Opinion
This writ petition, presents the question whether a defendant who was never himself physically present in this state at any time during the commission of the criminal offense with which he is charged, and did not act through an agent ever present in this state, is subject to the criminal jurisdiction of respondent court even though no jurisdictional statute specifically extends the extraterritorial jurisdiction of California courts for the particular crime with which he is charged. After determining that this writ proceeding is not premature, we shall conclude that territorial jurisdiction to prosecute lies under the traditionally applicable legal principles, and it makes no difference that the charged conduct took place in cyberspace rather than real space.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
On May 24, 2006, the San Mateo County District Attorney filed a criminal complaint charging, petitioner with the felony offense of practicing medicine in California without a license in violation of section 2052 of the Business and Professions Code. Section 2052 provides that aiiy person who “practices or attempts to practice, or who advertises or holds himself or herself out as practicing, any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in this state, or who diagnoses, treats, operates for, or prescribes for any . . . physical or
mental condition of any person, without having at the time of so doing a valid, unrevoked, or unsuspended certificate as provided in this chapter or without being authorized to perform the act pursuant to a certificate obtained in accordance with some other provision of law is guilty of á public offense, punishable by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000), by imprisonment in the state prison, by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one
The complaint is predicated on an investigative report of the Medical Board of California (Board) dated April 20, 2006, which the Board forwarded to the San Mateo County District. Attorney as part of its referral of the case for criminal prosecution. The report states that, on or about June 11, 2005, John McKay, a resident of San Mateo County, initiated an online purchase of fluoxetine (generic Prozac) on “www.usanetrx.com,” an interactive Web site located outside of the United States. The questionnaire McKay received and returned online, which identified him as a resident of this state, was forwarded by operators of the Web site to JRB Health Solutions (JRB) for processing. JRB, which has its headquarters in Florida and operates a server in Texas, forwarded McKay’s purchase request and questionnaire to petitioner, its “physician subcontractor,” who resided in Fort Collins, Colorado, and was then licensed to practice medicine in that state. 1 After reviewing McKay’s answers to the questionnaire, 2 petitioner issued an online prescription of the requested' medication and returned it to JRB’s server in Texas. JRB then' forwarded the prescription to the Gruich Pharmacy Shoppe in Biloxi, Mississippi, which filled-the prescription and mailed the requested amount of fluoxetine to McKay at his California address. Several weeks later, intoxicated on alcohol and with a detectable amount of fluoxetine in his blood, McKay committed suicide by means of carbon monoxide poisoning. The Board’s report indicates, and it is undisputed, that petitioner was at all material times located in Colorado and never directly communicated with anyone in California regarding the prescription. His communications were only with JRB, from whom he received McKay’s online request for fluoxetine and questionnaire, and to whom he sent the prescription he issued.
On May 24, 2006, the district attorney filed a criminal complaint charging that, “in the County of San Mateo,” petitioner willfully and unlawfully practiced medicine in this state without a valid license authorizing him to do so, in violation of Business and Professions Code section 2052, a felony. On the same date, the trial court issued a warrant for petitioner’s arrest and admitting him to bail in the amount of $500,000. Petitioner quickly demurred to the complaint and moved to quash the warrant and to dismiss the complaint. All such relief was sought on the ground that, because all the alleged criminal acts occurred outside the state, the court lacked
The instant writ petition was filed on October 3, 2006. We issued an order staying all proceedings in the superior court and thereafter an order to show cause.
DISCUSSION
L *
II.
