Carried to its logical extreme, he said, “it would seemingly cover a salaried employee’s phoning in sick to go to a ballgame.”

The Chicago officials had overseen a system that doled out jobs based on patronage and nepotism rather than merit. Such a system is neither ideal nor unusual, and the defendants were not alleged to have violated state criminal laws or to have lined their own pockets in the process.

Justice Scalia’s dissent, which was vigorous even by his own muscular standards, seems to have had an impact. In the following months, the Supreme Court agreed to hear not one but two cases exploring the scope of the honest services law.

One involves Conrad M. Black, the newspaper executive convicted of defrauding his media company, Hollinger International. The law, as interpreted by many courts, makes it a crime for officials of private companies to put their own interests ahead of those of their employers.

(The appeals court decision affirming Mr. Black’s conviction, by Judge Richard A. Posner of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in Chicago, contained perhaps the best judicial digression of 2008. Discussing a so-called ostrich jury instruction, Judge Posner paused to say that ostriches do not in fact bury their heads in the sand. “It is pure legend and a canard on a very distinguished bird,” Judge Posner wrote.)

The second case concerns a former Alaska legislator named Bruce Weyhrauch, who failed to disclose that he was soliciting work from a company with business before the Legislature. As in the Chicago case, the conduct may not have been pretty, but it did not violate a state criminal law.

Critics of the honest services law say it has two essential flaws. It allows federal prosecutors vast discretion “to go after people they don’t like or people they disagree with politically,” said Julie Rose O’Sullivan, who teaches criminal law at Georgetown.

The second problem, said George D. Brown, a specialist in government ethics at Boston College Law School, is that prosecutions of state officials under the federal law may violate fundamental principles of federalism. “It represents a federal judgment that you can’t trust the states,” Professor Brown said.

The honest services law is but one example of what Harvey A. Silverglate, a civil liberties lawyer in Boston, calls “an over-criminalization problem.” His new book, “Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent,” argues that the average American professional unwittingly commits several serious crimes each day.

“Even the most intelligent and informed citizen (including lawyers and judges, for that matter),” Mr. Silverglate writes, “cannot predict with any reasonable assurance whether a wide range of seemingly ordinary activities might be regarded by federal prosecutors as felonies.”

The Justice Department, of course, sees the matter entirely differently. In its Supreme Court brief in Mr. Black’s case, the government said the honest services law has an important role to play in attacking frauds that do not involve the loss of money or property but something intangible like candor or loyalty. In Mr. Weyhrauch’s case, the government said that requiring proof of a violation of a state law would result in a patchwork of legal standards under a single federal law.

Federal appeals courts have tried to impose limiting principles on the law.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in New Orleans, requires proof that a state law was violated before the federal law kicks in. But the Ninth Circuit, in San Francisco, rejected that limitation in Mr. Weyhrauch’s case.

The Seventh Circuit has imposed a different limiting principle. It requires proof of “private gain,” a principle rejected by the Third Circuit, in Philadelphia. But the “private gain” limitation was of no help to the defendants in the Chicago patronage case, who apparently gained nothing. The fact that the people who got jobs gained something was enough.

As the Seventh Circuit put it in 2005, “a participant in a scheme to defraud is guilty even if he is an altruist and all the benefits of the fraud accrue to other participants.”

The bottom line, Justice Scalia said in February, is that the courts have not been able to define what separates “the criminal breaches, conflicts and misstatements from the obnoxious but lawful ones.” The honest services law, he said, “invites abuse by headline-grabbing prosecutors in pursuit of local officials, state legislators and corporate C.E.O.’s who engage in any manner of unappealing or ethically questionable conduct.”

“It seems to me quite irresponsible to let the current chaos prevail,” Justice Scalia wrote. By the end of this term, we should know whether the Supreme Court can straighten things out.

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10 comments to Adam Liptak on the “honest services” bribery cases before the US Supreme Court

  • I’d have to question my understanding here. What part of having a job and failing to do it, that I don’t understand. In this case being paid to render judicial services. Wouldn’t one expect the court to render honesty in it’s ruling. Isn’t this just another way of saying that the rule of law isn’t being followed? or that the courts rule by personal choice which in turn deprives one party of legal justice. Ie: are we intended to pay for the dishonest choices ruled on by the services of the courts.

    How many persons in any given job get paid for non performance to a sworn oath of duty? No wait don’t answer that.

  • Observer

    Suppose you are the POTUS and your ole homies were the first to contribute to your campaign and are largely responsible for you winning the office. Let’s say you even hire some of the ole homies to work at the White House. Let’s say some of the ole homies own land that would likely be purchased to build the new Olympic stadium if the Olympics are awarded to Chicago. Let’s say they call and ask their old friend, who is now POTUS, to go to Copenhagen to woo the IOC to award the games to Chicago. As the law is now applied in some cases, wasn’t this an indictable offense?

