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Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Law: An Arresting Tale
by Ed Feulner
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It’s a common complaint: “There oughta be a law against [fill in the blank].” But these days, we hardly need more laws. Too many things are already illegal.

Businessmen, doctors and even schoolchildren have been charged with crimes and hauled into court -- and have actually spent time in jail -- for engaging in activities that shouldn’t have been illegal in the first place.

Consider the case of the refinery manager Hubert Vidrine, accosted at his office by a SWAT team.

In 1996, federal agents armed with semi-automatic weapons raided the Canal Refining Company in Louisiana. According to a civil suit Vidrine recently filed, the agents accused him of storing hazardous waste and lying about it. They ransacked his office. They told employees that Vidrine was poisoning them. For several hours they refused to allow them to use the facilities or phone loved ones.

Despite the urgency and extreme measures used in conducting the raid, it took several years for the feds to file charges. In 1999 Vidrine was charged with one count of knowingly storing hazardous waste on the property. Had he been convicted, he could have been imprisoned for up to five years and fined as much as $50,000 for each day the waste was improperly stored.

That punishment would seem severe even if Vidrine had broken the law. But he hadn’t. The alleged “hazardous waste” was in fact used oil the refinery was planning to reprocess. According to federal regulations, it shouldn’t have been considered hazardous waste.

Still, the charges weren’t dismissed for almost four years, and then only when the government admitted it couldn’t find test results that supposedly implicated Vidrine, tests that had supposedly been carried out at the request of the government’s only witness to the “crime.” Vidrine’s legal brief says he spent more than $180,000 fighting criminal charges that should never have been filed.

But cases such as Mr. Vidrine’s aren’t the only example of the overcriminalization of our society. We’re also being swept under by “zero tolerance” laws, as two boys in Oregon learned.

In February, two 13-year-olds trotted through the halls of their middle school, smacking girls on the bottom as they passed -- immature behavior, to be sure, but not something that should be punishable as a criminal offense.

The vice principal and a police officer assigned to the school disagreed. They kept the boys in an office for hours and eventually arrested them. Both spent five days in a juvenile detention facility. They were eventually charged with sexual abuse, charges dropped only after the girls who had supposedly been abused requested it.

“These cases are devastating to children,” the district attorney said when explaining why he’d pursued the case, even “life-altering.” And spending five days behind bars isn’t? These boys certainly need better parenting and appropriate discipline. But treated as criminals?

Things haven’t always been this way. Until recent decades, an action had to meet two standards before it could be considered a crime. The law required that an individual must 1) cause or attempt to commit a wrongful act and 2) do so with some form of intent to commit that act.

However, the Supreme Court has taken steps to undermine these fundamental protections. In United States v. Dotterweich, Justice Frankfurter wrote that Americans now depend on “the good sense of prosecutors, the wise guidance of trial judges, and the ultimate judgment of juries” to determine what is and isn’t criminal conduct.

The legislative branch has handed much of its lawmaking power to bureaucrats, prosecutors, trial judges and jurors. But it violates the Constitution for lawmakers to cede their powers to other branches of government.

“Our reason is our law,” Milton wrote in “Paradise Lost.” And to be just, our laws must be reasonable. Too many Americans are being treated as criminals by an out-of-control criminal justice system that is abandoning the rule of reason. Justice demands we change that.

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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Uncle Max
Would I want to live next door to the guy? Why not?

Heck, I have more than a few firearms and I'm a perfectly good neighbor.

Living free is too hard for most
Americans continue to elect petty politicians whose sole ambition in life is too control others. They have an enormous constituency. The result is an endless assault on the personal liberty of all. No person can go about the business of living without running afoul of some law, rule, or regulation. The true purpose is to ultimately make everthing illegal and then selectively enforce the law against those determined to be the enemies of the state. It has been successful in many venues and still works in the 21st Century.
PS I would rather live next door to Mr. Sonka than Uncle Max.

sorry
menat to say "could not sell to just anyone"

Mr. Sonka
Too bad Mr. Sonka didn't remember the rules of gun dealing. As an FFl dealer, he should have known that he could sell to just anyone in IL. Gotta do that FOI card deal. He should have sold off his "collection" when he surrendered his FFL. To keep selling under a business name is one sure way to get in alot of trouble, I'm surprised our buddies at BATF aren't involved in this also.

Control Freaks
The Supremes have decided 5-4 numerous times that the opinions of old dead judges (precedents) are far more important than the Constitution. Consequently, we have degenerated from a limited-government constitutional republic into a huge, invasive democracy. 50.01% is all it takes for the left or right wing of Control Freaks Unanimous to take away another right by calling it a privilege or even a crime. Of course, it is all for the common good, but the commoners I know seem to be getting angrier every day. http://www.poorgrandchildren.com

Really, Justic Frankfurter?
>In United States v. Dotterweich, Justice Frankfurter wrote that Americans now depend on “the good sense of prosecutors, the wise guidance of trial judges, and the ultimate judgment of juries” to determine what is and isn’t criminal conduct.