Under Traditionally Applicable Principles, Jurisdiction Lies
The issue of personal or territorial jurisdiction based on Internet or “network-mediated” contacts has drawn far more judicial and academic attention in civil than in criminal proceedings. Under the “minimum contacts” analysis adopted in
Internat. Shoe Co. v. Washington
(1945)
“Like most other states, California has addressed the problem of criminal activity that spans more than one state by adopting statutes that provide our state with broader jurisdiction over interstate crimes than existed at common law. Such laws generally ‘are premised on the belief that a state should have jurisdiction over those whose conduct affects persons in the state or an interest of the state, provided that it is not unjust under the circumstances to subject the defendant to the laws of the state.’ (Model Pen. Code & Commentaries, com. 1 to § 1.03, p. 35.) Penal Code section 27 generally permits the punishment of a defendant under California law for any crime committed ‘in whole or in part’ in the state. (§ 27, subd. (a)(1).) In addition, sections 27 and 777b through 778b establish territorial jurisdiction for specific types of interstate situations or particular crimes. For example, a person who, acting outside the state, aids, advises, or encourages a person in the state to commit a crime in California can be punished in California in the same manner as if he or she had acted within the state. (§§ 27, subd. (a)(3), 778b.) A person who kidnaps someone in California and takes that victim to another state or country may be punished in California for any crime of violence or theft committed against the kidnap victim in the other state or country. (§ 778a, subd. (b).) Anyone who commits larceny, carjacking, or embezzlement may be punished in California if the property taken is brought into the state. (§ 27, subd. (a)(2).)”
(People v. Betts
(2005)
With the parties, we agree that the jurisdictional statutes applicable to this case are Penal Code section 27, subdivision (a)(1), and Penal Code section 778. (Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Penal Code.) As noted, section 27 simply states that “persons are liable to punishment under the laws of this state . . . []□ . . . who commit, in whole or in part, any crime within this
' The question whether sections 27 and 778 confer jurisdiction over petitioner’s interstate activity, rendering the law of this state applicable, involves issues of fact; nevertheless, it is to be decided by the court prior to trial, not by a jury.
(People v. Betts, supra,
34 Cal.4th at pp. 1049-1054.) Territorial jurisdiction establishes no more than the court’s authority to try the defendant, a procedural matter that does not itself determine the defendant’s innocence or guilt.
(Id.
at pp. 1050, 1052-1053 [“The circumstance that the language, of the statutes refers to the liability of persons to punishment under California law, rather than the authority of California courts to hold those persons criminally liable, does not signify that the Legislature intended to transform jurisdictional facts into substantive elements of the offense”].) Because they are not elements of a crime, “jurisdictional facts need be proved only by a preponderance of the evidence and not beyond a reasonable doubt.”
(Id.
at p. 1053, citing
People
v.
Cavanaugh
(1955)
Petitioner maintains he committed no “part” of the offense in California, as section 27 requires, and does not come within the purview of section 778 because he did not use an “agent or some other means” to consummate a crime in California. Petitioner maintains that his “act of practicing medicine began arid ended with the writing of the prescription in Colorado,” and “[t]he filling of the prescription, which occurred in Mississippi, was an entirely separate act, requiring a separate license,” for which he cannot be held criminally accountable. As petitioner sees the matter, it is irrelevant whether he knew the medication he prescribed would be sent to California because his act ended with the writing of the prescription, and section 778 does not make his knowledge of the fact that the medication he prescribed would be sent to California a determining or even a relevant factor. Acknowledging cases finding personal jurisdiction in cases in which some
portion
of the alleged crime was committed within the state by the defendant or his agent (see, e.g.,
People v. Betts, supra,
The enactment of section 778, in 1872, was apparently inspired by the opinion six years earlier in
Ex Parte Hedley, supra,
Though the enactment of section 778 was undoubtedly motivated by the opinion in Hedley, its language differs in that the Legislature dropped the “without” that Hedley interpreted as “within.” The statutory language therefore appears to apply to an offense consummated within the boundaries of the state by a defendant himself outside the state “through the intervention of an innocent or guilty agent or any other means proceeding directly from said defendant” (§ 778), regardless whether the agent or other means employed was within the state at any relevant time.
During 135 years that have passed since its enactment,
11
section 778 has been invoked
The appellant’s sole defense on appeal was that “ ‘[a] non-resident of this state who has never been in this state cannot commit an offense within this state.’ ”
(People
v.
