SCOTUS Rejects a Legal Interpretation Underlying Capitol Riot Charges
The decision also negates two counts of the federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of illegally interfering in the 2020 presidential election.

The Supreme Court today rejected the statutory interpretation underlying a criminal charge against some of the Donald Trump supporters who participated in the riot at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. The same charge—obstructing an official proceeding—also figures in the federal indictment accusing the former president himself of illegally attempting to reverse the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.
Prosecutors alleged that rioters obstructed an official proceeding by interrupting the congressional ratification of the election results. In Trump's case, they argued that he interfered with that process by promoting the stolen-election fantasy that motivated the rioters, a subset of the protesters who attended the pre-riot rally at which he ginned up his supporter's outrage at President Joe Biden's supposedly illegitimate victory and urged them to march on the Capitol "peacefully and patriotically." But according to the Supreme Court, neither the rioters' actions nor Trump's meet the elements of this offense.
The case involves Joseph Fischer, a former police officer who was charged with obstructing an official proceeding under 18 USC 1512(c) after participating in the riot. That provision was created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a 2002 law that Congress approved in response to a financial scandal involving the destruction of potentially incriminating documents by the accounting firm Arthur Andersen. In light of that context and the provision's structure, Fischer argued, his conduct at the Capitol, which allegedly included entering the building and confronting police officers, did not fit the requirements for prosecuting someone under that statute.
Six justices agreed. Writing for the majority in Fischer v. United States, Chief Justice John Roberts says proving a violation of Section 1512(c) requires "establish[ing] that the defendant impaired the availability or integrity for use in an official proceeding of records, documents, objects," or "other things used in the proceeding, or attempted to do so."
Section 1512(c)(1) applies to anyone who "corruptly…alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so, with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding." Section 1512(c)(2), the provision used in the Capitol riot cases, applies to anyone who "otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so." Both are felonies punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
The crucial question, Roberts says, is whether "this 'otherwise' clause should be read
in light of the limited reach of the specific provision that precedes it," as a federal judge concluded, or as a catchall broad enough to encompass Fischer's behavior, as a divided D.C. Circuit panel held. Roberts concludes that the latter interpretation is implausible.
"Subsection (c)(1) describes particular types of criminal conduct in specific terms," Roberts writes. "To ensure the statute would not be read as excluding substantially similar activity not mentioned, (c)(2) says it is also illegal to engage in some broader
range of unenumerated conduct."
To determine how broad that "range of unenumerated conduct" is, Roberts relies on two interpretive principles. "The canon of noscitur a sociis teaches that a word is 'given more precise content by the neighboring words with which it is associated,'" he notes. That principle "avoid[s] ascribing to one word a meaning so broad that it is inconsistent" with "the company it keeps." And under "the related canon of ejusdem generis," a "general or collective term" at the end of "a list of specific items" is typically "controlled and defined by reference to" the "specific classes…that precede it."
Roberts illustrates those principles with the example of a sign at a zoo that says, "Do not pet, feed, yell or throw objects at the animals, or otherwise disturb them." Does that last phrase encompass "a visitor [who] eats lunch in front of a hungry gorilla, or talks to a friend near its enclosure"? Common sense suggests not.
"Although the smell of human food or the sound of voices might well disturb gorillas, the specific examples of impermissible conduct all involve direct interaction with and harassment of the zoo animals," Roberts writes. "Merely eating or talking is so unlike the examples that the zoo provided that it would be implausible to assume those activities were prohibited, even if literally covered by the language."
So too here, Roberts says: "The 'otherwise' provision of Section 1512(c)(2) is similarly limited by the preceding list of criminal violations. The offenses enumerated in subsection (c)(1) cover someone who 'alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object…with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding.' Complex as subsection (c)(1) may look, it simply consists of many specific examples of prohibited actions undertaken with the intent to impair an object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding: altering a record, altering a document, concealing a record, concealing a document, and so on. That list is followed immediately by a residual clause in (c)(2). Guided by the basic logic that Congress would not go to the trouble of spelling out the list in (c)(1) if a neighboring term swallowed it up, the most sensible inference is that the scope of (c)(2) is defined by reference to (c)(1)."
If the government were right that "otherwise" covers any conduct that "obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding," Roberts says, "the sweep of subsection (c)(2) would consume (c)(1), leaving that narrower provision with no work to do." That interpretation poses a "surplusage problem," which contradicts the usual assumption that each part of a statute is designed to accomplish something.
