Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge KOZINSKI; Dissent by Judge McKEOWN.
We consider whether the federal courts have jurisdiction over a criminal case charging a United States citizen with offenses committed at United States installations abroad.
I
Clifton S. Corey, a United States citizen, lived abroad with his family while working for the U.S. Air Force as a civilian postmaster. From 1993 to 1996, Corey ran the post office at the American Embassy in Manila, the Philippines, and for several years before, he managed the office at the U.S. Air Force Base at Yokota, Japan. In 1996, Corey’s stepdaughter, Anna, told her doctor that her stepfather had forced her to engage in sexual intercourse with him for the previous five years, starting when she was fifteen. After an investigation, the government charged Corey with aggravated sexual abuse and sexual abuse in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2241(a) and 2242C1).
II
Prior to trial, the district court granted the government’s motion to preclude Corey from contesting jurisdiction.
The “special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States” includes:
Any lands reserved or acquired for the use of the United States, and under the exclusive. or concurrent jurisdiction thereof, or any place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other needful building.
18 U.S.C. § 7(3). This provision tracks its origin to 1790, yet, at the time this case was brought, only two courts had ad
We review de novo the district court’s assertion of jurisdiction. See United States v. Vasquez-Velasco,
Ill
[1] A. Congress may enforce its laws beyond the territorial boundaries of the United States. See EEOC v. Arabian Am. Oil Co. (“Aramco”),
For most legislation, the presumption against extraterritoriality makes perfect sense. First, “Congress generally legislates with domestic concerns in mind,” Smith v. United States,
The territorial presumption is thus based on the common-sense inference that, where Congress does not indicate otherwise, legislation dealing with domestic matters is not meant to extend beyond the nation’s borders. But the presumption does not apply where the legislation implicates concerns that are not inherently domestic. For instance, in United States v. Bowman,
Applying the territorial presumption to subsection 7(3) would be a mistake for another reason: Land subject to subsection 7(3) is not “extraterritorial,” as the Supreme Court has defined the term. In Aramco, the Court described territorial jurisdiction as including “places over which the United States has sovereignty or has some measure of legislative control.” Aramco,
Because foreign lands covered by subsection 7(3) are, by definition, under the legislative control of the United States, the second policy supporting the territorial presumption-the desire to avoid “unintended clashes” with foreign powers, see Aramco,
But, even if the presumption were applicable, the text of section 7 would clearly rebut it. The language and structure of the statute reflect a legislative purpose to reach places that lie well beyond U.S. borders. The special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States extends by definition beyond ordinary land and seas. Taken as a whole, 18 U.S.C. § 7 extends the jurisdiction of the federal criminal laws to areas where American citizens and property need protection, yet no other government effectively safeguards those interests. Congress unmistakably had foreign locales in mind when it set about defining that jurisdiction. Put subsection 7(3) aside for the moment. Every other subsection mentions spaces outside the fifty states. Section 7 reaches vessels sailing on the high seas, subsection 7(1), or on international waterways, subsection 7(2); islands prized for their rich bird droppings, subsection 7(4); airplanes flying the friendly skies, subsection 7(5); NASA spaceships rocketing towards Mars, subsection 7(6); Antarctica, subsection 7(7); and foreign ships coming to America, subsection 7(8). Section 7 as a whole extends the jurisdiction of the United States to the ends of the earth (and beyond). We construe subsection 7(3) against the extraterritorial backdrop of its neighbors.
B. Our conclusion that subsection 7(3) applies to territory outside the borders of the fifty states agrees with that of the Fourth Circuit. See United States v. Erdos,
Recently, however, in a case almost identical to ours, the Second Circuit held that subsection 7(3) applies only to lands acquired within the territorial borders of the United States. See United States v. Gatlin,
We are not persuaded by the Second Circuit’s reasoning. Gatlin examined subsection 7(3)’s statutory predecessors and concluded that Congress drafted the provision without any inkling that it would be applied extraterritorially.