Jones, supra,
The “the objective territorial principle” or “detrimental effects” theory of extraterritorial criminal jurisdiction, which evolved out of the common law view of territorial jurisdiction (LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law,
supra,
§§ 4.2(d), 4.4(a)), was most authoritatively articulated by Justice Holmes in
Strassheim v. Daily, supra,
Though Justice Holmes’s opinion acknowledged the several visits Daily made to Michigan, the italicized language, which requires no act in the forum state, has been treated by modem courts as a reasonable and sufficient basis upon which to confer territorial jurisdiction, even without the benefit of a jurisdictional statute. (See, e.g.,
Travelers Health Ass’n
v.
Com.
(1949)
The detrimental effect theory of extraterritorial jurisdiction has been described as a “doctrine of constructive presence,” a legal fiction considered “necessary to the
The detrimental effect theory of extraterritorial jurisdiction has been incorporated into the Model Penal Code (§ 1.03, subd. (l)(a)) and has been accepted by our Supreme Court. as a valid basis upon which territorial jurisdiction may be posited.
(People v. Betts, supra,
In short, it is not necessary to the “detrimental effect” theory of extraterritorial jurisdiction that the defendant be physically present in this state during some portion of the time during which his alleged criminal act took place (though that was the case in
People v. Betts, supra,
People v. Gerchberg
(1982)
Gerchberg's jurisdictional analysis—repeatedly rejected by courts in other states (see, e.g.,
Trindle v. State, supra,
The charged offense, violation of section 2052 of the Business and Professions Code, prohibits the act of holding oneself out “as practicing . . . any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in.this state,” or, practicing
such a system or mode of treatment by “diagnosing], treating], operating] for, or prescribing] for any .... physical or mental condition of any person,” without having at the time of doing so a valid license. The criminalization of these acts represents a reasonable exercise of the state police power, as the statute was designed to prevent the provision of medical treatment to residents of the. state by persons who are inadequately trained or otherwise incompetent to provide such treatment, and who have not subjected themselves to the regulatory regime established by the Medical Practice Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2000 et seq.). Causing or intending an injury is not an element of the offense; and the injury sought to be prevented could not occur in another jurisdiction.
23
A preponderance of
Petitioner endeavors to diminish the significance of the nature and intentionality of his act by focusing almost entirely on the requirement of section 778 that the act be “consummated” within the boundaries of this state. According to petitioner, no criminal act can be “consummated” in California unless the actor or his agent is present here at some point between the commencement of the criminal act and its completion, and that is not here the case. Petitioner may be right with respect to some criminal acts, but his theory does not apply to all, because not all crimes are necessarily “consummated” upon completion by the actor of the last element of the offense. Petitioner’s theory is identical to that of the defendant in
Wheat v. State, supra,
As we have said, the acts forbidden by Business and Professions Code section 2052 (the actus reus) are (1) holding oneself out as practicing “any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in this state,” and (2) actually treating the sick and afflicted in this state, as by, among other things, “prescribing” medication for such persons. A preponderance of the evidence shows petitioner prescribed medication for a resident of this state, aware of the virtual certainty his conduct would cause the prescribed medication to be sent to that person at his residence in California. This state is thus the place where the crime is “consummated.” The fact that other parts of the crime were committed elsewhere is immaterial, as
Jurisdiction is not defeated by the fact that petitioner consummated the charged offense through the use of intermediaries located in other states. The trial court indicated its belief that a person in Colorado commits a crime in California if he sends á bomb through the mail, which explodes when the addressee opens the package in California. Petitioner’s counsel agreed that might be true, but distinguished the situation here because it was not petitioner, but the Mississippi pharmacy, that sent the prescription to California, and petitioner “had no contact at all with Mr. McKay.” The mere fact that petitioner acted through intermediaries—whether they be deemed “agent[s] or any other means”—is irrelevant under section 778: All that is required by the statute is that the intervention of such intermediaries “proceed[] directly from” petitioner, as a preponderance of the evidence shows it did. Petitioner’s contention that he cannot be deemed to have committed any part of the offense in California because “the filling of the prescription, which occurred in Mississippi, was an entirely separate act, requiring a separate license,” for which he cannot be held criminally accountable, is also unsustainable. That argument, which implies the pharmacy was a “guilty agent,” is also undermined by section 778. By making the innocence or guilt of the agent irrelevant, the statute abrogates the common law rule that “[o]ne who, at all times outside the state, commits a crime within the state by a ‘guilty agent’ is not subject to the jurisdiction of the state.” (LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law, supra, § 4.4(a) at p. 298.)
