William Kent Suter, Former Clerk of the Supreme Court of the United States, recently observed that the federal government had “lost four cases dealing with fundamental rights in unanimous decisions[,]” and that “the positions taken by the government suggest[ed] bullying and strong-arm tactics.” Not surprisingly, the Court rejected those tactics and instead came down on the side of individual rights. Standing on the side of liberty, Pacific Legal Foundation represented the winners in one of those four cases—Mike and Chantelle Sackett—and supported the winners via an amicus brief in another one of the cases, known as Arkansas Game & Fish Comm’n v. United States. I wonder what Mr. Suter would think of the facts of a case recently accepted for review by the Court called John L. Yates v. United States? And more importantly, I wonder what the Supreme Court will think?
Mr. Yates, a grandfather and commercial fisherman who has made his career fishing the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida, found himself in the cross hairs of the federal government because of fish that were an inch shorter—one inch shorter!—than the government allows fishermen to catch. Rather than try to tell his story for him, I’ll let him tell it:
Read his whole story right here.
PLF opposes the violation of criminal laws, but also opposes the federal government misusing its law enforcement authority and threatening Americans with exorbitant penalties for conduct that does not post a significant threat to health, safety, or the environment. Here, Mr. Yates—the kind of person that Ayn Rand may have recognized as a “producer”—had already been found to violate civil fish & wildlife laws by the government when he made the wrong decision and threw back some of the undersized fish he had caught. If he deserved a penalty for that, then the government should have imposed the regulatory penalty that applied.
The federal government’s decision to charge him with violating a law designed for corporate crime, a law that carried a possible 20-year prison sentence, was not a proper use of the awesome discretion that the federal government has when it considers whether to criminally charge an American just trying to make an honest living. Rather, it was an abuse of power most likely designed to exact a plea of guilt from Mr. Yates in exchange for a reduced sentence. Some experts like Professor Glenn Reynolds at the University of Tennessee College of Law have written law review articles that label this abuse of power “overcharging.”
We call it an injustice.
The statue photographed above memorializes the many fishermen who spent their lives fishing the waters of the east coast and lost their lives in this most dangerous pursuit. Nevertheless, these fishermen loved the sea and were willing to put their lives at risk to take care of their families. It is families—like the wife and children looking out to sea for their husband and father in the memorial pictured above—that have the most to lose when the federal government abuses its “almost unconstrained power” to overcharge a man (or woman) with crimes that do not apply to the conduct at issue in order to exact a plea bargain from the defendant because of the fear of spending decades in prison for crimes the defendant did not commit. Hopefully, the Supreme Court accepted this case in order to tell the government to stop relying upon “bullying and strong-arm tactics” in the federal courts, as Mr. Suter, the former Supreme Court Clerk, has seen the Court do in those other cases he recently described.