Nor, said Gatlin, did Congress intend to apply the statute extraterritorially in 1940, when it expanded its coverage to areas within the concurrent jurisdiction of the United States. See Act of June 11, 1940, ch. 323, 54 Stat. 304. “[W]hat little legislative history there is of the 1940 Act,” Gatlin,
The linchpin of Gatlin’s analysis was its assumption that it would have been “virtually inconceivable” for Congress in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to speak of the United States having exclusive jurisdiction outside the country’s territorial limits. Gatlin,
The original 1790 Act provided basic criminal laws for lands outside the jurisdiction of any other sovereign. See, e.g., Watts v. United States,
As the United States acquired new possessions, Congress extended federal criminal jurisdiction with the boundaries of the young republic. Special provisions of the organic acts of Louisiana and Florida applied the 1790 Act to land not subject to the territorial governments in those territories. See An Act for the Establishment of a Territorial Government in Florida, ch. 13, § 9, 3 Stat. 654 (1822); An Act Erecting Louisiana into Two Territories, ch. 38, § 7, 2 Stat. 283 (1804). In 1817, Congress provided that U.S. territory remaining under Indian control nevertheless lay within the “sole and exclusive” criminal jurisdiction of the United States. See An Act to Provide for the Punishment of Crimes and Offences Committed Within the Indian Boundaries, ch. 92, § 1, 3 Stat. 383 (1817). The Indian Intercourse Act subsequently defined such territory to include all of the Louisiana territory except the states of Missouri, Louisiana and the territory of Arkansas. See An Act to Regulate Trade and Intercourse with the Indian Tribes and to Preserve Peace on the Frontiers, ch. 161, § 1, 4 Stat. 729 (1834). As the United States expanded across the continent, the Supreme Court extended that “sole and exclusive” jurisdiction to all the unsettled territories in the American west. See Ex parte Crow Dog,
Congress’s regulation of the Indian territory demonstrates the error in presuming that nineteenth-century Americans believed territorial jurisdiction was an all-or-nothing concept. Although the Indian territory was part of the United States, the federal government respected the Indian tribes’ political claims over the lands within their possession. See, e.g., Cherokee Nation v. Georgia,
In extending the reach of United States jurisdiction, Congress did not stop with the continental possessions of the nation. The Guano Islands Act of 1856 asserted criminal jurisdiction over islands claimed by Americans for their guano deposits. See An Act to Authorize Protection to Be Given to Citizens of the United States Who May Discover Deposits of Guano, ch. 164, § 6, 11 Stat. 119, 120 (1856). The act gave the President the discretion to claim faraway islands as U.S. territory, see id. § 1,
Contrary to Gatlin’s suggestion, the United States at times did assert criminal jurisdiction over territories claimed by another sovereign. In Jones,
When in 1909, Congress placed these various jurisdictional provisions within a single statute, it understood criminal jurisdiction to extend to all lands claimed by the United States, without regard to whether they were within a particular state or even within the continental United States. Congress declined to assert jurisdiction over territories subject to the more comprehensive criminal codes of the states or self-governing territories. But it showed no intent to limit jurisdiction on the basis of geography alone. We see no reason then to presume that when, in 1940, Congress extended criminal jurisdiction to those lands under the concurrent authority of the United States, it intended to limit the reach of subsection 7(3) to areas under the concurrent authority of the states, but not those under the concurrent authority of other sovereigns.
Although Gatlin purported to rely on the legislative history of subsection 7(3), there is, in fact, very little in the legislative record that speaks to the question presented to us. Gatlin rather, relies on its reading of the historical record, its understanding of what the legislators must have assumed when they used particular words and phrases. We believe that Gatlin reached the wrong conclusion by failing to take into account our nation’s history of rapid territorial expansion during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Gatlin also erred, in our view, by considering subsection 7(3) in isolation from its neighboring subsections because the court believed “most subsections of § 7 were enacted separately by Congress and have their own legislative histories.” Gatlin,
But what history shows is that Congress never understood the provisions of section 7 to be separate fragments of jurisdiction. Indeed, when Congress extended federal criminal jurisdiction, it did so by reference. The Indian Intercourse Act criminalized actions in Indian territory that would be crimes if “committed within any place or district of country within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.” Indian Intercourse Act, § 25,
Gatlin holds that if Congress wanted to extend the jurisdiction of the federal courts beyond the borders of the collective states, it had to express its intent in each relevant subsection. See Gatlin,
And to what end? The Second Circuit was concerned that applying our law to U.S. possessions abroad might invite the “unintended clashes between our laws and those of other nations” that the territorial presumption helps avoid. Gatlin,
Thus, construing subsection 7(3) as applying only to federal lands within the United States serves neither congressional intent nor American foreign policy. All it does is hand a get-out-of-jail-free card to American civilians who violate U.S. law while stationed abroad.
