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Joe Biden

Biden Embraces the Fearmongering, Vows To Squash D.C.'s Mild Criminal Justice Reforms

In rebuking the legislation, the president showed that he may not know what's in it.

Billy Binion | 3.3.2023 5:45 PM

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President Joe Biden is seen in front of the bars of a jail cell | Illustration Lex Villena; Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
(Illustration Lex Villena; Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom)

Few things are bipartisan these days. If there's a consensus on any issue, it usually comes with a general proclivity toward moral panic—which is to say the consensus has more to do with politics than policy.

For a recent example, we can look to an announcement that came from President Joe Biden yesterday about legislation in Washington, D.C., which would have made some changes to the District's criminal code. "I support D.C. Statehood and home-rule – but I don't support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the Mayor's objections – such as lowering penalties for carjackings," he said. "If the Senate votes to overturn what D.C. Council did – I'll sign it."

That's a strange message for a few reasons, the first being that it doesn't make logical sense. It roughly translates to: "I support D.C. statehood and home rule, but because they did something I disfavor, I will act like a king, countermanding D.C.'s home rule." The concept of a principle is rendered meaningless if only applied in times of convenience and expediency.

The other issue, perhaps more glaring, is that in rebuking the legislation, Biden showed that he fundamentally does not know what it says. It appears he may be moving to nullify the bill not because of what's in the legislation itself—a yearslong effort to make D.C.'s criminal code clearer, something many states across the country have done—but because of what was in newspaper editorials and Twitter chatter about the bill. Much of that was plainly false. He is responding to a panic propelled in part by Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, who vetoed the legislation after it was passed in November of last year. The City Council overrode that veto in January, which then attracted the attention of Congress. Crime is a real issue, with real effects, and it should be taken seriously. Biden's announcement demonstrates that he has not grappled seriously with this issue.

That his administration is more acquainted with the punditry around the bill as opposed to the actual bill is evident in the example he used: carjacking penalties. The D.C. revision would "make it easier for carjackers to escape any kind of punishment," writes John Feehery in The Hill, a publication with millions of readers. Feehery's line is a good encapsulation of the alarming rhetoric that has come to characterize the discussion, which has seen special outsized attention paid to the bill's carjacking provisions. The blogger Matthew Yglesias, who boasts more than half a million followers on Twitter, has zeroed in on that portion, as did The Washington Post.

The problem is that Feehery's assertion is, quite literally, fake news. The bill does lower carjacking penalties—from a 40-year maximum to a 24-year maximum. It divides the crime into three levels of severity, prescribing up to 18 years' imprisonment for offenders who acted without a weapon, and up to 24 years' imprisonment if the defendant was armed (including with a fake gun). The idea that that qualifies as "escap[ing] any kind of punishment" would maybe be funny if it weren't an apt example of how incredibly muddied this conversation has become. Policy lives and dies, ideally, by objective measures—the text of a bill, for example. But this policy debate has turned into a culture war debate, which entitles people to make things up as they go along, including in major media outlets.

Crime denialism is a popular trend among some these days. You won't find that here. Carjacking is up in D.C., and it's a problem. This bill wouldn't have greenlit its continued rise. D.C.'s criminal code revision is "a carefully calibrated plan, grounded in empirical evidence and data, to make sure sentences are proportionate to culpability," says Rachel Barkow, a law professor at New York University who clerked for former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, in an email to Reason. "Is there really a would-be carjacker out there who thinks, 'I'll only spend two and a half decades [in prison] if I do this – let's roll.' Of course not."

Important to this debate is that the 40-year maximum for carjacking was not something judges actually imposed anyway. But even under D.C.'s new code, an alleged carjacker could still receive a punishment that greatly exceeds 24 years. "If a carjacker harmed someone or killed them, then there would be an assault or a homicide charge, and you'd have longer sentences anyhow," adds Barkow. In other words, residents can take comfort in the fact that a carjacker who attacks or kills a victim would still be subject to punishments for those crimes too. Murder is already illegal, and it should and will stay that way.

