The Volokh Conspiracy
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Interesting "Hate Crime" Opinion
According to PBS, the crime in the case was the "first federal trial over a hate crime based on gender identity."
Various laws are described as providing higher punishment for hate crimes, but they generally don't focus on whether the defendant hated people with a particular identity. Rather, they focus on whether the defendant committed the crime at least in part because of the target's identity. Often that will stem from hatred or other identity-based hostility, but not always. An excerpt from the long U.S. v. Ritter, decided last week by the Fourth Circuit (in an opinion by Judge Julius Richardson, joined by Judges Robert King and Pamela Harris), offers a good illustration:
Defendant Daqua Ritter grew up in rural Allendale, South Carolina. Though he later moved away, he often returned there during summers. During his visits, he maintained a sexual relationship with victim Ernest "Dime" Doe—a "biological male" who "presented as a female."
While Doe openly referred to Ritter as Doe's "man" or "boyfriend," Ritter tried to keep the relationship secret. He often told Doe to delete their messages. And Ritter became angry whenever people brought up his relationship with Doe, stating on several occasions that he would beat Doe when others brought up their sexual relationship. Though Doe feared Ritter, their relationship continued.
When Doe was found shot dead in a car beside a rural road, rumors implicating Ritter quickly surfaced. Just hours earlier, Doe had been pulled over for speeding while Ritter was in the passenger seat. That stop was the last time that Doe was seen alive. Hours later, Doe was dead. And Ritter then showed up at his uncle's house—blocks away from the crime scene—asking for a ride into town. Before long, Ritter asked friends to dispose of his gun and burned his clothes in a barrel. This initiated a years-long investigation conducted by state and federal law enforcement.
A federal grand jury eventually indicted Ritter for [among other things] willfully causing bodily injury to Doe because of Doe's gender identity …. A jury convicted Ritter on all counts, and the district court sentenced him to life in prison….
Ritter … argu[es] that the evidence was insufficient to prove that he killed Doe "because of" Doe's "actual or perceived … gender identity." … [W]hat does it mean for somebody to act "because of" a given trait? … "[B]ecause of" incorporates "the traditional but-for causation standard." … So the government had to show that Ritter would not have killed Doe but for Doe's "actual or perceived … gender identity." The statute defines "gender identity" as "actual or perceived gender-related characteristics." …
[T]he evidence—viewed in the light most favorable to the government—was sufficient to lead a rational juror to conclude that Ritter killed Doe because of one of Doe's perceived gender-related characteristics: Doe's biological sex.
The evidence showed that the broader Allendale community knew that Doe was a biological male who presented as a woman. Ritter was very sensitive about people finding out that he was in a relationship with Doe, because Ritter didn't want people questioning his sexuality. So Ritter pressured Doe to keep their relationship secret, including by asking Doe to delete the messages they exchanged.
Despite Ritter's secrecy, several people eventually found out about their relationship. As a result, one person called Ritter a "faggot," while another thought that Ritter "must be" gay. When others brought up their relationship, Ritter repeatedly became angry and said that he would "beat" Doe. Thus, Ritter treated his relationship with Doe very differently than his relationships with biological women, which he openly discussed.
The evidence here was sufficient for a rational juror to find that Ritter killed Doe because Doe was a biological male. The evidence suggests that Ritter was motivated in large part by Doe's desire to publicize their relationship. In other words, one but-for cause of Ritter's decision to murder Doe was Doe's indiscretion.
But the evidence also supports a jury finding that Ritter would not have killed a biological female who was similarly public about their relationship. Whereas Ritter was open about his prior relationships with biological females, he was secretive about his relationship with Doe. And Ritter expressed anger with Doe when Doe wasn't sufficiently discreet. From this evidence, a reasonable juror could conclude that Ritter wouldn't have killed Doe "but for" the fact that Doe was a biological male. Because biological sex is a "gender-related characteristic," there was sufficient evidence to find that Ritter killed Doe "because of" Doe's "gender identity." …
There was also another twist: One of the jurors, Juror 71, was also trans, and later approached newspapers about the case and was quoted in ways related to the trans issues in the case. Here's the court's discussion:
Ritter claims that Juror 71—a transgender woman—was biased against Ritter. The claim turns on what Juror 71 said and did after the verdict.
During jury selection, Juror 71 voluntarily disclosed to the court: "I am trans. And I just didn't want that to become an issue. I personally don't think it would affect my decision one way or the other, but I'll leave that up to you." See also id. (answering "no" to the question: "would your identity as transgender prevent you from rendering a verdict in this case based solely on the evidence that you see in this courtroom and the law as I give it to you?"). Neither party asked any follow-up questions, and Juror 71 was eventually selected to serve as the jury's foreperson.