IV
We next consider whether the areas in this case — the Yokota Air Force Base and Lopez Court — are lands “reserved or acquired for the use of the United States” and “under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction thereof’ for purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 7(3).
A. “Reserved or Acquired for the Use of the United States”
The meaning of “reserved or acquired for the use of the United States” is plain enough. Courts have demonstrated their faith in the words’ clarity by skipping over them without explication. See United States v. Blunt,
By this standard, there is not much question that the Yokota Air Force Base has been acquired for the use of the United States. The United States first occupied the territory upon which the base is located following Japan’s surrender in World War II. In negotiating Japan’s return to self-government, the Japanese government agreed that the United States would retain control over certain areas of the country, including the territory on which the base is located. See Preliminary Working Group Under the Exchange of Notes Between the Governments of the United States and Japan on 28 February 1952, Minutes of the Eighth Meeting, at 20 (Apr. 3, 1952). For almost half a century, the United States has used the Japanese land in question in the same manner as it uses American land on which are located domestic military installations.
Likewise, the United States has acquired Lopez Court for its own use. The State Department leased the apartment building from a private landlord for the purpose of housing our embassy personnel. See Lease No. 723574, Gov’t Ex. 5, United States v. Corey, No. 96-01019-DAE (June 23, 1997); Lease No. S-314FBO-136, Gov’t Ex. 6, Corey, No. 96-01019-DAE. The government furnishes and maintains the apartments, and the lease runs without regard to the residence of a particular employee. See Transcript of Testimony of Judith A. Senykoff, Housing Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Manila, Corey, No. 96-01019-DAE, at 42. In addition to signing the lease, the government pays rent and utilities, and provides security for the buildings. See id. at 40. Lopez Court was not Corey’s private residence; it was an apartment acquired by the State Department for governmental use.
Thus, both the Yokota Air Force Base and Lopez Court are lands “reserved or acquired for the use of the United States” within the meaning of subsection 7(3).
B. “Exclusive or Concurrent Jurisdiction”
We next consider whether the United States exercises “exclusive or concurrent” jurisdiction over the Air Force Base and Lopez Court. The jurisdiction in question is not that of the federal courts. If it were, subsection 7(3) would be trivial, if not tautological, defining a subset of territory over which the courts already had jurisdiction. The provision instead refers to “legislative jurisdiction,” see Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. California,
This definition under international law conforms with the Fourth Circuit’s interpretation of subsection 7(3). Erdos described this standard as one of the “practical usage and dominion” enjoyed by the United States over “the embassy or other federal establishment.” Erdos,
Under subsection 7(3), U.S. territorial jurisdiction need not be exclusive. We have recognized that embassy property “remains the territory of the receiving state, and does not constitute territory of the United States.” McKeel v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
Bin Laden concluded that concurrent territorial jurisdiction over embassy property would violate international law. See Bin Laden,
But the Chaining Betsy rule does not apply because there is no conflict with international law to avoid. Concurrent jurisdiction is well-recognized in international law. See Laker Airways Ltd. v. Sabena, Belgian World Airlines,
Bin Laden theorized that concurrent jurisdiction, by which it meant concurrent territorial jurisdiction, was inconsistent with the very notion of sovereignty. See Bin Laden,
Bin Laden suggested that concurrent territorial jurisdiction was only possible in the United States because the individual states were not “independent sovereign nations, but rather political sub-units of the United States.” Bin Laden,
Two sovereignties may exercise concurrent jurisdiction when their relationship is regulated by law. In the United States, the Constitution permits the state and federal governments to exercise concurrent jurisdiction without undue interference. While the Supremacy Clause normally resolves any conflict in favor of the federal government, that is not always the case. See, e.g., Kimel v. Florida Bd. of Regents,
The principle applies no less in the international domain. Independent nations cede their exclusive control over their territory through treaties, and the terms of those agreements govern that concurrent authority. See Vermilya-Brown Co. v. Connell,
