Appellant McQuoid brought this petition for habeas corpus in the district court alleging that his one-year mandatory minimum sentence for carrying a firearm without a license, see Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. c. 269, § 10(a) (1976 Supp.), constitutes cruel and unusual punishment and denies him equal protection of the laws. In a supporting memorandum, he claimed further that imposition of the one-year irreducible sentence violates his due process rights. The district court denied the writ, and also denied petitioner’s application for a certificate of probable cause. However, we granted the latter.
The underlying facts were summarized in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s opinion answering questions of law presented to it on report of the case from the trial judge,
Commonwealth v. McQuoid,
1976 Mass.Adv.Sh. 763,
“On April 24,1975, after finishing work as a loader-operator for the Leicester highway department around noon, the defendant spent the next five or six hours drinking heavily at three different places in the town of Leicester. When he returned home later that day, the defendant learned that his high school class ring had arrived C.O.D. at the post office. Because his wife refused to give him the money to pick up the ring, the defendant decided to sell his gun which was kept at home for his wife’s protection. En route to sell the gun, the defendant wasstopped by police for operating under the influence of liquor. Pursuant to a search of the defendant, the police found a loaded gun in his pants pocket. The defendant’s license to carry the gun had expired several months prior to this incident.
“The trial judge found, pursuant to the defendant’s request for findings of fact, that on April 24,1975, the defendant was not engaged in the commission of a crime of violence nor did he intend to commit a crime by using the gun, but rather that he was carrying it in order to transport it to a gun dealer for sale.”
Appellant was thereafter convicted and sentenced to a year in jail under Mass.Gen. Laws Ann. c. 269, § 10(a) (1976 Supp.), which provides in pertinent part:
“Whoever, except as provided by law, carries on his person, or carries on his person or under his control in a vehicle, a firearm, loaded or unloaded, as defined in section one hundred and twenty-one of chapter one hundred and forty without . having in effect a license to carry firearms . . . shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than two and one-half nor more than five years, or for not less than one year nor more than two and one-half years in a jail or house of correction. The sentence imposed upon such person shall not be reduced to less than one year, nor suspended, nor shall any person convicted under this subsection (a) be eligible for probation, parole, or furlough or receive any deduction from his sentence for good conduct until he shall have served one year of such sentence. Prosecutions commenced under this section shall neither be continued without a finding nor placed on file.” 1
We are not persuaded by appellant’s constitutional claims and affirm.
Considering the penalties prescribed in Massachusetts and elsewhere for similar and more serious offenses, appellant argues that the prescribed penalty is grossly disproportionate to the offense and hence violative of the eighth amendment.
See Weems
v.
United States,
The second facet of appellant’s eighth amendment argument is that the penalty’s inflexibility will cause it to be applied so arbitrarily and unevenly as to amount to cruel and unusual punishment.
Cf. Furman v. Georgia,
Nor does the supposed high likelihood of selective enforcement persuade us that the statute violates the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. No parallel has been demonstrated between this rigid statute and vague or overly broad laws which encourage discriminatory enforcement because of the amount of discretion granted to arresting and prosecuting officials.
Compare Smith v. Goguen,
Appellant argues that due process would be offended by imposition of a one-year mandatory sentence upon someone who, unaware of the provisions of the law, was carrying a gun without any criminal intent. To convict under section 10(a), it need not be shown that the accused knew of the necessity of a license nor that he possessed criminal scienter; on the other hand, it must be established that the accused knew he was in possession of a firearm.
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson, supra,
1976 Mass.Adv.Sh. at 750,
“Many violations of such regulations result in no direct or immediate injury to person or property but merely create the danger or probability of it which the law seeks to minimize. While such offenses do not threaten the security of the state in the manner of treason, they may be regarded as offenses against its authority, for their occurrence impairs the efficiency of controls deemed essential to the social order as presently constituted. In this respect, whatever the intent of the violator, the injury is the same . . .”
It is true that this statute not only creates strict liability for the unlicensed carrying of a gun but, unlike the statutes referred to, mandates a one-year irreducible sentence. But this latter consideration relates to whether the penalty is so grossly disproportionate as to violate the eighth amendment. If, as already determined, the severity and inflexibility of the penalty are not such as to render it cruel and unusual, these qualities do not render it any the more violative of the due process clause.
Appellant contends that the statute violates due process because it has the potential of ensnaring into its broadly cast net a large number of people with “innocent” intent. How many such “innocent” people will be ensnared once the existence of the statute is common knowledge seems questionable. Still, it is the nature of strict liability statutes that they may sometimes involve persons whose designs are not, in the ordinary sense, criminal. Society has a right to prohibit and punish not only overtly criminal conduct but other conduct which creates danger, or a sufficient probability of danger, to the community at large. Morissette v. United States, supra.
The Supreme Judicial Court treated appellant’s equal protection claim fully,
see
1976 Mass.Adv.Sh. at 765-66,
Affirmed.
Notes
. There are numerous exceptions to the strict rule of the statute, including, for example, several for nonresidents in certain circumstances and one for a person who comes into possession of a firearm by devise. See Mass.Gen. Laws Ann. c. 140, § 129C.
. Mandatory minimum sentences are not, however, totally unknown. See,
e.g.,
mandatory minimum sentence of ten years for one “who engages in a continuing criminal enterprise” in violation of the federal drug abuse prevention and control laws, 21 U.S.C. § 848, upheld against a challenge that it unconstitutionally encroaches on judicial authority.
United States v. Jones,
. Appellant cites as support a 1976 Report of the Center for Criminal Justice, Harvard Law School, entitled “And Nobody Can Get You Out” which is claimed to show that “police officers have and will sometimes ‘look the other way’ when an arrest might be made”. But the conclusions of the study are to the contrary. After noting a 24% reduction in charges for violation of section 10(a) between 1974 and 1975, the study tests whether the drop is attributable to greater compliance with the law or to lack of enforcement and concludes that the drop “is due primarily to increased citizen compliance”, although recognizing that the statistical evidence could not “rule out the argument that police officers can and will sometimes ‘look the other way’ when an arrest might be made.” Without any data supporting his assertion that the police will make arrests based on impermissible criteria, appellant’s argument has little force.
