Friday, January 22, 2021
Brown on Charging Nonexistent Offenses
Darryl K. Brown (University of Virginia School of Law) has posted Factually Baseless Enforcement of Criminal Law Is Okay. Full Enforcement Is Not. (Marquette Law Review, forthcoming vol. 104 (2021)) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
In several U.S. jurisdictions, prosecutors charge defendants with nonexistent criminal offenses. Sometimes the crimes do not factually exist, meaning they did not occur—defendants did not commit them and so prosecutors lack evidence to prove them. Other crimes do not legally exist; the offense appears nowhere in a criminal code or common law. The practice contravenes core principles of criminal process, including the standard of proof, the legality principle, and legislative crime definition. Nonetheless, prosecutors succeed in convicting defendants of both sorts of nonexistent crimes, and appellate courts explicitly approve those convictions.
This article, based on the 2019 Barrock Lecture at Marquette Law School, offers a partial defense of this practice—specifically of factually baseless charges as opposed to legally nonexistent ones. I situate the practice in a broader argument about how legislation and legislative intent speaks to prosecutorial discretion: in general, through criminal statutes legislatures imply an upper bound on how prosecutors should leverage statutes to trigger criminal punishment but no comparable lower bound, or minimum enforcement standard.
This article, based on the 2019 Barrock Lecture at Marquette Law School, offers a partial defense of this practice—specifically of factually baseless charges as opposed to legally nonexistent ones. I situate the practice in a broader argument about how legislation and legislative intent speaks to prosecutorial discretion: in general, through criminal statutes legislatures imply an upper bound on how prosecutors should leverage statutes to trigger criminal punishment but no comparable lower bound, or minimum enforcement standard.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2021/01/brown-on-charging-nonexistent-offenses.html