Judge OAKES dissents in a separate opinion.
We return in this appeal to a vexatious problem. When a criminal statute renders unlawful an act “knowingly” undertaken by the defendant, what must the extent of the defendant’s knowledge be to permit conviction?
The defendant, Bronx Reptiles, Inc., was convicted following a bench trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Cheryl L. Poliak,
Magistrate
Judge) of violating that portion of the Lacey Act, codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. § 42(c), that makes it a misdemeanor “for any person, including any importer, knowingly to cause or permit any wild animal or bird to be transported to the United States, or any Territory or district thereof, under inhumane or unhealthful conditions or in violation of such requirements” as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe.
See United States v. Bronx Reptiles, Inc.,
BACKGROUND
On May 9, 1995, Leo Yen, an inspector for the United States Fish and Wildlife
The shipment consisted of two identical wooden boxes, each approximately two and one-half to three feet wide and four to five feet long. One of the boxes had airline tape around it but its lid was nonetheless ajar. Opening that box, Yen found that about three-quarters of the box contained skinks, 1 all of which appeared to be in good condition. But crushed together in a compartment at the end of the box were several dozen frogs. At first the frogs appeared to be dead, but on closer examination, Yen saw that a few of them were still moving. The second box contained only skinks, all of which appeared undamaged.
Yen released the shipment to the defendant so that it could tend to the skinks and the surviving frogs, but he refused to sign off on the importation. On a Report of Refused Clearance, Yen wrote: “no damp materials, [a] shallow container, no separate bags, no water tray w/sponge.” Yen instructed the defendant through its employee to separate the dead frogs from the live frogs and to return the dead ones to Yen. The next day he received a package from the defendant containing all the frogs that had been shipped; all had died.
On May 9, 1995, the Fish and Wildlife Service issued a Violation Notice to the defendant charging it with violation of 18 U.S.C. § 42(c). On April 17, 1996, the case was tried, on consent of the parties pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3401(b), before Magistrate Judge Poliak in the Eastern District of New York. The government called three witnesses: Yen, Peter Brazai-tis, and Saverio LiBrandi.
Brazaitis, a curator of animals at the Central Park Zoo and a herpetologist, was qualified as an expert in the care, management, and transport of live reptiles and amphibians. He testified that if a frog becomes dehydrated, its respiratory functions are impaired, causing stress to the animal and resulting in the rapid production of mucous, urine, and toxins, which ultimately kills the animal. In order to protect frogs against dehydration, they should be shipped with a reservoir of water available to them. They .also should be packed in relatively small compartments in order to prevent them from leaping about and injuring themselves. And a relatively small number of frogs should be placed in each compartment to protect against the spread of noxious bacteria from a single frog to the entire population. Brazaitis opined that based on his examination of the shipment in this case, the method and conditions of shipment were improper, both because there was no water vessel or moist towel in the crate and because the frogs were not packed in small groups in separate containers.
Brazaitis further testified that in his experience as an importer of wild animals, it was customary for the importer to ensure the health and well-being of the animals for which the importer has placed an order. He testified that there are standards promulgated by the International An-Transport Association (“LATA”) that specify the size of the box, environmental conditions, and other requirements necessary to ensure the health of animals being shipped. When he was responsible for such importation, he said, he personally reviewed the qualifications of the shipper, sought out references, and called the shipper to make sure it was aware of shipping requirements, including IATA standards. He admitted during cross-examination, however, that he did not necessarily visit the foreign countries from which he pur
LiBrandi, a special agent for the Division of Law Enforcement of the Fish and Wildlife Service, testified that the defendant was responsible for about two shipments of live animals into the United States a week. He testified that the Fish and Wildlife Service had assessed civil penalties against the defendant on at least three previous occasions. The first involved two importations of live reptiles from Colombia in March 1993, in which some of the reptiles arrived dead as a result of improper ventilation and labeling. In the course of his investigation of the incident, LiBrandi spoke to a representative of the defendant, one Bruce Edelman, who told LiBrandi that he (Edelman) was aware of the IATA guidelines for shipping animals and thought that as an importer he was liable for the conditions under which wildlife enters the United States. The defendant was also assessed a penalty by the Fish and Wildlife Service in March 1994 when several dead animals were discovered in a shipment of small mammals and reptiles from Egypt. An investigation of the incident revealed that the company had failed to follow applicable IATA guidelines and that the packaging of the animals had been improper. And in March 1995, the Fish and Wildlife Service cited the defendant for a violation involving the importation of chameleons, skinks, geckos, other lizards, and frogs.