Most of the criticism around the bill appears to be grounded in questions not about its content but about its timing. Lost on many is that this process began in 2006 and is something that many states—red, blue, and purple—have engaged in over the years. D.C.'s criminal code has not been updated comprehensively since its 1901 inception, leaving it with arcane rules that make it harder for prosecutors to prosecute. (Also lost on many is that D.C. prosecutors, as well as the federal government, collaborated with lawmakers in crafting the new bill.) The aging D.C. code gives the government a very nebulous roadmap for addressing offenses that are specific in nature, thus making it difficult to secure convictions. Ironically, carjacking is a good example here—without gradations for punishment based on the aggravation of the offense, prosecutors in some sense had to wing it. Fixing that should not be scandalous.

Although the reaction to the carjacking provision provides a good microcosm for this debate, it's not the only portion that drew an ire that doesn't comport with reality. The bill "would also expand the right to a jury trial for those charged with misdemeanors but facing jail time," wrote Mayor Bowser. She meant that as a bad thing, which is, on its own, an amazing admission. The bedrock of this country, as envisioned by the Founders, was the right to a trial by jury. Ensuring everyone has access to that constitutional right, and is not punished for using it, is something that, in theory, would unite people. And yet, it is controversial.

The conversation here is bizarre in many ways. That doesn't make it surprising. "This is consistent with [Biden's] overall record on criminal justice reform since taking office, which has been abysmal," adds Barkow. "He hasn't supported any significant legislative reforms, his clemency record is an embarrassment"—she mentions the marijuana pardons, which freed a total of zero people from prison—"and his DOJ is opposing sensible compassionate release policies before the Sentencing Commission."

Prior to running for the presidency, Biden had a reputation as a tough-on-crime warrior, with his infamous 1994 crime bill that destroyed many lives. "He didn't just go along with these trends in the 1980s and 1990s - he was the ringleader," Barkow says. "And that statement about the carjacking provision shows that, in many ways, he still is."

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NEXT: The Flap Over Biden's Comment About 2 Fentanyl Deaths Obscures Prohibition's Role in Causing Them

Billy Binion is a reporter at Reason.

Joe BidenCriminal JusticeWashingtonD.C.Crimecrime victimsMediaMedia CriticismPolicyCongressFederalismPanicMoral Panic
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  1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

    Mr Biden is not capable of seriously grappling an issue.

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      "Biden clueless, film at 11" could have been a TV news headline circa 1992.

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    2. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

      Who voted for this demented asshole?

      Whomever did, it looks like they got the government they deserved.

  2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   2 years ago

    The concept of a principle is rendered meaningless if only applied in times of convenience and expediency.

    Someone at Reason actually knows the p-word!

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      The concept of a principle is rendered meaningless if only applied in times of convenience and expediency.

      Which is why so many of us openly mock the Democrats for supporting things like DC statehood. Among others.

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  3. Minadin   2 years ago

    "this policy debate has turned into a culture war debate"

    Among DC Democrats, liberal/progressive journalists, lefty Twitterati, and the Democratic president?

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

      It appears so; an internecine culture war.

      Pass me that tub of popcorn, will ya?

  4. Agammamon   2 years ago

    Are we pretending that DC isn't rules from I side DC now? It has home rule.

    Or are we going to support municipalities seceding from their state governments?

    Or how about states not being ruled from DC?

    1. CE   2 years ago

      50 tyrants 60 miles away, or 1 tyrant 3,000 miles away?

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Why can't we have both?

  5. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

    One senile looter spouts a bunch of ignorant gibberish. That one is replaced by another no less senile spouting coercive gibberish no less idiotic on behalf of a gang of morons just as evil and clueless as he first one. The Kleptocracy... ya gotta shove it!

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 years ago

      Yep, one "looter" said things mostly to annoy people, and then acted in ways that at least some times aligned with libertarian principles. The other "looter" said just plain stupid things verging on senility, and then acted in ways that consistently promote socialism and the woke agenda. Totes the same.

    2. Elmer Fudd the CHUD   2 years ago

      That looter is almost as senile as you are Hank.

  6. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Man. Of only J6 non violent criminals got the same love as increasing crime rates of liberal cities.

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      1. Pear Satirical   2 years ago

        Can you speak English or at least a language spoken by humans?

