Aaron Swartz and the Feds: How Progressivism Becomes Tyranny
by
William L. Anderson
Recently
by William L. Anderson: Be
Happy! Progressives Have Wonderful Plans for You!
When Aaron
Swartz allegedly chose to end his life last week, he was facing
federal criminal charges that a compliant federal jury almost certainly
would have transformed into a conviction, with his facing many years
in a federal prison. Other writers
have spoken out about the case and how it ended tragically,
and their knowledge of the Internet and its many nuances is much
greater than my own, and I believe their tributes and personal statements
are more insightful than anything I could say about Swartz’s life
and his many accomplishments. (Glenn
Greenwald’s tribute better sums up in a few words than I could
say in 20 pages, so I encourage readers to read what Greenwald and
others
have to say in Swartz’s defense.)
I will write,
instead, on a subject on which I have better knowledge: the actions
of federal prosecutors and how they are the natural offspring of
the Progressive beliefs that so many Internet activists share. Yes,
this is ironic, in that the civil religion of many people now mourning
Aaron’s death provided the fuel for the very fire that engulfed
this brilliant young man. The unfortunate thing is that almost no
one will recognize the connection and, thus, will continue to embrace
the very religion that is strangling them and their creativity.
At this point,
let me say that readers of my material surely are going to think
that my attempts to draw the connections between Progressive thinking
and the malicious prosecution of Aaron Swartz are a stretch. They
are not. What happened to Swartz is a logical extension of a civil
religion that holds the expansion state power and the employment
of "experts" who wield it and make decisions about the
use of force is what defines a truly civilized society. While I
don’t know what Swartz’s politics were, I suppose that he, like
most other intellectuals in the Harvard-MIT sphere, subscribed unknowingly
to the very kind of thinking that ultimately would bring him to
a ruinous end.
Federal prosecutors
in Boston (who ironically are silent out of what they claim to be
"respect" for Swartz’s family, as though federal prosecutors
give a damn about anyone but themselves) went after him for finding
a way to download a number of files from JSTOR, the website that
has archived millions of academic journal papers. One blogger
put this into perspective:
Here is where
we need a better sense of justice, and shame. For the outrageousness
in this story is not just Aaron. It is also the absurdity of the
prosecutor’s behavior. From the beginning, the government worked
as hard as it could to characterize what Aaron did in the most
extreme and absurd way. The "property" Aaron had "stolen,"
we were told, was worth "millions of dollars" — with
the hint, and then the suggestion, that his aim must have been
to profit from his crime. But anyone who says that there is money
to be made in a stash of ACADEMIC ARTICLES
is either an idiot or a liar. It was clear what this was not,
yet our government continued to push as if it had caught the 9/11
terrorists red-handed. (Emphasis his)
Writes Greenwald:
To say that
the DOJ's treatment of Swartz was excessive and vindictive is
an extreme understatement. When I wrote
about Swartz's plight last August, I wrote that he was "being
prosecuted by the DOJ with obscene over-zealousness". Timothy
Lee wrote the
definitive article in 2011 explaining why, even if all the
allegations in the indictment are true, the only real crime committed
by Swartz was basic trespassing, for which people are punished,
at most, with 30 days in jail and a $100 fine, about which Lee
wrote: "That seems about right: if he's going to serve prison
time, it should be measured in days rather than years."
He even speculates
as to why the feds would seem to be so "over-zealous":
Nobody knows
for sure why federal prosecutors decided to pursue Swartz so vindictively,
as though he had committed some sort of major crime that deserved
many years in prison and financial ruin. Some
theorized that the DOJ hated him for his serial activism and
civil disobedience. Others speculated that, as Doctorow put it,
"the feds were chasing down all the Cambridge hackers who had
any connection to Bradley Manning in the hopes of turning one
of them."
I believe
it has more to do with what I told the New York Times' Noam Cohen
for an
article he wrote on Swartz's case. Swartz's activism, I argued,
was waged as part of one of the most vigorously contested battles
– namely, the war over how the internet is used and who controls
the information that flows on it – and that was his real crime
in the eyes of the US government: challenging its authority and
those of corporate factions to maintain a stranglehold on that
information. In that above-referenced speech on SOPA, Swartz discussed
the grave dangers to internet freedom and free expression and
assembly posed by the government's efforts to control the internet
with expansive interpretations of copyright law and other weapons
to limit access to information.
As correct
as Greenwald might be, I think there is an even larger point that
Greenwald and others miss precisely because they are Progressives
themselves, and because they still subscribe to the political views
that made this abusive prosecution possible. The heart of Progressive
thinking is that state-sponsored "experts" should be given
vast powers because they already know what needs to be done and
how to do it.