The defendant presented no witnesses at trial.
In an opinion and order dated December 17, 1996, the magistrate judge found the defendant guilty of violating 18 U.S.C. § 42(c).
See Bronx Reptiles,
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3402, the defendant appealed the judgment of conviction to the district court. In a brief order, the district court affirmed.
See Bronx Reptiles,
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
“The definition of the elements of a criminal offense is entrusted to the legislature, particularly in the case of federal crimes, which are solely creatures of statute.”
Liparota v. United States,
I. The Language of § 42(c) and Mens Rea
Although the language of a statute does not always absolutely determine its meaning,
see Lewis v. Grinker,
18 U.S.C. § 42(c) provides:
[I]t shall be unlawful for any person, including any importer, knowingly to cause or permit any wild animal or bird to be transported to the United States, or any Territory or district thereof, under inhumane or unhealthful conditions ....
It seems reasonably clear from a reading of the text that the word “knowingly” in this sentence refers to all three of the phrases that follow: “[1] causing] or permitting] any wild animal or bird to be transported [2] to the United States ... [3] under inhumane or unhealthful conditions.”
First, § 42(c) is a provision of a criminal statute describing behavior that it declares to be “unlawful.” The reader therefore expects the sentence to tell him or her what it is that a person must do “knowingly” to perform a criminally punishable act. Reading knowingly to apply (1) to the language “to cause or permit any wild animal or bird to be transported” and (2) to the phrase “to the United States,” but not to (3) the requirement that such transportation be “under inhumane or unhealthful conditions,” leads to a highly unlikely result: A vast range of remarkably innocuous behavior is rendered criminal. Not only the importer but the pet store owner or the casual purchaser of pets may well become guilty of a crime by purchasing a once-wild animal or bird-a skink or a frog, a tropical fish or a tropical bird-knowing only that the direct or indirect result of the purchase is that a “wild animal or bird [will] be transported to the United States.” To avoid this extraordinary and unlikely result, the reader is bound to read the requirement of knowledge to apply to the provision that the animal or bird be transported “under inhumane or unhealthful conditions” so that the “unlawful” act prohibited involves wrongdoing. 2
Second, there is nothing in the structure or punctuation of § 42(c) that signals the reader that “knowingly” does
not
apply to the phrase “under inhumane or unhealthful conditions.” The statute could have been written, for example, to render it “unlawful for any person knowingly to cause or permit any wild animal or bird to be transported to the United States,
the conditions of which transportation
are in
If a simple review of the language of § 42(c) does not establish that “knowingly” refers to “inhumane or unhealthful,” however, the legal principle that criminal statutes are presumed to contain a
mens rea
requirement does. In interpreting criminal laws, we are required to assume that Congress “legislate^] against the background of our traditional legal concepts which render intent a critical factor.”
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
The contention that an injury can amount to a crime only when inflicted by intention is no provincial or transient notion. It is as universal and persistent in mature systems of law as belief in freedom of the human will and a consequent ability and duty of the normal individual to choose between good and evil.
Id.
at 250,
In applying the presumption that a
mens rea
is required, our recent decision in
Figueroa,
This principle of construction can be used to set a presumed floor to the knowledge requirement in [the statute under consideration]. In many, if not most, circumstances, it is perfectly innocent to aid persons in entering the United States. It is also perfectly innocent to assist many aliens, such as lawful permanent residents. Because criminal statutes should be presumed to criminalize only conduct that is accompanied by a non-innocent state of mind, the knowledge requirement in [the statute] must extend beyond the fact that the person aided is an alien.
Id.
at 116;
see also Liparota,
To apply these principles, we return to the language of 18 U.S.C. § 42(c): “[I]t shall be unlawful for any person, including any importer, knowingly to cause or per'mit any wild animal or bird to be transported to the United States ... under inhumane or unhealthful conditions....” For much the same reasons that a simple review of the language of § 42(c) indicates that “knowingly” applies to “inhumane or unhealthful,” the
mens rea
presumption compels the interpretation. “In many, if not most, circumstances, it is perfectly innocent,”
Figueroa,
There is, moreover, neither statutory language nor legislative history to overcome the mens rea presumption. We would expect that if Congress meant, contrary to the presumption, to impose liability absent a “guilty mind,” it would have said so. 5
Senator Moore.... This is a matter for legislation, making it a penal offense against whom? Who would this penalty be against where you have inhumane treatment of animals shipped from overseas to this country?
