Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
10/6/2009 8:26:01 AM EDT
Brian W. Walsh




"You don't need to know. You can't know." That's what Kathy
Norris, a 60-year-old grandmother of eight, was told when she tried to
ask court officials why, the day before, federal agents had subjected
her home to a furious search.





The agents who spent half a day ransacking Mrs. Norris' longtime home
in Spring, Texas, answered no questions while they emptied file
cabinets, pulled books off shelves, rifled through drawers and closets,
and threw the contents on the floor.





The six agents, wearing SWAT gear and carrying weapons, were with - get this- the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.





Kathy and George Norris lived under the specter of a covert government
investigation for almost six months before the government unsealed a
secret indictment and revealed why the Fish and Wildlife Service had
treated their family home as if it were a training base for suspected
terrorists. Orchids.


That's right. Orchids.





By March 2004, federal prosecutors were well on their way to turning
66-year-old retiree George Norris into an inmate in a federal
penitentiary - based on his home-based business of cultivating,
importing and selling orchids.





Mrs. Norris testified before the House Judiciary subcommittee on crime
this summer. The hearing's topic: the rapid and dangerous expansion of
federal criminal law, an expansion that is often unprincipled and
highly partisan.





Chairman Robert C. Scott, Virginia Democrat, and ranking member Louie
Gohmert, Texas Republican, conducted a truly bipartisan hearing (a D.C.
rarity this year).





These two leaders have begun giving voice to the increasing number of
experts who worry about "overcriminalization." Astronomical numbers of
federal criminal laws lack specifics, can apply to almost anyone and
fail to protect innocents by requiring substantial proof that an
accused person acted with actual criminal intent.





Mr. Norris ended up spending almost two years in prison because he
didn't have the proper paperwork for some of the many orchids he
imported. The orchids were all legal - but Mr. Norris and the overseas
shippers who had packaged the flowers had failed to properly navigate
the many, often irrational, paperwork requirements the U.S. imposed
when it implemented an arcane international treaty's new restrictions
on trade in flowers and other flora.





The judge who sentenced Mr. Norris had some advice for him and his
wife: "Life sometimes presents us with lemons." Their job was, yes, to
"turn lemons into lemonade."





The judge apparently failed to appreciate how difficult it is to run a
successful lemonade stand when you're an elderly diabetic with coronary
complications, arthritis and Parkinson's disease serving time in a
federal penitentiary. If only Mr. Norris had been a Libyan terrorist,
maybe some European official at least would have weighed in on his
behalf to secure a health-based mercy release.





Krister Evertson, another victim of overcriminalization, told Congress,
"What I have experienced in these past years is something that should
scare you and all Americans." He's right. Evertson, a small-time
entrepreneur and inventor, faced two separate federal prosecutions
stemming from his work trying to develop clean-energy fuel cells.





The feds prosecuted Mr. Evertson the first time for failing to put a
federally mandated sticker on an otherwise lawful UPS package in which
he shipped some of his supplies. A jury acquitted him, so the feds
brought new charges. This time they claimed he technically had
"abandoned" his fuel-cell materials - something he had no intention of
doing - while defending himself against the first charges. Mr.
Evertson, too, spent almost two years in federal prison.





As George Washington University law professor Stephen Saltzburg
testified at the House hearing, cases like these "illustrate about as
well as you can illustrate the overreach of federal criminal law." The
Cato Institute's Timothy Lynch, an expert on overcriminalization,
called for "a clean line between lawful conduct and unlawful conduct."
A person should not be deemed a criminal unless that person "crossed
over that line knowing what he or she was doing." Seems like common
sense, but apparently it isn't to some federal officials.





Former U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh's testimony captured
the essence of the problems that worry so many criminal-law experts.
"Those of us concerned about this subject," he testified, "share a
common goal - to have criminal statutes that punish actual criminal
acts and [that] do not seek to criminalize conduct that is better dealt
with by the seeking of regulatory and civil remedies." Only when the
conduct is sufficiently wrongful and severe, Mr. Thornburgh said, does
it warrant the "stigma, public condemnation and potential deprivation
of liberty that go along with [the criminal] sanction."





The Norrises' nightmare began with the search in October 2003. It
didn't end until Mr. Norris was released from federal supervision in
December 2008. His wife testified, however, that even after he came
home, the man she had married was still gone. He was by then 71 years
old. Unsurprisingly, serving two years as a federal convict - in
addition to the years it took to defend unsuccessfully against the
charges - had taken a severe toll on him mentally, emotionally and
physically.





These are repressive consequences for an elderly man who made mistakes
in a small business. The feds should be ashamed, and Mr. Evertson is
right that everyone else should be scared. Far too many federal laws
are far too broad.





Mr. Scott and Mr. Gohmert have set the stage for more hearings on why
this places far too many Americans at risk of unjust punishment.
Members of both parties in Congress should follow their lead.
Brian W. Walsh is senior legal research fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation.





http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/05/criminalizing-everyone//print/

10/6/2009 8:27:11 AM EDT
[#1]
Dupe, still on page 1. http://www.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=1&f=5&t=937354
10/6/2009 8:30:53 AM EDT
[#2]
The SWAT team has confiscated your dupe.