According to the government's theory, Roberts writes, "Section 1512(c) consists of
a granular subsection (c)(1) focused on obstructive acts that impair evidence and an overarching subsection (c)(2) that reaches all other obstruction." But "that novel interpretation would criminalize a broad swath of prosaic conduct, exposing activists and lobbyists alike to decades in prison." During oral argument in April, Roberts notes, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar conceded that "a peaceful protester could conceivably be charged under §1512(c)(2) and face a 20-year sentence" based on the government's reading of the statute. He adds that the government "would likewise have no apparent obstacle to prosecuting under (c)(2) any lobbying activity that 'influences' an official proceeding and is undertaken 'corruptly.'"
Those "peculiar results," Roberts says, underline the implausibility of the government's interpretation. "Rather than transforming this evidence-focused statute into a one-size-fits-all solution to obstruction of justice, we cabin our reading of subsection (c)(2) in light of the context of subsection (c)(1)," he writes. "Doing so affords proper respect to 'the prerogatives of Congress' in carrying out the quintessentially legislative act of defining crimes and setting the penalties for them."
The lineup in this case does not break cleanly on ideological lines. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who often joins Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan in dissenting from decisions by the Court's conservative majority, joined Roberts' opinion. She also wrote a concurring opinion in which she notes that "today's case is not about the immorality" of the Capitol rioters' behavior. "Our commitment to equal justice and the rule of law requires the courts to faithfully apply criminal laws as written, even in periods of national crisis," she says. "Notwithstanding the shocking circumstances involved in this case or the Government's determination that they warrant prosecution, today, this Court's task is to determine what conduct is proscribed by the criminal statute that has been invoked as the basis for the obstruction charge at issue here."
Meanwhile, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who usually aligns with the conservative majority, wrote a dissent, joined by Sotomayor and Kagan, that faults Roberts et al. for discounting the plain meaning of Section 1512(c)(2). "The Court does not dispute that Congress's joint session qualifies as an 'official proceeding'; that rioters delayed the proceeding; or even that Fischer's alleged conduct (which includes trespassing and a physical confrontation with law enforcement) was part of a successful effort to forcibly halt the certification of the election results," she writes. "Given these premises, the case that Fischer can be tried for 'obstructing, influencing, or impeding an official proceeding' seems open and shut."
The majority concludes otherwise, Barrett suggests, "because it simply cannot believe that Congress meant what it said." Statutes "often go further than the problem that inspired them, and under the rules of statutory interpretation, we stick to the text anyway," she writes. "The Court, abandoning that approach, does textual backflips to find some way—any way—to narrow the reach of subsection (c)(2)."
The practical implications of this decision are important for defendants like Fischer, given the stiff punishment authorized by this provision. But there is no shortage of other charges that the Justice Department can file (and has filed) against the Capitol rioters, ranging from misdemeanors such as "entering and remaining in a restricted building" to felonies such as aggravated assault. And while the Court's decision negates two of the charges against Trump, it does not affect the other two counts in the election interference indictment: conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to deprive Americans of their voting rights.
The more serious threat to that prosecution is the litigation over whether—and, if so, to what extent—Trump is immune from criminal charges based on his "official acts" as president. The Supreme Court is expected to rule on that question this Monday. But with just four months to go before the presidential election, it seems likely that, even if the Court clears the way, any trial would begin after that contest is decided. If Trump wins the election, as he seems poised to do right now, he surely will find a way to make the case disappear.
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Boeing leaks exculpatory details of door blow out investigation. Sanctioned by NTSB.
Chumby, Nardz, anti America pseudo right wing agitators hardest hit.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Poor guy, this is the worst day for democrats since Appomattox.
Sorry democrats
*makes heart symbol with hands*
Hope an angry father gets ahold of you.
Poor sarc. Poor Jeff.
Sarc wanted 20 year charges for disrupting congress.
sarcasmic 2 years ago
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Mute User
Charges of trespassing, vandalism and interfering with government business are sufficient. No need to add political crimes to the list.
Jeff said they could have shot the trespassers.
chemjeff radical individualist 3 years ago
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Mute User
What is there to talk about?
.
From a libertarian perspective, Ashli Babbett was trespassing, and the officers were totally justified to shoot trespassers. Again from a libertarian perspective, the officers would have been justified in shooting every single trespasser. That would not have been wise or prudent, of course.
Both support the jailing of 1200 political opponents. 80% who committed no vandalism or violence. Including old women who didn’t even enter. Arrests of journalists. 5 years for feet on the desk.
What a terrible day for the true libertarians.
They've been dealt quite a few L's lately, haven't they?
Uhhh, would that be big L's like Chase, or little l's?