Nor is jurisdiction to criminally prosecute petitioner defeated by the availability to the state of a civil remedy. Section 2242.1 of the Business and Professions Code states that, with specified exceptions, “[n]o person or entity may prescribe . . . dangerous drugs ... on the Internet for delivery to any person in this state, without an appropriate prior examination and medical indication ....’’ (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2242.1, subd. (a).) Residents of California who violate this provision are subject to either a fine of up to $25,000 per occurrence pursuant to a citation issued by the Board or a civil penalty up to the same amount per occurrence in an enforcement action commenced by the Attorney General.
(Id.,
subds. (b), (c).) If the person or entity that violates the statute is not a resident of this state, the violation shall “be reported to the person’s or entity’s appropriate professional licensing authority.”
(Id.,
subd. (e).) Petitioner maintains that section 2242.1 reflects a legislative acknowledgment that sections 27 and 778 “are not broad enough to reach the conduct in question,” and the civil remedies it prescribes are therefore exclusive remedies. There is no reason to think the Legislature shared this view. Section 2052, which applies to the practice of medicine generally, specifically declares that “[t]he remedy provided in this section shall not preclude any other remedy provided by law” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2052, subd. (c)), and it is settled that a state “ ‘may impose both a criminal and a civil sanction in respect to the same act or omission.’ ”
(One Lot Emerald Cut Stones
v.
United States
(1972)
For the foregoing reasons, and because a preponderance of the evidence now
The remaining question is whether it should make a difference that petitioner’s offense took place in cyberspace rather than in the real space for which the jurisdictional statutes were designed.
ra.
It Is Jurisdictionally Immaterial That Petitioner Committed the Charged Offense in Cyberspace
“Cybercrime” relates not just to the unauthorized use or disruption of computer files or programs and the theft of an electronic identity, but also to the use of a computer to facilitate or carry out a traditional criminal offense, as alleged in this case. (Katyal,
Criminal Law in Cyberspace
(2001) 149 U.Pa. L.Rev. 1003, 1013-1014; Charney & Alexander,
Computer Crime
(1996) 45 Emory L.J. 931, 934.) This species of cybercrime is considered by some no different from crimes committed in real space, and this school feels it should therefore be regulated in the same manner. (See, e.g., Kelly,
The Cyberspace Separatism Fallacy
(1999) 34 Tex. Int’l L.J. 413, 414; Goldsmith,
Against Cyberanarchy, supra,
65 U.Chi. L.Rev. 1199.) However, a growing number believe cyberspace requires a different system of rules (see, e.g., Johnson & Post,
Law and Borders—The Rise of Law in Cyberspace, supra,
48 Stan. L.Rev. 1367), particularly with respect to jurisdictional issues (see, e.g., Reidenberg,
Technology and Internet Jurisdiction, supra,
153 U.Pa. L.Rev. 1951; Wilske & Schiller,
International Jurisdiction in Cyberspace: Which States May Regulate the Internet?
(1997) 50 Fed.Comm. L.J. 117). Jurisdictional doctrine, which is constitutionally grounded in the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
(Internat. Shoe Co.
v.
Washington, supra,
An aspect of Internet technology that assertedly most warrants modification of jurisdictional doctrine is the extent to which it undermines the role of territorial boundaries in delineating “law space”—that is, in providing notice that the crossing of a physical boundary may subject one to new rules. It is said that “[cjyberspace radically undermines the relationship between legally significant (online) phenomena and physical location. The rise of the global computer network is destroying the link between geographical location and: (1) the power of local governments to assert control over online behavior; (2) the effects of online behavior on individuals or things; (3) the legitimacy of a local sovereign’s efforts to regulate global phenomena; and (4) the ability of physical location to give notice of which sets of rules apply. The Net thus radically subverts the system of rule-making based on borders between physical spaces, at least with respect to the claim that Cyberspace should naturally be governed by territorially defined rules.” (Johnson & Post, Law and Borders—the Rise of Law in Cyberspace, supra, 48 Stan. L.Rev. at p. 1370.) For these reasons, it is claimed that governmental efforts “to map local regulation and physical boundaries into Cyberspace” (id. at p. 1372) are sure to prove quixotic and the Internet must be therefore left alone to “develop its own effective legal institutions” (id. at p. 1387).
