The 10th Amendment Is Not a Treaty Violation
A chemical weapons law threatens liberty by undermining federalism.
After Carol Anne Bond discovered that her husband had impregnated her best friend, the Pennsylvania microbiologist took revenge by spreading toxic chemicals on her ex-friend's car door, mailbox, and door knob. The poisonous prank was mostly ineffectual, inflicting nothing worse than a minor thumb burn.
Bond's prosecution, the focus of a case the Supreme Court heard yesterday, could do a lot more damage. Defending its decision to make a federal case out of what sounds like fodder for a tabloid talk show, the Justice Department argues that treaties can give Congress new powers—a theory that threatens to destroy the constitutional division of authority between the states and the national government.
Instead of letting Pennsylvania's courts handle Bond's crime, federal prosecutors decided to indict her under the Chemical Weapons Convention Implementation Act. She received a six-year prison sentence, three times as severe as the maximum penalty available under state law.
The federal law makes it a crime to possess or use "any chemical weapon," defined as any substance that "can cause death, temporary incapacitation or permanent harm to humans or animals" unless it is intended for "peaceful purposes." Hence a host of widely used chemicals—chemicals that are sitting right now in your garage or under your kitchen sink—can be converted into contraband by evil thoughts.
A can of bug spray becomes a chemical weapon as soon as you think about deploying it against the dog that keeps pooping on your lawn. As Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito observed during an earlier phase of Bond v. United States, even a bottle of vinegar can be a chemical weapon if you pour it into someone's goldfish bowl.
On its face, this statute authorizes federal intervention in any case involving malicious use of chemicals, no matter how local, ordinary, or trivial. But what authorizes the statute? According to the Justice Department, the Chemical Weapons Convention does.
In other words, instead of going through the arduous process of amending the Constitution, the president and the Senate can expand the federal government's powers by agreeing to treaties. If the power to regulate interstate commerce cannot be stretched to accommodate a federal ban on possessing guns near schools or a mandate requiring everyone to buy government-approved medical coverage, a treaty dealing with firearms or health care will do the trick.
This broad view of the treaty power has dire implications for federalism. It suggests that Congress could cite international agreements as an excuse to override state decisions in areas such as drug policy, family law, and medical regulation. In fact, any state law would be subject to a federal veto if it arguably conflicted with the aims of a treaty.
The Justice Department concedes that "the Treaty Power would not permit Congress to breach prohibitory words applicable to all exercises of federal power." That means a treaty cannot authorize the federal government to violate the First Amendment by banning hate speech, the Second Amendment by confiscating handguns, or the Fifth Amendment by allowing punishment without due process. But somehow a treaty can authorize the federal government to violate the 10th Amendment by usurping powers "reserved to the states."
That dubious distinction reflects a fundamental misconception about the Constitution, which was designed to protect liberty primarily by limiting the federal government to specifically enumerated powers. The rights mentioned in the first eight amendments were literally an afterthought—not because they were considered unimportant but because the federal government, as constrained by the Constitution, had no power to violate them.
Two years ago, when the Supreme Court first considered Carol Bond's case, it unanimously ruled that she had a right to challenge her prosecution as a violation of the 10th Amendment. "By denying any one government complete jurisdiction over all the concerns of public life," Justice Anthony Kennedy explained, "federalism protects the liberty of the individual from arbitrary power." That is why letting treaties trump federalism is hazardous to your freedom.
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If someone has a peanut allergy and someone else exposes them to peanuts because they think they are doing them a favor to show them their allergy is just in their head, does that qualify as a chemical weapon?
And Jimmy Carter as a maker of WMD's
Let's see. You can't possess peanuts, which "can cause death, temporary incapacitation or permanent harm to humans or animals", unless they are intended for "peaceful purposes." You explicitly intend to do them a favor, so, nope -- not a chemical weapon.
Of course, you'd still be doing six years in the slammer.
I would think that "intended for peaceful purposes" describes the manufacture and distribution, not how a housewife decided to wield it.
If held to that meaning, then sarin gas is a chemical weapon while household vinegar is not. Unfortunately, those in power tend to define rules in the way that gives them even more power.
Water is a chemical; everything is a chemical. If I drown you or hit you with a rock, is that chemical warfare?
You know who else incited people over a treaty?
Sitting Bull?
Alexander II?
The original "Pilgrims"?
Legate Damar?
The "Prophet"?