If they'd only stop taking fascist and totalitarian stances, but orangemanbad I suppose.
Not to worry. Adjective Artie’s “better Americans” are due to stop granting permissions to the clingers any day now.
Haha
Meanwhile, when he's not lying about me and sarc and the rest of the people on his hit list, Jesse and pals are justifying and excusing violence and vandalism conducted in the name of stopping the peaceful transition of power, and then wonder why everyone else thinks they aren't really fans of democracy and/or will resort to the same tactics again if they should lose again in 2024.
Hey Jesse, when (if ever) is violence justified to stop the peaceful transition of power after an election?
when (if ever) is violence justified to stop the peaceful transition of power after an election?
Every time an election is stolen.
I agree with you – if we can settle on a reasonable, rational, objective and fair standard for determining if an election is truly ‘stolen’. Do you have such a standard in mind?
To be fair... Jeff only hates citizen violence. He loves state violence. Shoot, lock them up. Bankrupt them, do whatever you want as long as they are the political enemies of the left. He has supported every incident of state violence. From Bannon, to Navarro, to J6, to Trump, to Alex Jones, to abortion protestors, to Rittenhouse to right leaning reporter, and on and on.
He also likes rape violence.
In farsi: بزوربردن يا گرفتن. (For those innocent young gang rapists)
Violar for the ones he likes here.
He loves state violence.
No, that would be you, especially when directed against the illegulz.
What happened to 'the law's the law'? All those people that you mentioned, if they broke the law, shouldn't they be prosecuted for it?
Your screed is confession via projection. In fact, you are the one who wants a politically motivated justice system - one that lets your team off the hook even when they break the law.
And before jeff responds. I chose the word citizen carefully.
He of course loves non citizen illegal immigrant violence. Especially rape.
Oh well. Didn't get in before Jeff responded.
“Jesse and pals are justifying and excusing violence and vandalism conducted in the name of stopping the peaceful transition of power”
Literally not true as they have, on multiple occasions, clearly condemned the violence and vandalism.
Jeff is a lying piece of shit, following his nature.
when he’s not lying about me and sarc and the rest of the people on his hit list, Jesse and pals are justifying and excusing violence and vandalism conducted in the name of stopping the peaceful transition of power,
This seems an odd complaint for someone who advocates murdering trespassers. I wonder if we can identify some characteristic which explains when he will advocate violence and when he will be outraged others advocate violence. Surely there is a rational explanation.
And who justifies raping children if it excuses illegal immigrants.
Also, recall that before Ken Shultz stomped away, he took the position that it was perfectly legitimate to question the validity of the results of the 2020 election, even if the election was completely valid, because to undermine the legitimacy of the election is to undermine Biden's agenda, and "the ends justify the means" because Biden's agenda is so bad.
Ken's not here, but do you agree with this position that he took?
Link to said position.
Ken did nothing of the sort, you fucking liar.
She also wrote a concurring opinion in which she notes that "today's case is not about the immorality" of the Capitol rioters' behavior. "Our commitment to equal justice and the rule of law requires the courts to faithfully apply criminal laws as written, even in periods of national crisis," she says. "Notwithstanding the shocking circumstances involved in this case or the Government's determination that they warrant prosecution, today, this Court's task is to determine what conduct is proscribed by the criminal statute that has been invoked as the basis for the obstruction charge at issue here."
So glad we have a justice so focused on morality instead of the legal or constitutional issues.
She was with the majority, so I'd say she was focused on the legal and constitutional issues.
Yes, but she added unneeded pablum to just virtue signal. The problem is this pablum often gets used by lower courts as a form of dicta which can allow the lower courts to meander away from the rulings. See most of the lower courts ignoring 2A cases.
ACB is looking like a bad choice this week. She wants general clauses to expand government police powers beyond recognition. Any catch all clause can be used literally to catch all no matter how unrelated to the legal purpose of the law was.
I'll add this type if broad interpretation is exactly the bullshit jack Smith and Bragg have used to target political opponents. When the law is vague it should advantage the defendant, not the prosecutor. Is is incumbent on government to make clear the laws they want the populace to follow.
It's what a lot of people said at the time. There was perhaps some pressure in terms of optics to replace RBG with another woman, but we should be above making decisions on those grounds. We're going to be stuck with ACB for a long time now.
I'm actually beginning to wonder if Roberts and her are adding to these 6-2 dissents and she is the writer on the immunity case as a means to stop the partisan court narrative. She was also in the minority on Chevron.
I'm pretty convinced Roberts sees the efforts to undermine the court and has determined that preserving the legitimacy is his main job.
