SCOTUS Again Upholds Double Prosecution and Punishment for the Same Crime
Unsatisfied by the outcome of one case, the feds secured a much more severe penalty the second time around.

The federal government prosecuted Merle Denezpi twice for the same crime. It also punished him twice: the first time with 140 days in a federal detention center, the second time with a prison sentence more than 70 times as long.
Although that may seem like an obvious violation of the Fifth Amendment's ban on double jeopardy, the Supreme Court last week ruled that it wasn't. As the six justices in the majority saw it, that puzzling conclusion was the logical result of the Court's counterintuitive precedents on this subject.
The Fifth Amendment says no person will "be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." But under the Court's longstanding "dual-sovereignty" doctrine, an offense is not "the same" when it is criminalized by two different governments.
That doctrine allows serial state and federal prosecutions for the same crime, opening the door to double punishment or a second trial after an acquittal. Although neither seems just, the Court says both are perfectly constitutional.
The justices reaffirmed that view in a 2019 case involving a man with a felony record who was convicted twice and punished twice for illegally possessing a gun—first in state court, then in federal court. Although the elements of the crime were the same in both cases, the majority said, the two prosecutions did not amount to double jeopardy because they involved two different "sovereigns."
Justice Neil Gorsuch strenuously dissented in that case. "A free society does not allow its government to try the same individual for the same crime until it's happy with the result," he wrote. "Unfortunately, the Court today endorses a colossal exception to this ancient rule against double jeopardy."
Gorsuch, joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, dissented again last week. Even the "colossal exception" created by the dual-sovereignty doctrine, he said, is not big enough to encompass the two cases against Denezpi, both of which were pursued by the federal government under federal law.
In 2017, Denezpi and a woman identified as V.Y. in court papers, both members of the Navajo Nation, traveled to Towaoc, Colorado, a town within the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation where Denezpi's girlfriend lived. V.Y. alleged that Denezpi sexually assaulted her during the trip, while he maintained that the encounter was consensual.
After federal officials charged Denezpi with three crimes, he pleaded no contest to assault and battery, which is defined by tribal law but also punishable under the Code of Federal Regulations by up to six months in jail. A Court of Indian Offenses, part of a system established by the Department of the Interior, sentenced Denezpi to time served: 140 days.
Accepting V.Y.'s allegations as true, most people would view that penalty as excessively lenient, and federal prosecutors in Colorado evidently agreed. Six months after Denezpi completed his Interior Department sentence, the Justice Department charged him with aggravated sexual abuse, which resulted in a 30-year federal prison term.
"Mr. Denezpi's first crime of conviction (assault and battery) is a lesser included offense of his second crime of conviction (aggravated sexual abuse)," Gorsuch notes in his dissent. "And no one disputes that, under our precedents, that is normally enough to render them the 'same offense' and forbid a second prosecution."
Six justices nevertheless approved the second prosecution, tracing the authority for the first conviction to a distinct "sovereign": the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. But as Gorsuch notes, the first prosecution was not based on tribal law per se; it was based on a federal regulation that criminalizes "violation of an approved tribal ordinance."
Although the two convictions involved the "same defendant," the "same crime," and the "same prosecuting authority," Gorsuch observes, the Court implausibly concluded that "the Double Jeopardy Clause has nothing to say about this case." Such reasoning amplifies the danger that Gorsuch decried in 2019, inviting the government to "try the same individual for the same crime until it's happy with the result."
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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A blatant end run around the constitution.
Dumb nazi responding to a bot again.
He’s probably too fixated on exterminating the Jews. Like in the 40’s which totally never happened.
So we need to fix this with a constitutional amendment forbidding federal statutes that address things addressed by states. Right?
States or Federally recognized Tribes.
Or let the govt with the harshest penalty have first chance to prosecute or pass and right down the line. First trial (if any) ends it.
Good luck with that.
I agree with that and by that logic, there should be no such thing as the Federal Government dictating how states run their sex offense registries. Sex crimes that don't cross state lines have no hooks for federal jurisdiction and yet the Adam Walsh Act withholds 10% of Byrne Law Enforcement grants from states who are not "substantially compliant". The Adam Walsh Act has been interpreted in a way that would force a state-level sex offender to register even if they had previously been removed from the registry or were convicted and served their time long before the registry was ever even enacted. The recent "interpretations" has for all intents and purposes set up 2 parallel duties to register. Look at Willman v. United States Attorney General. Also look at how states can now side-step the legislative process of adopting those standards as their own by adding the words "or as required by Federal SORNA standards"
How about we just take the constitution we've GOTand let it mean what it says? Don't these high and mighty "Just Usses" realise that the states and tribes are the bases for the federal government, in other words, the soveriegn states jointly and severally COMPRISE FedGov. So if a state, as an entity being part of FedGov, tries a case, FedGov cannot ALSO try the same person for the same incident, as that IS "double jeopardy" and proscribed in the Constitutioin. Further, the "few and defined" powers of FedGov do NOT provide for that entity to try petty crimes, and the entire consept of the existence of "federal" crimes as distinct from "other" crimes is a travesty.
the INTENT of the Framers is very clear in the prohibition of "twice put in jeopardy for the same offense" means precisely what it says.
