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You Commit Three Felonies a Day
Laws have become too vague and the concept of intent has disappeared
By L. GORDON CROVITZ
When we think about the pace of change in technology, it's usually to marvel at how computing power has become cheaper and faster or how many new digital ways we have to communicate. Unfortunately, this pace of change is increasingly clashing with some of the slower-moving parts of our culture.
Technology moves so quickly we can barely keep up, and our legal system moves so slowly it can't keep up with itself. By design, the law is built up over time by court decisions, statutes and regulations. Sometimes even criminal laws are left vague, to be defined case by case. Technology exacerbates the problem of laws so open and vague that they are hard to abide by, to the point that we have all become potential criminals.
Boston civil-liberties lawyer Harvey Silverglate calls his new book "Three Felonies a Day," referring to the number of crimes he estimates the average American now unwittingly commits because of vague laws. New technology adds its own complexity, making innocent activity potentially criminal.
Mr. Silverglate describes several cases in which prosecutors didn't understand or didn't want to understand technology. This problem is compounded by a trend that has accelerated since the 1980s for prosecutors to abandon the principle that there can't be a crime without criminal intent.
In 2001, a man named Bradford Councilman was charged in Massachusetts with violating the wiretap laws. He worked at a company that offered an online book-listing service and also acted as an Internet service provider to book dealers. As an ISP, the company routinely intercepted and copied emails as part of the process of shuttling them through the Web to recipients.
The federal wiretap laws, Mr. Silverglate writes, were "written before the dawn of the Internet, often amended, not always clear, and frequently lagging behind the whipcrack speed of technological change." Prosecutors chose to interpret the ISP role of momentarily copying messages as they made their way through the system as akin to impermissibly listening in on communications. The case went through several rounds of litigation, with no judge making the obvious point that this is how ISPs operate. After six years, a jury found Mr. Councilman not guilty.
Other misunderstandings of the Web criminalize the exercise of First Amendment rights. A Saudi student in Idaho was charged in 2003 with offering "material support" to terrorists. He had operated Web sites for a Muslim charity that focused on normal religious training, but was prosecuted on the theory that if a user followed enough links off his site, he would find violent, anti-American comments on other sites. The Internet is a series of links, so if there's liability for anything in an online chain, it would be hard to avoid prosecution.
Mr. Silverglate, a liberal who wrote a previous book taking the conservative position against political correctness on campuses, is a persistent, principled critic of overbroad statutes. This is a common problem in securities laws, which Congress leaves intentionally vague, encouraging regulators and prosecutors to try people even when the law is unclear. He reminds us of the long prosecution of Silicon Valley investment banker Frank Quattrone, which after five years resulted in a reversal of his criminal conviction on vague charges of obstruction of justice.
These miscarriages are avoidable. Under the English common law we inherited, a crime requires intent. This protection is disappearing in the U.S. As Mr. Silverglate writes, "Since the New Deal era, Congress has delegated to various administrative agencies the task of writing the regulations," even as "Congress has demonstrated a growing dysfunction in crafting legislation that can in fact be understood." Prosecutors identify defendants to go after instead of finding a law that was broken and figuring out who did it. Expect more such prosecutions as Washington adds regulations.
Sometimes legislators know when they make false distinctions based on technology. An "anti-cyberbullying" proposal is making its way through Congress, prompted by the tragic case of a 13-year-old girl driven to suicide by the mother of a neighbor posing as a teenage boy and posting abusive messages on MySpace. The law would prohibit using the Internet to "coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress to a person." Imagine a law that tried to apply this control of speech to letters, editorials or lobbying.
Mr. Silverglate, who will testify against the bill later this week, tells me he figures that "being emotionally distressed is just part of living in a free society." New technologies like the Web, he concludes, "scare legislators because they don't understand them and want to control them, even as they become a normal part of life."
In a complex world of new technologies, there is more need than ever for clear rules of the road. Americans should expect that a crime requires bad intent and also that Congress and prosecutors will try to create clarity, not uncertainty. Our legal system has a lot of catching up to do to work smoothly with the rest of our lives.
Obama Watch
- "The Making of George W. Obama." Foreign Policy Magizine
- Obama Bush Continuity: Reason TV: Barrack W. Bush
- Obama Top Economic Advisors Took Bribes from JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Others
- WSJ: Obama Using TARP to Control Banks
- WSJ to Obama: How Not to Fight Discrimination
- Reuters: Businesses Move to Switzerland to Avoid Obama
- Economist Give Obama and Team Failing Grade So Far
- Newsweek, Howard Fineman Critiques Obama: "He'd have made a fine judge. But we don't need a judge."
- Liberal Economist Paul Krugman Criticises Pres. Obama's Economics
- Wall Street Journal: Is Our Troubled Economy a Responce to Obama's Policies?
- Jim Cramer: Is this Friend of Democrats on Obama's Enemies List? His Responce.