During the
Progressive Era of a century ago, the intellectuals pushing this
way of thinking openly despised the U.S. Constitution and any idea
that individuals should be free to think and act for themselves.
From the belief in the primacy of Eugenics, held by people like
Margaret Sanger, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, and others, to the
idea that government could and should manipulate markets in order
to obtain "socially-optimal outcomes," Progressives were
united in their conviction that intellectuals and "experts"
employed by the State could and should make decisions on how others
– especially those who were "inferiors" – should live.
While today’s
Progressives do not openly espouse the overt racism held by most
early Progressives (and especially Woodrow Wilson, who brought Jim
Crow laws and policies to the federal government), nonetheless they
still admire their intellectual forebears and they hold to the belief
that State power guided by (of course) Progressives will ultimately
produce the Good Society, whatever that may be. All one needs to
do is to read the editorial page (and the front page, for that matter)
of the New York Times to get a sense of how Progressives
think, and how they utterly despise anyone who is not of their ilk.
I have written
many articles on federal criminal law for this page, and for other
publications, such as The Freeman, Regulation, The
Independent Review, and Freedom Daily, and the theme
always has been the same: federal criminal law permits ambitious
prosecutors (or even lazy career prosecutors) to shape just about
any action one takes into a monstrous crimes that the Progressive
media echoes as being a huge threat to the well-being of all. While
some (including the bloggers
and writers dealing with the Swartz case) seem to believe that
this legal abuse is the result of "overzealousness" or
"overcriminalization," I see it from a very different
point of view.
Most federal
crimes today do not involve actual theft or unwarranted actions
of violence against others, but rather are the result of someone
allegedly breaking a rule. Thus, what was "legal" on one
day suddenly becomes illegal today, and as time goes on and people
continue to break the rules, the penalties become increasingly draconian.
(The Drug War and its escalation into the present-day situation
in which U.S. police have become essentially paramilitary forces
acting like occupying armies is the "gold standard" in
understanding how the system metastasizes.)
With these
points in mind, I examine the
charges against Swartz to point out just how awful and just
plain immoral they were. Of course, the standard federal charge
of "fraud" is all through the 14 indictments, but it is
questionable as to whether or not he actually "defrauded"
JSTOR (which settled with Swartz later and the principals of JSTOR
clearly did not want Swartz prosecuted). What he did was to devise
a system to get around the blocks that JSTOR has in order to keep
"unauthorized" users out.
While the feds
in the indictment sheet point out that some universities pay up
to $50,000 a year for JSTOR services, Swartz did not deprive other
professors and researchers at MIT from using JSTOR (except for the
brief time when MIT shut down the system to block Swartz, but that
was MIT’s choice, not Swartz’s). He allegedly downloaded close to
a million papers, but clearly could not have sold them, so they
were not worth anything to him financially.
(The feds told
the media that he "stole" material worth "millions
of dollars," but there is a huge point that needs to be made:
theft means that I have your material – and deprive you of
the use of what is legitimately your property. No one
at MIT or anywhere else where JSTOR is used was deprived of a single
academic paper for their own research. The JSTOR system exists because
of Intellectual Property rules, period, and IP rules have become
increasingly artificial – and more draconian in the penalties –
which is what we have come to understand is the hallmark of the
growth of federal criminal law.)
Because he
performed the "unauthorized" downloads more than once,
the feds essentially repeat the same charges over and over again.
Federal law encourages prosecutors to take a single act and fashion
multiple charges from it, the feds were able to get 14 separate
charges. Furthermore, because he was using a computer and the Internet,
the feds could charge him with "wire fraud," which is
nothing more than what Candice E. Jackson and I described as a "derivative
crime" in which the act itself (using the Internet) is not
criminal, but the charges are put together in a way to make an imaginary
act a crime.
For example,
the federal Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act
(RICO) allows prosecutors to bundle sets of actions and declare
them to be a single act of "racketeering." Now, no one
"racketeers" anyone, and the "crime" is "derived"
from other actions, but "racketeering" sounds quite onerous
and has very stiff criminal penalties associated with it. Likewise,
"wire fraud" is an imaginary crime that was created simply
to allow prosecutors to pile on more charges in hopes of getting
a plea bargain. In some cases, prosecutors are permitted to seize
a defendant’s assets even before a trial, making it virtually impossible
for a defendant to pay for decent legal help, and the "indigent"
lawyers provided by the government generally are people who mostly
plead out drug cases. (American prosecutors have a saying that describes
their goals when going after others: "Bleed ‘em and plead ‘em.")
Indeed, Swartz
was bled dry. While federal prosecutors have near-unlimited resources,
those charged must pay for a defense themselves, and federal prosecutions
are extremely expensive. It is not unusual for defendants to have
to come up with a million dollars or more. (In the Duke Lacrosse
case – a state case – the three defendants had to spend about a
million-and-a-half dollars apiece even though the case never
came to trial and even though it was obvious from the start that
the charges were false.)