The United States exerts practical dominion over activities on the Yokota Air Force Base. The SOFA with Japan provides that “[wjithin the facilities and areas, the United States may take all the measures necessary for their establishment, operation, safeguarding and control.” SOFA, supra, art. III. That broad language alone would confer upon Congress the legislative jurisdiction to prescribe and enforce the laws necessary for the management and security of the Yokota Air Force Base. But Article XVII goes farther and explicitly grants the U.S. military the authority to exercise criminal jurisdiction over all persons subject to military law. See id. at XVII(l). Where jurisdiction is concurrent, the SOFA grants the United States the primary right to try U.S. military and civilian personnel for offenses committed solely against U.S. security, property or persons. See id. at
Extraterritorial rights conferred by the SOFA have been confirmed by several decades of experience. Thomas Perham, a Department of Defense attorney staffed at Yokota, testified to the Air Force’s almost exclusive control of affairs within the base. Transcript of Testimony of Thomas Perham, Chief of International Law at Department of Defense Headquarters in Yokota, Japan, United States v. Corey, No. 96-01019-DAE, at 14-15 (June 23, 1997). Japanese environmental, labor, and other regulatory statutes are not enforced on the base. American lawyers and doctors practice without local licenses, and gambling, which is strictly illegal in Japan, is permitted on the base. See id. at 14. In police matters, the U.S. government conducts all investigations, searches and arrests, and the Japanese police may not enter without the permission of the United States. See id. The Japanese government is generally reluctant to prosecute American civilians who commit crimes against American persons or property on the base, because it recognizes that, despite its reserved claim to the territory, such matters are properly within the sphere of American interests. See id. at 24; see also Overseas Jurisdiction Advisory Committee, Report to the Secretary of Defense, the Attorney General, the Congress of the United States 26 (1997).
The security personnel at the doors of Lopez Court may be less imposing than the U.S. military, but the United States exercises jurisdiction over the premises nonetheless. Indeed, the United States’s legal control over embassy premises and personnel is more exclusive than that over its affairs on the military base. In centuries past, “the official residences of envoys were in every respect considered to be outside the territory of the receiving state.” 1 Oppenheim’s International Law § 494, at 1076 (Robert Jennings & Arthur Watts eds., 9th ed.1992). Indeed, some courts have continued to embrace that view. See United States v. Archer,
These norms were codified in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, a treaty to which both the United States and the Philippines are signatories. See Vienna Convention, supra. Article 22 guarantees that embassy land shall remain “inviolable.” Id. art. 22. The host country may not enter the embassy grounds without the consent of the sending state. The Convention further acknowledges that the private residences of embassy personnel, even if they are not located on the premises of the mission, enjoy the same inviolability as the embassy itself. See id. art. 30; see also United States v. County of Arlington,
Out of necessity, diplomatic conventions have acknowledged the embassy’s jurisdiction over crimes committed by its personnel. Even if the embassy territory is not considered the territory of the sending country, “an envoy must have jurisdiction over his staff in matters of discipline, he must be able to put under restraint a member of his staff who has committed a crime and is to be sent home for trial, and the like.” 1 Oppenheim’s International
Although Lopez Court remains Philippine territory in some sense, diplomatic conventions disable the Philippine government from exerting effective control over the area. The local police could not enter the premises to investigate crimes without the consent of the ambassador. Nor could they prosecute Corey, or any other American member of the embassy staff. The United States has the real power — and the concomitant duty — to regulate conduct on those grounds.
Thus, we conclude that the United States exercises concurrent, and indeed primary, jurisdiction over the actions of United States nationals on both the Yokota Air Force Base and Lopez Court. This conclusion arises out of the plain meaning of subsection 7(3), the relevant international agreements, and the practical realities of the situation. The United States has negotiated a modus vivendi with both Japan and the Philippines for the lands under United States dominion in their respective countries. Were we to hold that federal court jurisdiction is not coextensive therewith, we would risk destabilizing the accommodation that the Executive Branch has worked out with the foreign powers. Congress intended through subsection 7(3) to avoid such dangers by extending the federal criminal laws as far as U.S. dominion.