While Internet technology can create new realities courts may be compelled to accommodate, 24 those who claim their Internet-related conduct should be exempt from a traditional legal principle because the conduct is not within the paradigm for which the rule was designed bear the burden of establishing the fact. Petitioner has not done so.
Petitioner does not make the bold claim that cyberspace is or should be beyond the reach of the criminal law, but he does insist that the People’s assertion of extraterritorial jurisdiction over his Internet conduct is unreasonable because (1) he and others are not on notice of the unlawfulness of such conduct, and (2) the assertion of jurisdiction would not deter others from his allegedly unlawful conduct, but (3) it would deter physicians licensed in other states from providing residents of
The claim that petitioner and others like him who prescribe medications over the Internet lack notice of the unlawfulness of that conduct is unacceptable. California’s proscription of the unlicensed practice of medicine is neither an obscure nor an unusual state prohibition of which ignorance can reasonably be claimed, and certainly not by persons like petitioner who are licensed health care providers. Nor can such persons reasonably claim ignorance of the fact that authorization of a prescription pharmaceutical constitutes the practice of medicine.
The claim that a finding of jurisdiction in this case would not deter out-of-state physicians from prescribing medications for residents of this state via the Internet cannot be so easily dismissed. 25 Such physicians or the Web sites that employ them can and usually do conceal their names, locations, and state of licensure (Bloom & Iannacone, Internet Availability of Prescription Pharmaceuticals to the Public (1999) 131 Annals of Internal Med. 830), and it is difficult and costly for regulatory and law enforcement agencies to discover this information, as they must in order to charge a person with the unlawful practice of medicine.
Nonetheless, as this case demonstrates, the information can sometimes be discovered, so that federal and state agencies are not invariably unable to find and assert jurisdiction to punish persons and entities engaged in the unlawful prescription of pharmaceuticals over the Internet. (See, e.g.,
United States v. Yates
(11th Cir. 2006)
Finally, there appears to be little danger that the finding of extraterritorial jurisdiction in this case will stifle provision over the Internet of many useful forms of medical assistance to residents of this state in need thereof. The practice of “telemedicine”—i.e., “health care delivery, diagnosis, conshltation, treatment, transfer of medical data, and education using interactive audio, video, or data communications”—is specifically authorized by the Telemedicine Development Act of 1996 (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2290.5, subd. (a)(1)). Furthermore, the Medical Practice Act exempts from the unlawful practice of medicine “a[] practitioner located outside this state, when in actual consultation, whether within this state or across state lines, with a licensed practitioner of this state” provided only that the out-of-state practitioner does not “appoint a place, to meet patients [in this state], receive, calls from patients within the limits of this state, give orders, or have ultimate authority over the care or primary diagnosis of a patient who is located within this state.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2060.) 28 .
DISPOSITION
For the foregoing reasons, the petition is denied and the temporary stay is hereby dissolved.
Haerle, J., and Richman, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 18, 2007, S153961.
Notes
The Board investigative report indicates petitioner’s Colorado medical license was restricted to “research and independent medical exams only.” The People take the position that the status of petitioner’s license is “immaterial.”
In the questionnaire, McKay stated his name, age, sex, height, weight, and phone number; that the requested fluoxetine should be shipped to him at an address in Menlo Park, California; that he had not previously taken fluoxetine, does not have high blood pressure, “agrees to consult a pharmacist before taking any over-the-counter medications,” and is “not suicidal, hpmicidal, or assaultive”; that he sought fluoxetine as “[flreatment for the symptoms of adult attention deficit disorder in relation to depression”; that his symptoms were “[nfioderate depression and major attention deficit”; that he has no “current medical conditions,” is currently taking no other medications and does not plan to do so; and that he has no allergies, has had no “major medical procedures,” and no “relevant medical history.”