Lady Godiva? Oh, wait. You said treaty
After Carol Anne Bond...took revenge by spreading toxic chemicals
If James Bond had used these chemicals on someone, it would have been for national security!
But what about abortion? abortion abortion abortion abortion abortion
Aren't chemicals used in abortion abortion abortion? Why does the UN care more about baby murder than Reason?!? Cocktail partiez!
ABORTION! GAYS! CHEMICALS!
Abort all gay chemicals?
Marriage equality means abortions can gay marry any chemical they choose.
Jooz.
Gaysian Joobortions!
GAYABORTOCHEMTRAILZ1111!!!!!ONE!
That's what happened to Art Bell.
He was aborted by a gay chemtrail...?
He died fighting them!
This thread is already a mini classic.
Tax and spend, interstate commerce, necessary and proper, and, now, treaties. One way or another, all your rights are belong to us.
Yes. The Statists desperately, DESPERATELY want a way around the Constitution because they know that they can't get popular assent to their ideas quickly enough to get their dreams in place before their failures catch up with them. It's just SO HARD getting all these peasants to accept what is good for them!
*spit*
Just wait till they get the Senate to ratify the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which has all sorts of rules that are aimed at getting rid of various constitutional limits.
I weep for thou, O Sovereign.
So when my college buddy woke up his roommate by peeing in his ear, he was a war criminal?
Good to know.
Wait...what?!
Some of these things scenarios sound more like biological warfare.
So no more itching powder, black soap, or insanely hot chewing gum. This will put an end to the Johnson Smith catalog. Well, I guess there is still fake dog poo.
X-ray glasses and rubber vomit are safe, right?
Water can be a chemical weapon too.
"instead of going through the arduous process of amending the Constitution, the president and the Senate can expand the federal government's powers by....."
They have completely slipped the leash. Where is my pitchfork? I think it is in the shed.
By "pitchfork," surely you mean "AT4-CS," right?
It will be interesting to see how blue-helmeted enforcers are greeted in, say, Texas. With cheers? With cow flops? With ...?
theres the problem of missouri v holland in 1920 - the ussc proclaimed thatt laws which would violate the 10th absent a rreaty could be constitutional as treaty enforcement. Alas, the opinion was by the prophet o w holmes, pbuh, so it has an extra respectability.
O.W. Holmes erred on this one. First, the Constitution is supreme over treaties. Second, the 10th Amendment was ratified AFTER the original constitutional language of treaties, thus superseding the earlier language. I will go read the opinion to see how Holmes justified his error, but it's still an error, and the current court should overturn Mo. v. Holland if it relies on that error.
Then theres the political history of the failure of the bricker amendment in the fifties, which is seen as a Defeat of Extremism and a Victory of Human Rights.
So any cop who unlawfully uses pepper spray on someone is violating an international chemical weapons treaty.
When are the feds going to prosecute this guy?
As I read it, 18 USC 220 specifically exempts government employees, of course.
These people obviously don't care about the law. All they care about it filling the already overrun prison cells, packing people in like sardines, just to so they can say they did something.
In a way, I am surprised that this case has come this far. I thought it was settled law that, to the extent treaties expanded Federal power against or beyond Constitutional provisions, they were null and void. I guess not; you learn something new every day. Still, assuming that principle is upheld in this case, can the Senators who ratified the treaty in question, and the President who negotiated it, then be punished violating their oaths of office to "Preserve, Protect, and Defend" the Constitution?
One, this is assult and needs to be prosecuted; giving people chemical burns is not free speech it is an attack on a person.
That said a Federal case using a Treaty is not the venue for this; there are those who want to use (and believe; Team Blue I'm looking at you) the treaty to "get around" the Constitution on matters like Gun Control and Social Justice.
Cases like this where the person needs to be punished locally and was not opens the door for bad precedence like this to bring abut the leftist holy grail of dismantling what remains of the limited government philosophy of the founding fathers.
That's just the thing. There are dozens of cases where precedence refutes the above egregious over-stepping of Federal power. How many articles have you read about someone who had battery acid or sulfuric acid thrown in his/her face by someone else armed with a jar and malice? Exactly.
A agree with author.
Or rather see George Will's Wa-Po column this week for a more educated and academic explanation. Nice try though, Sullum.
"Mistrust those in whom the urge to punish is strong." (Friedrich Nietzsche) That would be us... as in U.S.
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