"The good sense of prosecutors," like Nifong and the ilk of prosecutors across the nation that, for whatever various personal reasons prosecute the innocent. Good sense? What about their motives?
"WISE (?) guidance of trial judges," like those who let vicious child predators off with a slap on the wrist, but throw the book at inncuous infractions, etc.
"...ultimate judgment of juries." Like those composed of the kind of people who made John Edwards wealthy with pseudo science nonsense.

Yes, Justice Frankfurter, let us depend on them.


Ceding of powers
"But it violates the Constitution for lawmakers to cede their powers to other branches of government."

If you truly believe this, Mr. Fuelner, then I ask you to join me in demanding a full and immediate refund of all income taxes ever collected by the Internal Revenue Service. You see, the 16th Amendment is the only Constitutional justification for the Federal Income Tax. Yet the same 16th Amendment says "CONGRESS shall have the power to lay and COLLECT taxes on income..." (emphasis mine). And yet, it is the EXECUTIVE branch of the federal government (in the form of the IRS) that collects income taxes, not the legislative branch. Looks to me like another example of lawmakers ceding their powers to other branches of government.

Regards,
Trevor

Out of control justice system
Once the cuffs are on, it becomes one person against all of the resources of the government.
From what I've read, you will often be threatened with a lengthy trip to Hell in the prison system if you don't sign a confession but instead have the audacity to request a trial by a jury.

jerabaub, your neighbor is not offending
you, he is disturbing your peace. In most localities now, it is not against any law during daylight hours. Most areas around here, it is illegal to disturb via noise after 10:30pm until 6am, even on weekends.

Otherwise, I agree with your post completely!

We're supposedly...
...very sensitive people now who are unable to digest imagined social slights or even the smallest insults to our perceived fragile egos. At least that's what most lawmakers make us out to be.

This construct has netted millions for trial lawyers, feminists, and it has established careers for race hustlers. And there is no end in sight.

Controlling personalities
Sometimes it is not clearly a left-right issue.

While there are explicit internet sites, a few of which clearly promote illegality, some on the right, in the name of what they deem to be virtue, want to ban all sexually explicit sites.

And then we have the leftist social engineers, be they Al Gore or Michael Bloomberg, who, "for our own good", want to limit or even ban what we can buy, consume, own, from suvs and pick-up trucks, to trans-fat french fries.

Then we have those who deem themselves to be spokespersons of various racial and religious entities, who ban certain books from libraries, be they "Huckleberry Finn", or books that question the legitimacy of the Prophet Mohammad.

No one has a right not to be offended, with the exception of some moron who lives next door to you, playing his stereo so loud that even your windows shake.

Now I do draw the line at that.

This country, as most in Europe also
One based Law in the Laws of Nature.
Through the years the Law has become an avenue for gain and not justice.

We have what is called today the Rule of Law, instead of the old system of Justice of Natural Law.

There really is a great difference in what each do, as one was to seek justice, the other is to promote rules over justice.

While it is called the Justice System, we see in many cases Justice is turned upside down for some rule violation.

There is a host of examples for this over the last 50 years especially.


Rules, Not Laws
In an excellent book titled The Death of Common Sense, a liberal Democrat New York lawyer explains that the difficulty is not the laws, it is the RULES -- the Marching Mommy Meddlers that try to make a Rule to fit every single occasion. For example, the Rule that my sister and I could not ride or bicycles in the dining room did not cover our riding our marx-a-karts in the dining room. So a new rule had to be made saying You Cannot Ride ANYTHING in my dining room. Which did not cover roller skates....

Trying to make Rules that cover every eventuality means that you spend all day long screaming NO NO! at people and arguing about whether the Rule covers the behaviour you do not like -- and then hours re-drafting the Rule to cover THAT behaviour, meanwhile inspiring the rule breakers to find a way around that one, too.

Daddys Three Rules would cover the whole subject, from the brats on Butt Slap Day to the actual crime in the schoolroom. SIT STILL, SHUT UP, HANDS OFF.

Name anything that is not covered by that.

Mike Nifong
Pretty self-explanatory.

Further, the laws that seem to most lend themselves to interpetive abuse are those the libs want, such as the idiotic "zero tolerance" BS at schools, and the environmental laws.

Both of which are the type of laws featured in the column, btw.

What a coinkydink!

Addendum
(88) in the Telephone Yellow Pages

Out of curiosity
I just counted the pages of advertisements for att$rneys here in my city of around 1/2 a million customers, I mean consumers.

88 pages

Then found out the BAR lists over 1 million lawyers.

The production line for their bread and butter, Congress is faithful, passing more and more laws every year from the States to the Federal level.

Our government is crawling
with lawyers - all anxious to beef up their resume by trying ridiculous cases and building large staffs - and all at taxpayer (and the defendants' expense). THey don't care about inconvenience, reduced productivity or the mental anguish of the people affected, all they care about is growing the bureacracy and paying the mortgage (and the porsche payments, of course).