See footnote, ante, page 1399.
In the scenario most frequently presented in civil actions, which are invariably for medical malpractice, the prospective patient travels out of state to a physician and there receives allegedly negligent medical treatment. In those cases, which ordinarily do not involve an intentional tort, “courts consistently hold that the patient’s home state courts cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over the physician even though the
effects
of the doctor’s negligence are (literally) felt in the patient’s home state.”
(Prince v. Urban
(1996)
See, e.g., Spencer, Jurisdiction and the Internet: Returning to Traditional Principles to Analyze Network-Mediated Contacts (2006) 2006 U.I11. L.Rev. 71; Reidenberg, Technology and Internet Jurisdiction (2005) 153 U.Pa. L.Rev. 1951; Salvado, An Effective Personal Jurisdiction Doctrine for the Internet (2003) 12 U.Balt. Intell. Prop. L.J. 75;, Geist, Cyberlaw 2.0 (2003) 44 B.C. L.Rev. 323; Geist, Is There a There There? Toward Greater Certainty for Internet Jurisdiction (2001) 16 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1345; Redish, Of New Wine and Old Bottles: Personal Jurisdiction, the Internet, and the Nature of Constitutional Evolution (1998) 38 Jurimetrics 1. 575; Goldsmith, Against Cyberanarchy (1998) 65 U.Chi. L.Rev. 1199; Johnson and Post, Law and Borders—The Rise of Law in Cyberspace (1996) 48 Stan. L.Rev. 1367.
“Minimum contacts” may, however, be applied in criminal cases involving a corporate defendant due to distinctions between corporate and individual defendants. (See
U.S. v. Nippon Paper Industries Co., Ltd.
(D.Mass. 1996)
Section 786, which was enacted after Hedley was decided and at the same time the Legislature enacted section 778, now provides that where a person outside California receives property there with the knowledge it was embezzled in this state (as in Hedley) “the jurisdiction of the offense is in any competent court within either jurisdictional territory.” (§ 786, subd. (a).)
The only amendment of the provision was in 1951, when the Legislature “shifted a number of phrases for more understandable reading without changing the meaning of the section, except that it fixed jurisdiction ‘in any competent court within the jurisdictional territory of which the offense is consummated’ instead of ‘in the county in which the offense is consummated.’ ” (Historical Note, 50 West’s Ann. Pen. Code (1985 ed.) foil. § 778, p. 161, citing Stats. 1851, ch. 29, § 85, p. 221.)
Section 778 appears to have been cited by other courts only twice: by the Ninth Circuit in a case finding it inapplicable
(Ex Parte Davis
(9th Cir. 1931)
It is strange that
People
v.
Jones, supra,
The differentiation of crimes of omission and commission for jurisdictional purposes, and the theory that proper jurisdiction of a crime that consists of the omission of an act or failure to comply with a legal duty lies in the place where the legal duty is required to be performed, has been adopted by many state courts. (See, e.g.,
Vasquez, petitioner, supra,
705 N.E.2d at pp. 611-612;
State
v.
Gantt
(1996)
As material, current section 279 provides that a violation of section 278.5 “by a person who was not a resident of, or present in, this state at the time of the alleged offense is punishable in this state, whether the intent to commit the offense is formed within or outside of this state, if any of the following apply: [$]...[]□ (c) A lawful custodian or a person with a right to visitation is a resident of this state at the time the child was taken, enticed away, kept, withheld, or concealed.” The present version of former section 279, subdivision (e), now set forth in section 279, subdivision (c), makes no reference to sections 27 and 778. (See also § 784.5, subd. (a), which provides that jurisdiction of a criminal action for violation of § 277, 278, or 278.5 (all of which relate to child abduction) shall be in “[a]ny jurisdictional- territory in which the victimized person resides, or where the agency deprived of custody is located, at the time of the taking or deprivation.”)
Unlike the “subjective territorial principle,” which relates to 'situations in which all of the elements of the crime occurred in the territory of the forum state, the “objective territorial principle” comes into play when the elements of the crime all took place elsewhere. (See LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law (2d ed. 2003) § 4.2(d); Podgor, International Computer Fraud: A Paradigm for Limiting National Jurisdiction (2002) 35 U.C. Davis L.Rev. 267, 289.)