I don't like the guy, but he is surrounded by wolves right now. I wouldn't put it past him to shuffle the votes on a dissent for the sake of the court's image.
Considering how much of a political creature he is, that wouldn’t surprise me in the least.
She wants general clauses to expand government police powers beyond recognition.
And you don't? How else are you gonna round up all those illegulz?
It’s not against the law to arrest criminals.
It’s not against the law to shoot trespassers in some jurisdictions.
Even on public property?
Jeff says a resounding "YES!"
The enforcement of current immigration laws on the books would necessitate that, especially after they get caught breaking another law.
Swing and a miss, champ.
I mean, I'm going to be fair to her - she focused on the legal and constitutional issues *to the detriment* of her morality.
She clearly thinks these people done wrong - they just didn't break *this particular* set of laws.
I'll take 'lawful evil' over 'neutral evil' any day.
This steaming pile of lefty shit wanted the death penalty for, well, he's not sure just what:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
They had to be stopped!
They might have taken an illegal selfie or something.
"from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?…”
To anally masturbate and then get rodgered by their boyfriend while filming it and then uploading it on the net?
Oh, wait...
Need a nap. So tired of winning.
The powers that be somehow forgot to charge Congressman Bowman with this crime after he intentionally pulled a fire alarm to obstruct a vote.
That's (D)ifferent
It only counts a anti-democratic for that one specific vote and every else is just good people being passionate and getting carried away.
But “that novel interpretation would criminalize a broad swath of prosaic conduct, exposing activists and lobbyists alike to decades in prison.”
Yeah, can't have that. It's good they noticed that feature, and good they cut that off at the knee's, but at the same time there are some activists and lobbyists I wouldn't mind seeing in prison. Just not for this in particular I suppose.
You're a libertarian man - if you want to see someone in prison you don't wait for the government to do it for you, you get out there, turn your basement into a holding cell, and then kidnap that person and keep them there!;)
In Trump's case, they argued that he interfered with that process by promoting the stolen-election fantasy that motivated the rioters, a subset of the protesters who attended the pre-riot rally at which he ginned up his supporter's outrage at President Joe Biden's supposedly illegitimate victory and urged them to march on the Capitol "peacefully and patriotically."
Is this what they are really arguing?
Because in essence, they are claiming that Trump obstructed an official proceeding by promoting Badthink®™, and because some people rioted on the basis of this Badthink®™, Trump cbstructed an official proceeding.
But could not the same be said of Nikole Hannah Jones, Patrice Cullors, and Charles M. Blow, who kept claiming #HandsUpDontShoot", that the police habitually hunt down and gun down unarmed Black men, that the criminal justice system is systemically racist? after all, some people rioted on this basis, and some people even attacked a federal courthouse in Portland, which would, under this interpretation, obstruct an official proceeding. And what about those who spread lies about peaceful protesters being kidnapped and placed in uNmArKeD vAnS? People formed Walls of Moms and Walls of Vets to obstruct law enforcement, based upon these lies.
Of course, what we should remember is that the same people who feel that Trump caused the Capitol Riot by promoting Badthink®™ also believe that Patrice Cullors, Nikole Hannah-Jones, and Charles M. Blow were promoting Goodthink®™, and those who rioted in Minneapolis, Portland, and Kenosha, those who attacked Secret Service agents guarding the White House, and those Walls of Moms and Walls of Vets who were protecting rioters were not obstructing official proceedings or insurrecting, but fighting White Supremacy®™.
The left is famous for cherry-picking words out of context to "hang the witch". They've been doing that to the Supreme Law of the Land for years.
Point & Case: There is no such thing as a "general welfare" clause. It's the taxing clause for the General Welfare of the US Government.
>The decision also negates two counts of the federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of illegally interfering in the 2020 presidential election.
Sullum! SULLUM! *SULLUM!!!!!*
The WALLZ! The wallz Sullum! They're getting further apart. The wallz aren't clozin' in Sullum!
If (c) 2 read as the minority imagines, you would have to declare it unconstitutional since any protest which in any way obstructs a vote, even if only because it delays the congressional members on their way to Congress, would qualify, thus being a breach of the 1st Amendment. If not read that broadly then you’re in some bizarre limited territory not suggested by (c) 2 alone or constrained by the nature of (c) 1. Whereas when constrained by (c) 1 it also covers things like the manufacture of entirely new records etc.. etc..
Addendum - Alternatively, either the majority or the minority could have attempted to square the circle by explicitly defining corruptly in such a way to encompass the behavior in question, but such a forced definition would have affected swathes of other legislation which is why neither side elected to do so.