ROBERT SORICH, TIMOTHY MCCARTHY, AND PATRICK SLATTERY v. UNITED STATES
No. 08–410
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
February 23, 2009
555 U. S. ____ (2009)
SCALIA, J., dissenting
ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
JUSTICE SCALIA, dissenting from denial of certiorari.
In McNally v. United States, 483 U. S. 350 (1987), this Court held that while “[t]he mail fraud statute clearly protects property rights, . . . [it] does not refer to the intangible right of the citizenry to good government.” Id., at 356. That holding invalidated the theory that official corruption and misconduct, by depriving citizens of their “intangible right” to the honest and impartial services of government, constituted fraud. Although all of the Federal Courts of Appeals had accepted the theory, see id., at 364 (STEVENS, J., dissenting), we declined to
Congress spoke shortly thereafter. “For the purposes of this chapter, the term ‘scheme or artifice to defraud’ includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.”
Though it consists of only 28 words, the statute has been invoked to impose criminal penalties upon a staggeringly broad swath of behavior, including misconduct not only by public officials and employees but also by private employees and corporate fiduciaries. Courts have upheld convictions of a local housing official who failed to disclose a conflict of interest, United States v. Hasner, 340 F. 3d 1261, 1271 (CA11 2003) (per curiam); a businessman who attempted to pay a state legislator to exercise “informal and behind-the-scenes influence on legislation,” United States v. Potter, 463 F. 3d 9, 18 (CA1 2006); students who schemed with their professors to turn in plagiarized work, United States v. Frost, 125 F. 3d 346, 369 (CA6 1997); lawyers who made side-payments to insurance adjusters in exchange for the expedited processing of their clients’ pending claims, United States v. Rybicki, 354 F. 3d 124, 142 (CA2 2003) (en banc); and, in the decision we are asked to review here, city employees who engaged in political-patronage hiring for local civil-service jobs, 523 F. 3d 702, 705 (CA7 2008).
If the “honest services” theory—broadly stated, that officeholders and employees owe a duty to act only in the best interests of their constituents and employers—is taken seriously and carried to its logical conclusion, presumably the statute also renders criminal a state legislator‘s decision to vote for a bill because he expects it will curry favor with a small minority essential to his reelection; a mayor‘s attempt to use the prestige of his office to obtain a restaurant table without a reservation; a public employee‘s recommendation of his incompetent friend for a public contract; and any self-dealing by a corporate officer. Indeed, it would seemingly cover a salaried employee‘s phoning in sick to go to a ball game. In many cases, moreover, the maximum penalty for violating this statute will be added to the maximum penalty for violating
To avoid some of these extreme results, the Courts of Appeals have spent two decades attempting to cabin the breadth of
It is practically gospel in the lower courts that the statute “does not encompass every instance of official misconduct,” United States v. Sawyer, 85 F. 3d 713, 725 (CA1 1996). The Tenth Circuit has confidently proclaimed that the statute is “not violated by every breach of contract, breach of duty, conflict of interest, or misstatement made in the course of dealing,” United States v. Welch, 327 F. 3d 1081, 1107 (CA10 2003). But why that is so, and what principle it is that separates the criminal breaches, conflicts and misstatements from the obnoxious but lawful ones, remains entirely unspecified. Without some coherent limiting principle to define what “the intangible right of honest services” is, whence it derives, and how it is violated, this expansive phrase invites abuse by headline-grabbing prosecutors in pursuit of local officials, state legislators, and corporate CEOs who engage in any manner of unappealing or ethically questionable conduct.
In the background of the interpretive venture remain the two concerns voiced by this Court in McNally. First, the prospect of federal prosecutors’ (or federal courts‘) creating ethics codes and setting disclosure requirements for local and state officials. Is it the role of the Federal Government to define the fiduciary duties that a town alderman or school board trustee owes to his constituents? It is one thing to enact and enforce clear rules against certain types of corrupt behavior, e.g.,
Second and relatedly, this Court has long recognized the “basic principle that a criminal statute must give fair warning of the conduct that it makes a crime.” Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U. S. 347, 350 (1964). There is a serious argument that
The present case in which certiorari is sought implicates two of the limiting principles that the Courts of Appeals have debated—whether the crime of deprivation of “honest services” requires a predicate violation of state law, and whether it requires the defendant‘s acquisition of some sort of private gain. The jury was instructed that petitioners, who were employed by the city of Chicago, were obliged, “[a]s part of the honest services they owed the City and the people of the City of Chicago,” to abide by a laundry list of “laws, decrees, and policies,” including a 1983 civil consent decree entered into by
Finally, in addition to presenting two of the principal devices the Courts of Appeals have used in an effort to limit
It may be true that petitioners here, like the defendants in other “honest services” cases, have acted improperly. But “[b]ad men, like good men, are entitled to be tried and sentenced in accordance with law.” Green v. United States, 365 U. S. 301, 309 (1961) (Black, J., dissenting). In light of the conflicts among the Circuits; the longstanding confusion over the scope of the statute; and the serious due process and federalism interests affected by the expansion of criminal liability that this case exemplifies, I would grant the petition for certiorari and squarely confront both the meaning and the constitutionality of