Feds cannot get off with renaming a specific "action" and thus inveinting a separate offense. Gorsuch has it right, and for once do the two leftwingnuts Kagen and SotoMayor.
your plan is reasonable and therefor rejected
The tribes themselves need to pass internal legislation that makes it a CRIME for any prosecutor to attempt prosecution under different statutes and or different sovereign of the same actions. The penalty MUST be at minimum the longest possible incarceration for the offense prosecuted the SECOND time. In other words the PROSECUTOR in this case would be subject to 30 years imprisonment for having prosecuted a second time. The Indian tribe under its treaties has authority to cause the prosecutor to be extradited to the Indian Nation for prosecution. Failure to do so would be a violation of treaty (highest law of land) and in fact END the treaty itself!
i've often thought that the tribes do not push their sovereignty envelope nearly as aggressively as i would if i was a member. years ago i was at a concert on a res and asked where the grilling section" was. the tribal guy said "sorry, county law says no grills". I LAUGHED AND TOLD HIM HIS TRIBE NEEDED TO GROW A SET OF BALLS. we're on the rez babee...we do as we please
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The job of the Court is to protect government, not to uphold the Constitution.
That's a fact. Protect the system.
Your complaint ignores the fact that it's not the same crime. He broke tribal law and also broke federal law.
When you simultaneously break laws on both federal and state (or tribal) levels, then of course they can both prosecute you. Otherwise, you end up being prosecuted for only one of the crimes with the other being permanently barred. Whether the laws are identical, similar (possessing drugs versus trafficking drugs), or different yet done simultaneously (assaulting someone while violating their civil rights), this is a necessary allowance.
I have a hard time finding the part of the Constitution that gives policing power to the federal government. Commerce clause maybe?
Any federal territory which may or may not include Indian reservations
The Interstate Commerce Clause gives the feds pretty much unlimited power. Anything that can have even the remotest ties to "interstate commerce" is fair game. Even if a supervised felon subject to the sex offense registry at the state level drops off radar in one state and shows up in another, the feds can get him because that touches "interstate commerce". Wickard v. Filburn should be overturned and dial the power of the FED back to what it should be.
they've angled that tactic to preposterous levels. the supremes will reign them in
Part of the problem here is the fiction that Tribes are sovereign.
They are about as sovereign as Reason is libertarian.
Good point. Only leftists disagree with the right. True libertarians are conservative Republicans.
I think you got this one wrong sarcasmic. Only the right disagrees with the left. True libertarians are progressive leftists.
find the nolan chart...this left/right standard needs to be laid to rest.
So the founders were being very technical when they wrote/approved the double jeopardy clause? You can only be tried for a crime once, but any action can be made any number of crimes by all levels of government all of which can be tried repeatedly? It makes me wonder why they bothered at all with the double jeopardy clause.
Why did they bother with enumerated powers or a constitution at all when the two words "regulate commerce" give the federal government virtually unlimited power?
God youre dumber than I am, Orgasmic !
Again, thank SCOTUS for Wickard v. Filburn. When the Supreme Court lets the federal government screw a man over for growing 1 extra acre of wheat beyond the limit set for personal consumption, you know then and there the Court is NOT concerned about the rights of citizens, but rather ensuring all-encompassing federal authority is never compromised to the least degree and I guarantee you no matter how loudly we all shout, republicans and democrats both won't lift the tiniest finger to change the law to protect us!!!
" It makes me wonder why they bothered at all with the double jeopardy clause."
Overall it is a good question. But perhaps the answer is they were simply preventing what to us seems so obviously wrong and is still very much protected. That being to not allow the prosecution any simple do-overs/repeat prosecution when faced with an undesired verdict.
Because in any given case - even with these two particular prosecutions - jeopardy was attached to each. While I do find them similar enough to pose the more broad question, the court felt they were different enough to answer the matter.
As I said in an earlier thread on the same topic, I think that the FFs simply made a mistake. The English common law rule was that you couldn't be tried on the same facts twice, which prevents serial charges.
But the dual sovereign argument is nowhere to be found in the Constitution - it's judge-made law.
Yeah. Maybe we can say they made a mistake in not being specific enough, but if consider what has happened to the rest of the constitution, especially the commerce clause, they never stood a chance.
Is the crime the action or the law?
Can someone be charged for theft by the city, county, state, and feds if each entity has their own law about theft?
The Fifth Amendment says no person will "be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb."
How is an "offense" defined? Why stop at different "sovereigns". Can't this be interpreted to mean that each law that is broken constitutes a different "offense"?
I was thinking the same thing. If someone robs a store and pistol whips the clerk, but the DA knocks it down to just robbery if they plead guilty, can another "sovereign" still prosecute the assault?
Just going to mention in passing that the author of the the dissent is a SUPREME COURT JUSTICE. Remarkably, they are recognized by their expertise on black letter law. In the dissent, he is quoted as saying "Mr. Denezpi's first crime of conviction (assault and battery) is a lesser included offense of his second crime of conviction (aggravated sexual abuse)," Gorsuch notes in his dissent. "And no one disputes that, under our precedents, that is normally enough to render them the 'same offense' and forbid a second prosecution." Just noting the relevance to your initial post.
