The U.S. Navy has an ELF (extremely low frequency) system that broadcasts communications to submerged U.S. submarines that are armed with intercontinental ballistic missiles fitted with nuclear warheads. The ELF facility in Wisconsin (there is another in Michigan) includes a 28-mile-long antenna strung on wooden poles on federal government land. Urfer and Sprong, the defendants in this case, sawed down three of the poles, disabling the facility for 24 hours. They fastened literature denouncing nuclear-armed submarines on the poles and spray-painted “Nuremberg” on one of them, a reference to the fact that the Nuremberg Tribunal punished transgressions of international law by Germans who were acting in conformity with domestic law.
United States v. Sisson,
These arguments have no merit. To begin with, the reasonableness of a lawyer’s advice is indeed relevant to a determination of willfulness.
United States v. Benson,
As for the judge’s refusal to allow the defendants to turn the trial into a referendum on U.S. defense strategy, international law, and civil disobedience, it was well within his discretion. “A judge may, and generally should, block the introduction of evidence supporting a proposed defense unless all of its elements can be established.”
United States v. Haynes,
The only part of the excluded evidence that was clearly related to the charges was the part that concerned international law, specifically the argument that the defendants’ trespass and destruction of government property were privileged by that law; but questions of law are for the judge, not the jury, to decide. E.g.,
Gramercy Mills, Inc. v. Wolens,
The only error committed at trial was in the defendants’ favor. No advice of counsel instruction should have been given. There is no such thing as an “advice of counsel” defense.
United States v. Benson, supra,
We do not see how such an argument can operate as a defense in a case involving the destruction of property. It is true that the statute punishes only “willful” damage to government property. As has often been remarked, the meaning of “willful” varies with the context. E.g.,
Spies v. United States,
Destroying other people’s property is malum in se, and thus is willful provided only that the defendant knows that he’s destroying another person’s property without the person’s authorization.
Morissette v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