Grow the system, codify every movement a potential defendant might make (turning without using a signal) and then use directed verdicts to take the judgement of a "jury of their peers" out of the picture. This allows you to strongarm citizens, and in the case of Waco, kill them, with impunity. The jury in the subsequent trial were horrified at the unjust sentences handed down to seemingly innocent people.

Someone commits a minor offense, threaten them with five different charges and potential legal fees that force them to accept a plea deal.

Let's hear it for the lawyers!

I like this
"Every man, woman, and responsible child has an unalienable individual, civil, Constitutional, and human right to obtain, own, and carry, openly or concealed, any weapon - rifle, shotgun, handgun, machinegun, anything - any time, any place, without asking anyone's permission."

..-- L. Neil Smith
--------------

Free men do not ask permission to Keep and Bear Arms

Uncle Max & Mike's Sporting Goods
--
Max says:

"Would you like to live next door to Mr. Sonka?"

My answer?

Hell, yes. With a neighbor who's gone through the hoops required to secure a federal license as a firearms dealer, I can have some assurance that his house is thoroughly equipped with electronic alarms, and that any housebreaker attempting forced entry there will meet armed resistance.

Makes the whole neighborhood safer.

I don't do much shooting anymore (the eyes have been going for the past few years), but I'd get to know him if for no other reason than to cozen him into providing firearms safety instruction to my grandkids.

The little monsters don't take seriously the Grandpa with whom they used to play "horsie" when they were little. Some authoritative visiting fireman with a shop rag reeking of Hoppe's #9 in his hip pocket might get a bit more respect out of 'em.

And he's a personal firearms collector in the bargain, as H. Beam Piper had been. I've never met a man with Mr. Sonka's qualifications I *couldn't* get along with.



--
"Every man, woman, and responsible child has an unalienable individual, civil, Constitutional, and human right to obtain, own, and carry, openly or concealed, any weapon - rifle, shotgun, handgun, machinegun, anything - any time, any place, without asking anyone's permission."

..-- L. Neil Smith

Lobaazul
Would you like to live next door to Mr. Sonka?

one more thing
Remember when there was a comic strip by Jimmy Hatlo entitled "There Oughta be a Law?"

Remember SWINE, the creation of Al Capp? He was FUNNY. SWINE of course stood for Students Wildly Indignant about Nearly Everything.

There must have been some leftie cartoons (Doonesbury doesn't count) that took swats at us. Whatever happened to our national sense of humor?

lilly
You have too much fun arguing with us knuckle-draggers for me to interrupt, but I do want you to know that your posts are consistently amusing.

Thanks

M Y 2 CENTS
If 13 year old yahoos walk the halls smacking the butts of 13 year old yahooettes it is in all probability for one reason - that they got it from their parents that it's cool, or at least ok.

If you're gonna arrest anyone (which you shouldn't) arrest the parents.

lilly
So are you for or against what happened to Mr. Sonka? The post of 9/19/07 @ 3:58pm was rather ambiguous.

Right on, lilly
Mr. Sonka has committed no crimes.

We Don't Want No Stinkin' Laws
Michael Sonka was arrested 9-18-07 for gun-running after selling three 9 mm guns to undercover Lake CO officers at his home in Mundelein IL. Sonka previously was licensed as a firearms dealer but surrendered his license four months ago when advised that his gun business violated local zoning laws. Since then he has run an online ad to sell firearms under the name of Mike's Sporting Goods. When selling a gun, he has not required the 3-day waiting period and has not complied with documentation laws. At the time of his arrest, Sonka was found to have 636 guns, with an estimated value of $600,000, in the basement of his home. "I didn't do anything wrong," said Sonka. "That is my personal collection."

hot dog
Of course we have a major problem, traceable to the likes of Justice Frankfurter, the consummate judicial hot dog. Trusting the 'good sense' and 'guidance' of prosecutors and judges has led to where -- the prosecution of youthful pranksters, the continual release of sexual and violent offenders and frivolous lawsuits galore. Wish I could offer a solution, but our system has been seriously sabotaged over the years, primarily by Supreme Court bozos.

Even worse
In Georgia, we have several teenagers in jail serving TEN YEAR sentences for having consensual oral sex--if it had been regular sex, no crime, but oral sex, no. Ten years in prison with no chance of parole.

And with so many law and order types bent on criminalizing sex they don't like (many people still think all gay sex should be a criminal offense!), throwing people in prison for years because they have drug problems, and basically, just introducing state power into every corner, our prisons are bursting to the seams.

We have more people in prison per capita than any other country in the world. Think about that. That includes countries like China, Syria, and Iran. And WE lock more people up than they do. And no one wants to do anything about it, and the Republicans are worse on this than Democrats.

Still think we're the land of the free?

Incompetence
Both of the scenarios you describe - which I agree are absurd, sad and shameful - are the results of overzealous police and brain-dead school administrators, not flaws in the legal system.

We have a good system being run by idiots. Don't change the system - fire the idiots.
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