Except he didn't break tribal law. He broke federal law applied to the tribes. The court he was tried in for violating 'tribal' law wasn't any part of the tribal government, nor was the law he was accused of violating instituted by the tribal government. It was pure federal.
'...A free society does not allow its government ..' and this case doesn't change that. Each 'government' gets one bite at the apple. There will be good and bad results, e.g. When State Courts with a 12 member KKK jury fail to convict anyone caught on video and signing a confession, if the victim is black,we should be grateful there is another chance at justice from another separate government. States are not enforcing interstate gun laws used in crimes in places like Chicago. (Unfortunately, the Feds aren't much better, but the pending gun legislation soon to be law, has a provision for 15 years if you use an out of State gun in a crime. Don't expect anyone Biden or Trump, to consider using it). Gorsuch (and Reason) don't seem to be too bright on this pretty simple, easy to understand decision.
Except this time it was the same government. Gorsuch has it exactly right, the first court and offense were just as federal as the second were.
Hasn't this always been the case? There have been state and federal charges for the same set of charges going back decades is not longer. So, this isn't a change, just upholding the status quo. Now it's fair for Reason to argue that the status quo is wrong, but they didn't really make that argument in this piece. In my opinion, the author just half assed a quick article with little research.
The difference he was first convicted in A Court of Indian Offenses, which is under federal jurisdiction, then tried again in federal court, no state jurisdiction involved.
More than that, he was convicted and fully served his sentence. That's a far cry from a white guy getting off in the Jim Crow South.
The best thing about being the sovereign... is that there are so many sovereigns!
This jogged my memory about an episode of Law & Order. After getting some slimeballs testimony in exchange for dropping charges against him a federal agent appears and arrests him. When the guy looks at the L&O DA in shock he says "the agreement was to drop all state charges. Nothing was said about federal charges. Next time get a better lawyer".
Oh, I HATE AND I DO MEAN HATE TO THE DEPTHS OF MY BEING the character of Jack McCoy!!!
This kind of makes sense: different nations can prosecute you for the same crime, and, well, we pretend that Indian reservations are a "different nation".
The real problem here is that the federal government has no business prosecuting ordinary crimes (like rape, murder, etc.) in the first place. These are purely state/tribal matters.
Yes! Why is sexual assault a federal crime?
"These are purely state/tribal matters."
"Purely" tribal matters are by definition Federal matters, since each and every Tribes owes it's existence to an agreement with the Federal government and none has a legal existence apart from the Federal government.
See how that works?
These lands are "Native American tribal nations" with tribal sovereignty.
Not only that, but the Court of Indian Offenses isn't a tribal court at all. It's a federal court, enforcing federal laws. To pretend its a different sovereign is laughable.
the tribes predate the federal structure. one does not receive/get sovereignty...it is god given. like those who think our constitution grants rights...you are mistaken. if the tribes let themselves be hornswaggled into letting federal courts adjudicate the issues that doesn't mean they are right...only misled and awaiting their enlightenment.
when i'm president there will be some changes!
Then why do so many cheer the Feds using the withholding of 10% of Byrne Grants to law enforcement for states who do not comply with the sex offender registry standards set out in the Adam Walsh Act? Why do so many of you champion and scream and cheer for laws like the federal Adam Walsh Act?
Each state runs their registry as they see fit and if they want to let people off after so many years offense-free, that's the state's business. If they want to tier offenders based on actual individual risk to the community vs. The Adam Walsh Act's offense-based tiering, that's also the states' business. Why should it be a federal matter to retroactively recapture and register state-level offenders whose offenses may have occurred decades before any registry law was written? Does anyone criticize the feds stepping all over state sovereignty in this arena? I want an answer from you guys. Do you flip-flop based on the agenda of the moment?
But can our government prosecute someone who commits crimes in a foreign country? For example, can the USA prosecute someone for a crime in Irkutsk? Or, as I believe is more likely, can the nation with jurisdiction, apply for extradition of said miscreant? The accused can fight the extradition but our nation cannot prosecute, barring a nexus to the USA.
30 years on a double-jeopardy he said / she said what dafuq Colorado?
Im a criminal and got away with it.
I comitted a felony in Ukraine- extorted political compliance with Obama by threatening to cut off money to Ukraine.
See, money and politics have privilege.
Just ask Hillary.
Sucks to be you, Peasants.
Can we all just appreciate that Gorsuch is, by far, the best Supreme Court Justice?
Add this to the list of "misrepresentation" examples. I doubt a poll would get 5% approval. Or, the approval on the state department's granting of "diplomatic immunity" to foreigners who break the law.
The silver lining here is that outgoing justice Breyer was one of the majority, and that his replacement Ketanji Jackson would likely side with the dissent.
Of course that just makes it 5-4. So it will take one more lefty (or one justice, maybe Roberts, changing his mind) to overturn this. With luck it will happen as quickly as Lawrence v. Texas replaced Bowers v. Hardwick.