Overcriminalization: Congressional Research Service Doesn't Have The Manpower To List All Federal Crimes
from the perhaps-we-have-too-many dept
A new video from the Cato Institute discusses the issue of overcriminalization, which is quite interesting:The task force staff asked the Congressional Research Service to update the calculation of criminal offenses in the federal code, which was last undertaken in 2008, said task force chairman Representative John Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.)There's clearly something very, very wrong about a criminal code where the governmental agency charged with doing basic research for Congress finds it too big a task to list out all of the crimes listed under federal law. At that point, you no longer have a "rule of law." You have a system of loopholes and gotchas, with enough tricks and traps that anyone can be made into a criminal if the authorities decide that's what they want to do. This isn't to suggest that law enforcement regularly goes after people with trumped up charges -- I don't think they do. However, it does happen sometimes. But, far more common, and equally worrisome, is how this allows law enforcement to pile on additional charges and potential punishment for people accused of relatively minor crimes.
"CRS's initial response to our request was that they lack the manpower and resources to accomplish this task," Sensenbrenner said Friday. "I think this confirms the point that all of us have been making on this issue and demonstrates the breadth of overcriminalization."
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Filed Under: congressional research service, crimes, jim sensenbrenner, laws, overcriminalization
Reader Comments
The First Word
“"Sorry, we can't provide that information. Way too much work."
"But how can I be sure that I'm not breaking any laws"
"We're constantly monitoring your email, phone calls, and your location. We know what library books you check out and can get your credit card and banking data whenever we want. If we suspect you broke a law, we'll arrest you."
"Arrest me!? But then I'd have to spend money on bail, on a lawyer, and take time off from work. All because you suspect I may have committed a crime?"
"Freedom ain't free, sir."
"But that's not freedom."
"Sorry, it's my lunch break."
This is a Bloom County comic strip waiting to happen...
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Holy tree devastation, Batman!
And then you can't claim lack of knowledge of the law...
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"Sorry, we can't provide that information. Way too much work."
"But how can I be sure that I'm not breaking any laws"
"We're constantly monitoring your email, phone calls, and your location. We know what library books you check out and can get your credit card and banking data whenever we want. If we suspect you broke a law, we'll arrest you."
"Arrest me!? But then I'd have to spend money on bail, on a lawyer, and take time off from work. All because you suspect I may have committed a crime?"
"Freedom ain't free, sir."
"But that's not freedom."
"Sorry, it's my lunch break."
This is a Bloom County comic strip waiting to happen...
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Or, they simply don't have the manpower or resources to do it, as they said. If you task someone to do something, but then give them too few resources to accomplish it, isn't it your fault for not giving them the resources they need to accomplish the task you've asked of them?
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Re:
"I would like a list of all laws so that I can be sure not to break any."
"Sorry, there are too many for us to list them all."
"Sorry, I didn't know I was breaking a law."
"Ignorance of the law doesn't excuse you from it."
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If they have the resources to enforce these laws, it stands to reason that they have the resources to list them all out.
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It's truly amazing, the divide between what the government expects of you and how much they can punish you for not meeting their expectations. In many cases, even if you ultimately win, you're still in far worse shape than you were before, with little chance of ever being "made whole" again.
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The fact that THEY DO NOT ALREADY HAVE IT is a huge problem. Our lawmakers don't have a list of the existing laws?
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We're all individually expected to adhere to the laws that they don't have enough manpower to figure out.
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Any Crime, One Punishment
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_(Star_Trek:_The_Next_Generation)
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Re: Any Crime, One Punishment
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Re: Re: Any Crime, One Punishment
http://www.brillig.com/sliders/episodes/20.html
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I think someone needs to document "crimes" committed (innocently) by Federal judges to illustrate that the theory of "ignorance of the law is now excuse" is a hopelessly outdated concept.
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The pain of planning the future of a country: The better you protect the system against stupid politicians doing overreaching powergrabs/corruption, the more of an inflexible and politically unaccountable system you end up with.
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You think that after 2000 years people would learn not to make laws to govern every single aspect of life, but find mechanisms that passively drive people to obey certain rules.
Nature apparently can do better without laws at all.
http://www.wired.com/opinion/2013/07/what-ants-yes-know-that-we-dont-the-future-of-networking/
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With the amount of laws in existence today, trumping up charges is no longer necessary, although it does happen with enough frequency (for every Aaron Schwartz - just dogpiling on every offense they can find on the books - that makes the headline, there are literally hundreds, if not thousands, that get lost in the mass of information today). Nowadays it's more a matter of ignoring the more "meaningless" laws (jaywalking and spitting on the sidewalk are still technically against the law in many places) than actually trying to trump up charges.
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ignorance of the law
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignorantia_juris_non_excusat
Ah, The One Law? "Everything about law I learned from one legal maxim"
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