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  8. Bill Falcon   2 years ago

    Didn't two young black girls car jack an immigrant who got caught in the car (uber?) and was dragged to death? And the girls got community service and a full ride of Harvard to study gender studies with a $100K a summer intern program in the new Equity and Cultural Marxism department in the Biden admin?

  9. Bill Falcon   2 years ago

    car jacking should be death by firing squad. punks have no right to my life, liberty or property. You take my "horse" and I get to blow your fing head off...that is what we need. Frank Rizzo law and order in these degenerate cosmo cities...law and order.

  10. CE   2 years ago (edited)

    I’m not sure why anyone is surprised. Biden has always touted his “tough on crime” bona fides, even to the point of picking a former prosecutor and attorney general as his VP.

    1. NoVaNick   2 years ago

      He’s just being racist here. Only whites care about crime in DC.

  11. The Margrave of Azilia   2 years ago

    No-holds-barred Democrat-on-Democrat action!

  12. NoVaNick   2 years ago

    A lot of text wasted here that could be summed up in a simple sentence: Joe Biden is a senile dolt.

    As for the carjackings and other crime in DC, short of electing Rodrigo Duterte mayor, I don’t know what could fix that

    1. Nardz   2 years ago

      Duterte?
      No. Bukele.

      https://twitter.com/nayibbukele/status/1631452921014411266?t=RNoNuKtxbCuYwUXvrFOE_A&s=19

      Why did we destroy the tombstones on the graves of gang members?

      [Video]

      1. The Margrave of Azilia   2 years ago

        Because, it seems, the tombstones have illegal gang symbols, and such symbols are required to be destroyed.

        By all means, destroy illegal symbols on U. S. tombstones. Which symbols are illegal here?

  13. JeremyR   2 years ago

    Crime is exploding back to 1990s/1970s levels in inner cities thanks to "reform" prosecutors and stuff like this.

    People are pissed

  14. NOYB2   2 years ago

    Reason can take solace in the fact that illegals can now vote in DC!

    Don't worry, Bill, they will figure out a way to empty the prisons yet!

  15. NOYB2   2 years ago

    The concept of a principle is rendered meaningless if only applied in times of convenience and expediency.

    What would you know about "principles"?

  16. DRM   2 years ago

    It appears he may be moving to nullify the bill not because of what's in the legislation itself—a yearslong effort to make D.C.'s criminal code clearer, something many states across the country have done—but because of what was in newspaper editorials and Twitter chatter about the bill.

    So, if this is just a code cleanup bill, what criminal penalties did it increase?

    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 years ago

      How is it “clearer” to go from 1)carjacking is punishable up to 40 years to 2) carjacking has 3 different degrees

  17. Liberty Lover   2 years ago

    Biden has been fearmongering for years. I wonder how the writers at Reason missed it? Willful blindness?

  18. Sequel   2 years ago

    I thought Biden's refusal to veto was a very smart political move.

    Getting himself accused of racism and white supremacy would only magnify the brilliance of his action. It wasn't white supremacist or racist of course, but those are associations that his action makes for many people in this era. It defines a massive fault line between left and right thanks to Culture Wars.

    1. Bruce   2 years ago

      Sister Souljah.

  19. Bruce   2 years ago (edited)

    While these two issues – jury trial and carjacking penalties – are interesting, for this article to be persuasive it would have needed to have taken up more.

    First, as to D.C. Statehood: Mayor Bowser was nominated in a primary where only 33% of registered voters participated. And she only got half of that vote. So she is in office because 17% of voters marked her name on the ballot. One could overturn any of the decision of the DC city council or mayor and it would not mean you were opposing the will of voters in DC.

    Second. many liberal publications in DC have even admitted that most crime in DC is committed by fewer than 1,000 perpetrators, who keep being released. That is why stronger enforcement of laws against crime is so popular here.

    1. Elmer Fudd the CHUD   2 years ago

      DC statehood is not allowed in the constitution. Period. An amendment is required to change that.

  20. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

    If Binion is accurate here I have no problem with the proposed changes and the mayor's remarks about jury trials are appalling. But Biden and the Democrat senate are pretty obviously trying to score tough on crime points. Biden was happily locking up crack users while his son was getting kicked out of the military for testing positive. He doesn't give a shit about criminal justice as long as nobody fucks with a Biden.