Mr. McDonald. I do not believe we could hold somebody in Africa for it.
Senator Moore. Whom are you going to hold liable here?
Mr. McDonald. The only way we could hold them I believe, is the man who purchases them here. If you hold him up, then you will get results.
Senator Moore. That is the importer?
Mr. McDonald. That is right.
Senator Moore.... The question is: whose duty is it to see [the animals] are humanely loaded and handled and shipped? Do you want to impose that on the vessel?
Senator Moore. Should that be made the duty of the importer?
Mr. McDonald. The importer seems to be the only man that we could—
Senator Moore. That is the only man that I think should have that responsibility.
See Bronx Reptiles,
While this testimony may suggest that Congress viewed imposing liability on importers as the only way to affect the conditions under which wild animals and birds were transported to the United States, it does not speak to what requirements for importers’ liability Congress intended to impose. That Congress wished to place liability on importers of wild animals and birds transported to the United States under “inhumane and unhealthful conditions” is consistent with both a requirement that the importer know of the inhumane and unhealthful conditions and the absence of such a requirement.
In the words of the Liparota Court:
Of course, Congress could have intended that [a] broad range of conduct be made illegal, perhaps with the understanding that prosecutors would exercise their discretion to avoid ... harsh results. However, given the paucity of material suggesting that Congress did so intend, we are reluctant to adopt such a sweeping interpretation.
We disagree with the district court’s view that under our interpretation of § 42(c) it will be “virtually impossible for the government to prove that an importer knowingly caused the shipment of an animal with knowledge that the overseas shipper was sending the animal under inhumane conditions.”
Bronx Reptiles,
In sum, to permit the defendant to be convicted of a crime under 18 U.S.C. § 42(c) without knowledge of the “inhumane or unhealthful” conditions under which the frogs were transported to the United States would be to impose upon them guilt absent a mens rea. This is contrary to the fundamental presumption that mens rea, a “guilty mind,” is a prerequisite to conviction for a crime.
II. “Public Welfare Offenses”
The government points out that in cases involving “public welfare offenses,” courts have declined to read into statutes a
mens rea
requirement, concluding that Congress intended to impose a form of strict criminal liability instead.
See Staples,
“[PJublic welfare offenses have been created by Congress, and recognized” by courts “in limited circumstances.”
Staples,
In support of its claim that a violation of § 42(c) is a “public welfare offense,” the government relies on our recent decision in
Figueroa.
In that case, discussed in section I above, we held that the defendant’s knowledge of the specific legal basis for an alien’s exclusion is unnecessary for conviction of a person aiding an excludable alien to enter the United States — but only “because knowledge that an alien is excludable should put any reasonable person on notice that it would be illegal to aid that person’s entry into the country.”
Id.
at 118.
6
In the case at bar,
The government also argues that a
mens rea
requirement need not be inferred where the penalties for violating a statute are.relatively small. That is simply wrong. While “a severe penalty is a further factor tending to suggest that Congress did not intend to eliminate a
mens rea
requirement,” Staples,
CONCLUSION
Because the government failed to satisfy its burden under 18 U.S.C. § 42(c), we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions to enter a judgment of not guilty.
I respectfully dissent.
Bronx Reptiles imports live animals, including reptiles, into the country approximately twice a week. Since at least 1993, it has been well aware of the IATA guidelines used by the industry to determine how a specific species is to be shipped and of the container requirements listed in the guidelines. Indeed, a special agent of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Law Enforcement, who spoke with Bruce Edelman, the owner of Bronx Reptiles, testified that Mr. Edelman knew of the IATA guidelines and knew that as an importer he was liable for the conditions under which wildlife entered the United States.
Despite its knowledge of IATA guidelines, Bronx Reptiles has arranged for a number of shipments that involved inadequately packed and ventilated shipments. In 1993, Bronx Reptiles arranged for an importation of iguanas and boa constrictors from Colombia that resulted in a substantial number of dead reptiles due to improper ventilation and improper labeling. Based on the two shipments from Colombia, notices of violation were issued to Bronx Reptiles and civil fines were subsequently paid. A similar incident occurred in March of 1994, involving small mammals and reptiles from Egypt in which a number of dead animals were discovered and as well a number of weaning mothers with young were improperly packaged. In March of 1995, Bronx Reptiles was cited for yet another importation of chameleons, skinks, geckos and other lizards and frogs in inhumane fashion.