- Reuters: Obama Budget Sends $11,000 Bill to Every American
- Wall Street Journal: Obama's Mortgage Plan: Dukes of Moral Hazzard
- Obama Rhetoric is a Real Problem - Wall Street Journal
- CATO Calls Out Obama Admin's Lie About Economists
- Congressional Budget Office Says Obama Stimulus Will Hurt Economy in Long Term
- Peter Schiff (you know, the guy who predicted the current crisis) Say Obama Stimulus Will be a Disaster
- Obama "Stimulus" Bill May Have Serious Problems
Past Articles: March 24 - Aprile 16
- WSJ: The Greatness of Capitalism Can Save Us: Lessons from the Recovery of 2001
- Democrats: Merit-Based Pay? Fugetaboutit !
- Deregulation? Bush was the Biggest Regulator in Decades
- The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One
- Cost for Bailout Jumps...Again.
- Watchdogs: Treasury Still Wont Release Details of Bailouts
- How NOT to Fight Discrimination - Obama Admin Goes After Wal-Mart
- "A Moderate Manifesto" David Brooks Feels Betrayed By Obama - NYTIMES
- George Will - The Toxic Assets We Elected
- The REAL AIG Disgrace - WSJ
Past Articles of the Day - Feb 9 - March 24 2008
- Wells Fargo Chief Critiques Bailout, Calls Plan "Asinine"
- Government Forces Doctor to Raise Fees
- NY Times: "Stimulus Report" Further Evidence that Central Planning Does Not Work
- Bailout Woes Continue With Citi
- WSJ: How California Became France. (one of the best articles I have read)
- Investing Legend Jim Rogers Speaks on the Economy
- The Popular Uprising Against Central Banking
- Tax Payer Risk 9.7 Trillion on Crisis
- Pushing Banks to Loan Could Backfire - WSJ
- Fed Still Refuses to Disclose Recipients of 2 Trillion Dollars
- Government Watchdog Agencies Chide Treasury On Bailout Handling - WSJ
- China Lectures Paulson on Economic Policy - US No Longer Holds Moral High Ground
- Sen. Jim Demint: "Republicans Must Fight for Freedom to Regain America's Trust"
- The Other Auto Industry
- Is Uncle Sam's Credit Line Running Out?
- Obama's Clinton Problem: Deregulation Led to the Prosperity of the 90's; Just Ask Bill Clinton
Past Articles of the Day
- Why Republicans Need to Get Back to their Roots
- Gun Control and Crime
- Myth: Ethanol is Great.
- Silly Senator, Corn is for Food! Why Ethanol is not What It's Cracked Up to Be.
- Freedom to Choose Flat Tax
- What Happened to Detriot
- Great Article on Ivy League Schools by William Deresiewicz
- America is the World's Highest Drug User
- Petro-politics: As Oil Prices Rise, Human Rights Go Down. by Thomas Friedman, Foreign Policy Magazine
- Finally! Democrats Vote to "Privatize" a Wastful Goverment Program!!!
- Unlike Others, U.S. Defends Freedom to Offend in Speech - NYTimes
- Wall Street Journal: "Our Collectivist Candidates" by David Boaz
- We Knew About the "Housing Crisis" Well Before it Struck
- The Trillion Dollar War
- "Yes, the Market is Unfair" - Insightful Article on the Economics of the Stock Market
- Ron Paul's Libertarian Lesson for John McCain (U.S. News W.R.)
- Raw Milk - More Government Shutting Down Legitimate Business Under False Pretense
- 5 Myths About No Child Left Behind
- Making College More Expensive: The Unintended Consequences of Federal Tuition Aid
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- Ten Days the Changed Capitalism
- Universal Health Care: '08 Presidential Race
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- "Unfettered Speech, Now" by Bradly Smith & Steve Simpson
- Litigating for Liberty
- 1 in 100 U.S. Adults Behind Bars, New Study Says
- Scalia the Civil Libertarian? by The New York Times
- Montana: They'll Cecede From the Union if Supreme Court Rules Wrong
- Of Horses Teeth and Liberty. by The Economist
- Americans Go to Mexico for Affordable Dental Care
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- How Cincinnati Turned It's Schools Around
- "Waving Goodbye to Hegemony" by Parag Khanna, NY Times
- "Social Entrepreneurs" - Better Than Government Activism
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- Bush's Stimulus Flop
- Stimulus Stupidity
- Inflation and the Tax Man
- Why Ignorance Is'nt Bliss. How Ignorance Threatens Democracy
- Newsweek: "Bothersome Intel on Iran"
- Liberal-tarians
- GOP Fusion Comes Unfused
- Financial Times: "An Ottoman warning for indebted America"
- "American Power. Still #1" by The Economist
- How to Fire and Incompetent Teacher
- Few senators read Iraq NIE report
- US Mercantilist Machismo, China Replaces Japan
- Ten Days the Changed Capitalism
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