  21. Brett Bellmore   2 years ago

    "It appears he may be moving to nullify the bill not because of what's in the legislation itself—a years long effort to make D.C.'s criminal code clearer, something many states across the country have done—but because of what was in newspaper editorials and Twitter chatter about the bill. "

    That's a really nervy thing to write, when you're giving one link after another to people chattering about the act, and not one link to the act itself.

    Apparently, after the revision, murder is the only remaining crime with a minimum sentence, and not even that if the perpetrator is under 18. This bothers some people, since, YES, it does actually permit absurdly short sentences for serious crimes, at the discretion of the sentencing authority.

    Looking through it, I find the portion on criminal conspiracies rather interesting, and, yes, objectionable.

    "(e) Jurisdiction when object of criminal conspiracy is to engage in conduct outside the
    District. When the object of a conspiracy formed inside the District is to engage in conduct
    outside the District, the conspiracy is a violation of this section only if:
    (1) The conduct would constitute a criminal offense under the statutory laws of
    the District if performed in the District; and
    (2) The conduct would constitute a criminal offense under:
    (A) The statutory laws of the other jurisdiction if performed in that
    jurisdiction; or
    (B) The statutory laws of the District even if performed outside the
    District
    (f) Jurisdiction when criminal conspiracy is formed outside the District. A conspiracy
    formed outside the District to engage in conduct inside the District is a violation of this section
    if:
    (1) The conduct would constitute a criminal offense under the statutory laws of
    the District if performed within the District; and
    (2) An overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy is committed within the District.
    (g) Legality of conduct in other jurisdiction no defense. When subsection (e) of this
    section is proven, it is not a defense to a prosecution for conspiracy that the conduct that is the
    object of the conspiracy would not constitute a criminal offense under the laws of the jurisdiction
    in which the conspiracy was formed."

    If I'm reading this right, DC claims the power to outlaw conduct outside of DC, and then prosecute under DC law a conspiracy to commit that conduct, even if the 'conspiracy' AND the act both occurred outside of DC, and were legal where the happened.

    Please tell me I'm reading that wrong, that's absurd!
    ...

    1. DRM   2 years ago

      No. For jurisdiction under (e), a conspiracy has to be within the District. For jurisdiction under (f), the "and" between (1) and (2) means an "overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy" has to be "committed within the District".

      1. Brett Bellmore   2 years ago

        It still permits a conspiracy prosecution in DC for a plan entered into outside DC, to do something outside DC which is legal where you do it.

        Remember, 'predicate acts' don't have to be crimes themselves. So that overt act could be perfectly legal!

        Let's say, to be topical, that DC outlaws gas stoves. You live in Maryland, but you own some hunting property in Virginia, that you use together with friends. You get together to agree to install a gas stove in your hunting cabin.

        Passing through DC, you recall that you're lacking a gas line fitting, so you buy one in a DC hardware store. In theory you've satisfied all the requirements for a DC conspiracy prosecution!

  22. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    That's a strange message for a few reasons, the first being that it doesn't make logical sense.

    If I find any links of late-stage Biden making sense, I'll post them here.

  23. Sequel   2 years ago

    There seems to be ample room for moral panic on both side of this issue. Why the City Council would lack the political skills to limit this bill to something actually do-able is the inescapable question.

  24. Liberty Lover   2 years ago

    Joe Biden, Fearmonger in Chief!

  25. Cyto   2 years ago

    A wall-of-text post worthy of Cyto on the danger of analyzing a policy based on the political punditry of opponents.....

    After a year of "analysis" of Florida legislation based entirely on the punditry coming from political opponents........

    See why libertarians tend to stick to principles over principals? Much easier to claim the high ground when you are operating from an unreasonably rigid set of principles.

  26. Livemike   2 years ago

    Exactly why is a specific carjacking law needed? I mean it's robbery, usually with a weapon, that's already illegal.

  27. damikesc   2 years ago

    Your love affair with "reform" prosecutors has been a joke. They have all been abject failure.

    The entire movement requires people to forfeit their property rights on behalf of those who violated them. Why should anybody do that?

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

      Because they live in gated communities well outside the urban crime zone, and can signal their virtue with little consequence to themselves [at least for now]?

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