There was no doubt whatsoever that the shipment of frogs from the Solomon Islands, at the center of this case, was improper. The container was shallow and the frogs were not separated. Furthermore, no damp materials or water trays
No evidence was introduced by Bronx Reptiles to contradict any of the foregoing.
The majority holds that a violation of § 42(c) is not a public welfare offense and further holds that for a conviction under § 42(c) to stand, Bronx Reptiles had to know specifically that the frogs were improperly packed. In my view § 42(c), under the law of this Circuit, is properly treated as a public welfare statute. In
Figueroa,
we held that the alien-smuggling statute was properly treated as a public welfare statute “because knowledge that an alien is excludable should put any reasonable person on notice that it would be illegal to aid that person’s entry into the country.”
Figueroa,
The provision against inhumane transportation, which is the subject of this prosecution, has been in the law since 1948. The legislative history makes it clear that Congress knew that it could not hold foreign shippers liable for the conditions in which animals were shipped, and that it was necessary to hold the United States importer responsible for ensuring, by contract or otherwise, that the transportation would be done in a humane fashion. See 1948 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2180-2182. Thus, Congress plainly contemplated that United States importers would be in a position where they could be responsible for ensuring safe transport of live animals.
The IATA guidelines themselves illustrate that the transport of live animals, including live reptiles and amphibians, is a delicate and risky business. As Congress clearly found, it is the United States importer who is in a position to take responsibility for ensuring the safe and humane transport for foreign animals. The fact that it is arranging for the transport of animals that are alive puts it on notice of the “probability of strict regulation.” The United States importer can arrange by contract to ensure the safety of the animals. Thus, the United States importer is in responsible relation to the public danger of harm to the wildlife that it caused to be shipped to this country and should be strictly regulated.
After concluding that § 42(c) should be treated as a public welfare statute, I now properly turn to the question of what intent is required under
Figueroa.
We stated in
Figueroa,
Here, the uncontradicted evidence at trial demonstrated beyond a reasonable doubt that Bronx Reptiles arranged for the shipment of live animals, knew of the IATA guidelines, had failed to meet these requirements numerous times in the past, and submitted no evidence to show that they had attempted to assure the safety of the shipment here involved despite their knowledge that under the guidelines they should do so. Thus, in my view, the evidence in this case is sufficient so that a jury could find that Bronx Reptiles knew there was a high probability that the frogs would be shipped under inhumane conditions and was aware that it was doing something wrong. To hold that this evidence is insufficient would eviscerate the Act’s purpose because it would be nearly impossible to prove that the United States importer is liable for the conditions under which the animals are shipped, contrary to congressional intent.
The analogy to the hypothetical posed by the majority in footnote 2 of its opinion is inapposite. The majority hypothetical sets forth a statute making it unlawful for any person knowingly to open an envelope containing mail intended for another person and suggests that the person would have to know that the enclosed mail was intended for another person or else the mere opening of an envelope could be punishable. But this is true only if the envelope were not addressed to the person to whom the letter was sent. Here, in the business of importation, Bronx Reptiles well knew the requirements for shipping frogs and, being the large and frequent importer that it is, should have required that the shipper box the frogs according to the IATA rules and standards. Nothing in this record indicates that this was done. In fact, everything in the record indicates that it was not done and that Bronx Reptiles took no steps whatever to see that it was done. In other words, the letter it opened, to continue the analogy, had the name of another addressee on it.
I would affirm the conviction.
Notes
. A skink is "any of a family ... of typically small insectivorous lizards with long tapering bodies.” Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 1100 (10th ed.1998).
. Compare the word “knowingly” in a hypothetical statute that provides: "It shall he unlawful for any person knowingly to open an envelope containing mail intended for another person.” The statute clearly requires the letter opener to know not only that he or she is opening an envelope but also that the enclosed mail is intended for another person. Otherwise, the law would prohibit the innocent act of opening of an envelope that through no fault of the opener contained mail addressed to another.
.
Cf. United States v. Tolkow,
.
Cf. Figueroa,
. We also note that whether conditions are "inhumane or unhealthful” is a question of fact. We are thus not confronted by an assertion that the statute requires that the defendant must know that what he is doing is unlawful in order to be guilty of a crime.
Cf., e.g., Bryan v. United States,
. Judge Oakes, in his dissent,
post
at 92, refers to
Figueroa
as holding that the alien-
