The Overcriminalization of America: Are We All Criminals Now?
by John W. Whitehead
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Under
the blazing Arizona sun stands an encampment of military tents filled
with some 2,000 people. They battle the heat by positioning themselves
in front of a few large fans, but they are of little use when temperatures
reach 145 degrees. Stun fences surround the perimeter, with four
Sky Watch Towers bearing down on the occupants. Facial recognition
software and K-9 units keep track of the people moving about, longing
for their freedom.
For the residents
of Tent City Jail, their time behind bars is an exercise in humiliation:
they are forced to dress in pink underwear, they work seven
days a week, are fed only twice a day, get no coffee, no cigarettes,
no salt, pepper or ketchup and no organized recreation. They
work on chain gangs, and have to pay ten bucks every time they want
to see a nurse. This draconian treatment is not reserved for hardened
criminals. In fact, most inmates in Tent City are imprisoned for
less than a year for minor crimes, or are simply awaiting trial.
It is in this
Guantanamo-like facility, surrounded by hardened criminals and subjected
to all manners of degradation and hardship that Michael Salman who
was fined more than $12,000 and sentenced to 60 days in jail starting
on July 9, 2012, for the so-called crime of holding
a weekly Bible study in his Phoenix home, allegedly in violation
of the citys building codes is incarcerated.
What happened
to Michael Salman armed police raids of his property, repeated
warnings against holding any form of Bible study at his home, and
a court-ordered probation banning him from having any gatherings
of more than 12 people at his home should never have happened
in America. Yet this is the reality that more and more Americans
are grappling with in the face of a government bureaucracy consumed
with churning out laws, statutes, codes and regulations that reinforce
its powers and value systems and those of the police state and its
corporate allies. All the while, the life is slowly being choked
out of our individual freedoms. The aim, of course, is absolute
control by way of thousands of regulations that dictate when, where,
how and with whom we live our lives.
Incredibly,
Congress has been creating on average 55 new crimes
per year, bringing the total number of federal crimes on the books
to more than 5,000, with as many as 300,000 regulatory crimes. As
journalist Radley Balko reports, that doesn't include federal
regulations, which are increasingly being enforced with criminal,
not administrative, penalties. It also doesn't include the increasing
leeway with which prosecutors can enforce broadly written federal
conspiracy, racketeering, and money laundering laws. And this is
before we even get to the states criminal codes.
In such a society,
we are all petty criminals, guilty of violating some minor law.
In fact, Boston lawyer Harvey Silvergate, author of Three Felonies
a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent, estimates that the average
American now unknowingly commits three felonies a day, thanks to
an overabundance of vague laws that render otherwise innocent activity
illegal and an inclination on the part of prosecutors to reject
the idea that there cant be a crime without criminal intent.
Consequently, we now find ourselves operating in a strange new world
where small farmers who dare to make unpasteurized goat cheese and
share it with members of their community are finding their farms
raided, while home gardeners face jail time for daring to cultivate
their own varieties of orchids without having completed sufficient
paperwork.
This frightening
state of affairs where a person can actually be arrested and
incarcerated for the most innocent and inane activities, including
feeding a whale and collecting rainwater on their own property (these
are actual cases in the courts right now) is due to what law
scholars refer to as overcriminalization, or the overt proliferation
of criminal laws. Such laws, notes journalist George
Will, which enable government zealots to accuse almost anyone
of committing three felonies in a day, do not just enable government
misconduct, they incite prosecutors to intimidate decent people
who never had culpable intentions. And to inflict punishments without
crimes.
Michael Salman
is merely one more unfortunate soul caught in the governments
cross-hairs, only his so-called crime deserving of prosecution was
daring to take part in a time-honored tradition that goes back centuries gathering
with family and friends at home for prayer and worship.
Since 2005,
Michael and his wife Suzanne have hosted Bible studies at their
Phoenix home for 20-45 family and friends, depending on the day
of the week and time. Attendees park their cars on the Salmans
4.6-acre property so as not to crowd the street or inconvenience
the neighbors. However, after some neighbors complained about the
gatherings, city zoning officials started harassing the Salmans,
advising them that they were breaking the law because religious
activities, even in the home, have to be governed by building codes
for churches, rather than residential homes. Of course, these zoning
officials had no problem with group gatherings for family reunions,
football parties, Tupperware parties or Boy Scout meetings. In June
2009, nearly a dozen armed police officers, accompanied by city
inspectors, raided the Salmans property, charging them with
67 code violations that apply to commercial and public buildings,
including having no emergency exit signs over the doors, no handicap
parking spaces or handicap ramps.
For more than
three years, the Salmans attempted to placate city officials, even
agreeing to install overhead sprinklers in their converted game
room, but when zoning officials started insisting that the Salmans
actually install paved roads and curbs on their private property,
they said no more. Thats when city officials really
turned up the heat, sentencing Michael Salman to 60 days in jail,
more than $12,000 in fines and a two-year probation. Making matters
worse, city officials then found Michael guilty of violating his
probation by continuing to hold Bible studies on his private property
after being ordered not to have more than 12 people gathered on
his property at any one time. In addition to increased jail time
for Michael and fines, the Salmans will also be subjected to unannounced
monthly visits by government inspectors, checking to ensure they
do not have more than 12 people in their home at any given time.
The situation
in which the Salmans find themselves is not all that unusual. All
across the country, in cities, towns and villages of every size
imaginable, Americans of all faiths Christians, Jews, Muslims
and so on gather in their homes for fellowship, prayer and
reflection. Yet as communities from New York to California adopt
strident zoning codes crafted in such a way as to keep churches,
synagogues and mosques at a distance, especially from residential
neighborhoods, and discourage religious gatherings, these religious
rituals are now being outlawed in America. For example, in an effort
to discourage what it referred to as illegal synagogues,
the Village of Hempstead, N.Y., went so far as to create zoning
laws that would make it nearly impossible for Orthodox Jews to hold
prayer meetings in their homes.
There was a
time in our nations history when such an accounting of facts
would have sparked immediate outrage. However, having bought into
the idea that anything the government says and does is right, even
when it is so clearly wrong, many Americans through their own compliance
have become unwitting accomplices in the governments efforts
to prosecute otherwise law-abiding citizens for unknowingly violating
some statute in its vast trove of laws written by bureaucrats who
operate above the law. Yet as Nathan Burney so adeptly points out
in his Illustrated Guide to Criminal Law, when
crimes are too numerous to count
when youre punished,
not because what you did was wrong, but simply because the law says
so
when laws are too vague or overbroad
thats
not justice.
August
7, 2012
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead [send
him mail] is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. He is the author of The
Change Manifesto (Sourcebooks).
Copyright
© 2012 The Rutherford Institute
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