Shortly after returning the verdict, Juror 71 contacted the press about the trial. One newspaper quoted Juror 71 as saying, "In my personal experience, it can be dangerous for transgender women to date," and that transgender people "are everywhere. If one of us goes down, there'll be another one of us on the jury." Juror 71 told another newspaper, "I wish I had this great angle to give you as a reporter, that my gender identity weighed on this heavily and I saw myself in the victim, but honestly, it didn't. I followed the evidence and law and followed the judge's instructions and did what was asked of me and came to that conclusion."
After these articles went live, the district court held an evidentiary hearing. The court asked many questions of Juror 71, who affirmed that no past experience affected Juror 71's ability to fairly consider the evidence. The court found Juror 71 credible in the jury "questionnaire, during jury selection, at sidebar, and on numerous occasions at the post-trial hearing." The court found that Juror 71's statements to the press did not contradict the juror's oath of impartiality.
On appeal, Ritter argues that Juror 71's post-trial actions suffice to show actual bias. Actual bias exists only when a juror cannot or will not decide the case solely on the evidence. The district court observed Juror 71's demeanor, posed probing questions, and found the juror both credible and impartial. We reverse such credibility findings only for "manifest error." None exists here.
David N. Goldman argued on behalf of the government.
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"And Ritter then showed up at his uncle's house—blocks away from the crime scene—asking for a ride into town. Before long, Ritter asked friends to dispose of his gun and burned his clothes in a barrel. This initiated a years-long investigation conducted by state and federal law enforcement."
Of course it took years!
If he had showed up at the station and confessed, it might only take months.
The murder happened in July 2019 and COVID mostly started in the US in March 2020, so that could have added delays to the investigation and court events.
I notice that the 4th Circuit never so much as mentioned jurisdiction or constitutionality. If the defendant’s lawyer didn’t raise it, the defendant had ineffective assistance of counsel
In striking down the Violence Against Women Act in U.S. v. Morrison, the Supreme Court held that the federal government has no general power to regulate domestic violence, and simply focusing on people with a particular characteristic doesn’t create federal jurisdiction.
The 4th Circuit’s holding doesn’t even give that decision enough respect to distinguish it, even to say that as long as Congress uses the label “hate crime,” Congress can completely bypass the limits on its power.
Indeed, the 4th Circuit’s upheld convictions for lying to (State!) investigators and witness tampering by saying the matters related to an underlying federal offense, without ever even considering whether, under Morrison, the federal government has the power to make domestic ciolence a federal offense merely because the victim is a member of a class the federal government regards as special.
The federal hate crime statute has the required jurisdictional hook to interstate commerce.
This prosecution was brought pursuant to the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd act, 18 U.S.C. § 249(a)(2), which has interstate commerce jurisdictional factors as elements of the crime.
Treating this case as a hate crime is a reach. Its much more typical of a murder associated with a lovers quarrel, albeit with the decedent being transgender. Its murder, so how much enhancement over death or life without parole can there be?
Yeah, it seems thin. There are could have been lots of reasons for the murder. Maybe Doe wouldn't put out, maybe Ritter was mad because they couldn't afford the speeding ticket, maybe he suspected Doe was seeing someone else.
It seems hard to prove a case like this when the details around the shooting don't show any motive.
Apparently there was evidence offered that he was angry about the victim being indiscreet about being trans.
That was what the jury had to decide, and did, based on the evidence presented to it.
Under this rationale, every man who kills his wife or girlfriend is guilty of a hate crime because he did it because of her gender identity.
The logic would mean every man who did so was angry that their victim was being indiscreet about there gender presentation?
But the evidence also supports a jury finding that Ritter would not have killed a biological female who was similarly public about their relationship. Whereas Ritter was open about his prior relationships with biological females, he was secretive about his relationship with Doe. And Ritter expressed anger with Doe when Doe wasn't sufficiently discreet. From this evidence, a reasonable juror could conclude that Ritter wouldn't have killed Doe "but for" the fact that Doe was a biological male.
This logic seems off to me. As presented by the opinion, his motive was a compound one: that the victim was transgender AND that he/she was indiscrete about their relationship. Take either one away, and the motive would go away. Yes, he would not have murdered a biological female who was indiscrete about their relationship. But, conversely, he would not have murdered a transgender person who was discrete.
I don't think that meets the "but for" test that the court is applying here.
Doesn't Bostock say otherwise?
According to the Congressional Research Service, Burrage v. United States (2014) supports the conclusion that :
I too was going to reference Bostock, but that's Title VII. Burrage is a closer analog because it involves a criminal violation (but there has been no perfectly on-point case for the hate crime statute).