As Swartz never
had sought to use his abilities to become wealthy, he ran out of
money and, according
to one blogger, he was forbidden by the federal district judge
in Boston from appealing to the public for legal funds. Thus, his
attorneys were hamstrung by a lack of resources even before the
case was scheduled to go to trial in April.
Then there
was stress, and I don’t think people can imagine the stress one
is under when facing a criminal trial. I have seen good people fall
apart under the pressure, and it is that pressure that leads one
to plead out just to get things over and done. Because prosecutors
are permitted by judges to engage in misconduct (and most judges
sympathize with their employer, the government, of course) and because
juries generally don’t care, the odds of even innocent people prevailing
at trial are astronomically small.
I
have serious doubts that even with the best of legal help, Aaron
Swartz would have prevailed at trial, and that is because federal
criminal law does not hold to the mens rea standard. (Under
the ancient Anglo-American doctrine of mens rea, a
defendant must have intended to commit a crime. Today, the
courts interpret that doctrine in a much different way: one must
have intended to commit the act that the feds claim is criminal.)
Furthermore, as I have written before, federal cases differ from
typical state cases in another important way: the action itself.
Assume, for
example, that someone is accused of murdering a store clerk during
a robbery. One can see on the video the person taking something
at gunpoint and then shooting the clerk. No one disputes that an
actual robbery and murder took place; what is decided is whether
or not the person in the dock is the one who committed the crime.
In federal
cases, however, people may well agree on the act itself – Swartz
did not deny using a computer to hack into the JSTOR system – but
a jury is supposed to decide whether or not the act itself is criminal.
Because the laws themselves can be confusing and because certain
technical issues might be introduced (one can imagine the terminology
that was to be used at Swartz’s trial), jurors tend to give up and
just assume that the fact that someone is on trial is proof of guilt.
I have seen situation after situation in which jurors clearly did
not understand what was happening, so they took the default position
of "guilty."
I suspect that
federal prosecutors would have likened Swartz to a computer hacker
who breaks into financial accounts and steals money or someone who
creates a malicious virus for the fun of it. By lumping him into
a category of real criminals, the feds would have been able to obscure
the fact that no one was deprived of any particular good, which
clearly would have set him apart from someone who illegally drains
the bank account of someone else. Even though Swartz would have
gained no material wealth from the downloads, nor could he have
sold these papers at any price, the feds still were accusing him
of stealing "millions of dollars" of material. That was
nonsense, but most federal criminal charges are nonsense.
Federal juries,
as most court observers will note, rarely are able to differentiate
between real crimes and federal rule-breaking. The difference is
huge, but after more than a century of Progressivism, Americans
have come to see arbitrary rules having the same moral and legal
structure as what historically has been regarded as law. Thus, a
jury would convict attorney Johnny Gaskins of "structuring"
because he deposited cash holdings at his home in amounts under
$10,000. He had obtained the money legally, had reported it to the
IRS and paid taxes, but still he was convicted because he broke
a rule that had an arbitrary number -- $10,000 – attached.
(I also note
that when Elliott Spitzer was a U.S. attorney and the governor of
New York, he also engaged in "structuring" withdrawals
in order to evade the law, as he was visiting prostitutes. Despite
the clear evidence against him, the government failed to file charges,
as those who are politically-connected have insurance policies when
they are caught breaking the law.)
Before the
proliferation of federal criminal laws, at worst Swartz would have
been charged with trespassing (had it even come to criminal proceedings),
and most likely the matter would have been handled privately. However,
federal prosecutors had different ideas, and while Greenwald notes
that there likely could have been other factors – such as his activism
in undermining what he believed to be immoral aspects of IP law
– I will claim ignorance here.
Over
the years, I have found that federal prosecutors don’t need to have
any particular reason to go after essentially innocent people. For
them, it is fun to destroy others, and they relish the "hunt"
and the "chase" as much as anything else. Because prosecutors
rarely are disciplined for misconduct, this is a profession that
attracts bullies, mediocre attorneys who love to stick it to others,
and ambitious but dishonest people. Aaron Swartz fell victim to
that state of affairs, and the fact that this kind of malicious
prosecution is the direct result of the Progressive mentality means
that only those who are not part of the Progressive mindset
– a very few number of people, indeed – really will understand what
is happening.
Progressives
believed (and still believe) that unlimited executive power placed
in the hands of "experts" and "good government"
types will produce the Good Society. Because of the reality of human
nature, political and legal power in the hands of people who believe
themselves invincible and righteous always will turn into the worst
kind of tyranny. There is no exception.
January
16, 2013
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. He
also is a consultant with American Economic Services. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2013 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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