    I may be right-wing, but I am not suggesting that the empty suit should be indicted. Rather, I am talking about how this law can be, and often is, abused by prosecutors. There’s no common sense applied to anything anymore. A slight semblance of the same thing occurred when an ‘excessive celebration’ penalty likely cost UGA a win against LSU last weekend. The call was beyond stupid, totally lacking in common sense. Lack of common sense is manifested in schools suspending little boys who bring Scout gear to school. Collectively, we, as a society, are a group of morons.

  • Ben

    Speaking of which, Observer … sez here that the President of MUW announced her retirement, effective at the end of June 2010. Will that be right before, right after, or none of the above regarding renaming the school?

  • pr1954

    Common sense ain’t that common.

  • Observer

    MUW. Ben, what the retirement may mean is that there will be NO name change. She’s recommended a name change, but that has to be approved by IHL, and I don’t believe it has approved the name change yet. Limbert has been fixing stuff that wasn’t broken. If MUW needed help attracting new students, it should have followed the plan Blue Mountain College is using – starting a men’s athletic program. I don’t think it ever helps to rip away tradition when there are alternatives.

  • Kay Sieverding

    USA v. Michael T. Conahan and Mark A. Ciaveralla Jr. is the indictment of the two Pennsylvania judges who were taking payoffs to pack their conspirators’ for profit juvenile facility. It is Middle District of PA 09-cv-272, 09/09/09 Count 1 is “racketeering” 18 USC section 1962(c) …an enterprise was developed…interstate commerce…improperly taking payments and other things of value….deprivation of honest services….Racketeering Act 1.1…wire transfer …$600,000…18 USC section 2, 143 and 146….Racketeering Act 1.2…wire transfer…$387,000…Racketeering Act 1.1…wire transfer… $1,000,000… Racketeering Act 3 … wire transfer …$150,000 … Racketeering Act 4.1 (extortion under color of official right checks totally $70,000)…multiple counts of bribery chargeable under state law… money laundering conspiracy

    There is a section called manner, means and methods…. Entering into agreements
    Guaranteeing placements… summarily granting motions… hiding income… arranged to receive payment… solicited, accepted, and agreed to accept, monetary benefits…. as consideration for “violations of known legal duties of the defendants as public servants in violation of Title 18 PA C.S. section 1407 (a)(3)…”. The USDOJ indictment uses that term multiple times.

    Counts 3-6 are described as “honest services wire fraud” …a material scheme and artifice to defraud… the citizens …. And to deprive those citizens and the judiciary of the right to honest services…. As judges to the honest services … performed free from deceit, favoritism, bias, self-enrichment, self- dealing, concealment, and conflict of interest. … as public officials … owed a fiduciary duty …. to refrain from conduct that constitutes seeking or accepting improper influence …. Part of the fiduciary duty arose from constitutional law, including Article 5, section 17 (b) and 17(c) of the Pennsylvania Constitution ….

    The above are excerpts from the federal indictment dated 09/09/09. Here is an FBI press release about it

    http://philadelphia.fbi.gov/dojpressrel/pressrel09/ph090909d.htm

    There was a shorter version filed in January.
    See also http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/pam/Victim_Witness/Luzerne_County_Corruption/Ciavarella_Conahan/ciavarella_conahan_index.html

    http://philadelphia.fbi.gov/dojpressrel/pressrel09/ph060909.htm
    http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/pam/press_releases/Information-Ciavarella_Conahan-1_26_09.pdf

    8/13/09 “Federal Officials Announce the Filing of a Criminal Information and Plea Agreement Against a Luzerne County Businessman Accused of Aiding Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan to Avoid Detection in Tax Fraud Scheme” http://philadelphia.fbi.gov/dojpressrel/pressrel09/ph081309d.htm
    “The criminal Information charges Mericle with concealing and failing to report a felony to federal authorities.”

  • this law is teh key to retaliation and abuse http://www.honestservicefraud.com

  • T. Gentry

    C-SPAN video:Harvey Silverglate and Tim Lynch on Federal prosecutorial abuse.

    I kept having flashbacks to the Cleveland RICO trial of Congressman James A. Trafcant during this one-hour Cato presentation. Jimbo claimed that the RICO trial had prosecutorial abuse and judicial misconduct written all over it. That is probably why the US Attorney– appointed as Deputy Attorney General to AG “Torture is OK” Mukasey– has faded from the scene.

    Is it true that a sitting Congressman cannot bring suit in the Courts?

    http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/289272-1

  • T. Gentry

    Traficant:He’s baaaaack!

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