The only oilier case relevant to the meaning of section 778 that petitioner relies upon is
People v. MacDonald
(1938)
Gerchberg’s specific holding was- effectively nullified by the Legislature’s adoption in 1983 of legislation stating that, “pursuant to sections 27 and 778,” violation of section 278.5 and related statutes is “punishable in California, whether the intent to commit the offense is formed within or without the state, if the child was a resident of California or present in California at the time of the taking, or if the child is thereafter found in California.” (Former § 278, Stats. 1983, ch. 990, §§ 3, 4, p. 3521; see § 279.)
Section 778a provides: “(a) Whenever a person, with intent to commit a crime, does any act within this state in execution or part execution of that intent, which culminates in the commission of a crime, either within or without this state, the person is punishable for that crime in this state in the same manner as if the crime had been committed entirely within this state. [1] (b) Whenever a person who, within this state, kidnaps another person within the meaning of Sections 207 and 209, and thereafter carries the person into another state or country and commits any crime of violence or theft against that person in the other state or country, the person is punishable for that crime of violence or theft in this state in the same manner as if the crime had been committed within this state.”
Despite the subsequent opinions in
People
v.
Burt
(1955)
Morante, supra,
In passing,
Lazarevich, supra,
The Model Penal Code provides that there is no jurisdiction “when either causing a specified result or a purpose to cause or danger of causing such a result is an element of an offense and the result occurs or is designed or likely to' occur only in another jurisdiction where the conduct charged would not constitute an offense, unless a legislative purpose plainly appears to declare the conduct criminal regardless of the place of the result.” (Model Pen. Code, § 1.03, subd. (2); see also State v. Luv Pharmacy, Inc., supra, 388 A.2d at pp. 195-197, applying a state jurisdictional statute based on this provision.)
See, e.g.,
Reno
v.
American Civil Liberties Union
(1997)
With respect to this issue, it is appropriate to distinguish the facts of this case from the common situation in which, while in another state, a California citizen receives medical treatment from a physician, licensed there but not in California, who writes her a prescription knowing she is a California resident intending to return to this state. Nothing in this opinion is intended to address that situation.
Compare, e.g., Opinion of the Florida Attorney General, No. 95-70 (Oct. 18, 1995),
The order states that the defendants are permanently enjoined from “ ‘prescribing, dispensing, or delivering any prescription-only drug to a person located within the State of Kansas unless licensed to practice medicine and surgery by the State Board of Healing Arts,’ ” and further ordering “ ‘that these Defendants must post on all written and Internet advertisements a notice that these Defendants will not deliver a prescription-only drug into the State of Kansas, and that this notice will remain on all written and Internet advertisements until such time as these Defendants are authorized to deliver prescription-only drugs into the State of Kansas.’ ” (State ex rel. Stovall v. DVM Enterprises, Inc., supra, 62 P.3d at pp. 655-656.)
Additionally, the Legislature has by statute authorized the Board, “at its discretion, [to] develop a proposed registration program to permit a physician and surgeon, or a doctor of podiatric medicine, located outside this state to register with the board to practice medicine or podiatric medicine in this state across state lines.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2052.5, subd. (b).) For purposes of the proposed registration program, “[a] physician and surgeon practices medicine in this state across state lines when that person is located outside of this state but, through the use of any medium, including an electronic medium, practices or attempts to practice, or advertises or holds himself or herself out as practicing, any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in this state, or diagnoses, treats, operates for, or prescribes for any . . . physical or mental condition of any person in this state.” (Id., § 2052.5, subd. (a)(1), italics added.) Further, the Federation of State Medical Boards has promulgated “Model Legislation Regarding Licensure” permitting a physician with a medical license in one state to apply for a special-purpose license to practice across state lines “by electronic or other means” which has been adopted in some states. (See, e.g., Ala. Code § 34-24-500 et seq.; 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 174.1 et seq.; Tenn. Code Ann. § 63-6-231.)