We are not unmindful that some commentators in the military and academia have posited the existence of a jurisdietional gap over American civilians stationed at military bases abroad. See Overseas Jurisdiction Advisory Committee, supra, at 41; Gatlin,
V
Both Lopez Court and the Yokota Air Force Base fall within the “special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.” 18 U.S.C. § 7. The district court had jurisdiction to hear the charges against Corey under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241(a) and 2242(1).
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Subsections 2241(a) and 2242(1) provide respectively that:
Whoever, in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States or in a Federal prison, knowingly causes another person to engage in a sexual act—
(1) by using force against that person; or
(2) by threatening or placing that other person in fear that any person will be subjected to death, serious bodily injury, or kidnapping; or attempts to do so, shall be fined under this title, imprisoned for any term of years or life, or both....
18 U.S.C. § 2241(a).
Whoever, in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States or in a Federal prison, knowingly—
(1) causes another person to engage in a sexual act by threatening or placing that other person in fear (other than by threatening or placing that other person in fear that any person will be subjected to death, serious bodily injuiy, or kidnapping)[,] ...
or attempts to do so, shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 2242(1).
. The government filed this somewhat unusual motion in order to present the jurisdictional question to the district court prior to trial.
. Gatlin also found that Congress’s failure to fill the supposed “jurisdictional gap” over civilians on military bases confirmed a legislative belief in the existence of that jurisdictional gap. See Gatlin,
The dissent makes much of the fact that Congress responded to Gatlin by enacting a bill to remove any doubt over American jurisdiction. See Dissent at 1197 (citing Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000, S. 768, 106th Cong. (2000)). But if this gap has existed for decades, as the dissent purports, then why did Congress close it only now? The answer, of course, is that so long as the gap only existed in law reviews, Congress had no need to resolve the ambiguity. But Gatlin's novel interpretation of subsection 7(3) prodded Congress to remove the circuit split. In any event, we fail to see how recent legislative action can help us interpret a law that has been on the books in one form or another since 1790.
. Gatlin s skepticism presumably extended only to jurisdiction over foreign territory. Nations have long enjoyed the right to exercise jurisdiction over acts committed outside of their own territory by their nationals. See Henry Wheaton, Elements of International Law, § 113 (James Brown Scott ed., Clarendon Press 1936) (Richard H. Dana, Jr. ed., 8th ed. 1866) (recognizing that the state's judicial power extended to the punishment of offenses "by its subjects, wheresoever committed”).
. The Gatlin panel recognized as much when it look the unusual step of sending a copy of its opinion to the relevant House and Senate committees with the implicit message that Congress ought to correct the problem legislatively. See Gatlin,
. The dissent presumes that section 7(3) would extend federal criminal jurisdiction to all property leased by the United States abroad. See Dissent at 1195. But section 7(3) also requires that the property be within the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction of the federal government. Section 7(3) will not apply to all leased properties, but only to those properties over which the United States has obtained legislative jurisdiction by treaty or otherwise.
. McKeel continued: "Thus, United States embassies are not within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.” McKeel,
McKeel concluded that torts committed on embassy property were not torts "occurring in the United States,” but nonetheless accepted that "United States embassies are subject to the jurisdiction of the United States for certain purposes.” Id. at 587-88. McKeel's reliance on Meredith supports this reading of McKeel, since Meredith held only that embassy properly lay within the territory of the foreign country. See Meredith,
. Bin Laden did hold that the terrorists might be prosecuted for other crimes that it found fell within the Bowman exception, including bombing United States property under 18 U.S.C. § 844(f)(1); killing in connection with the destruction of such property under 18
. We use "arguably” deliberately. Even if concurrent territorial jurisdiction were not permissible under international law, the Charming Betsy principle would probably not apply for two independent reasons. First, the Supreme Court has never invoked Charming Betsy against the United States in a suit in which it was a party. Charming Betsy itself concerned a private dispute where the Court had to determine whether the ship could be seized for violating the American embargo against France. Faced with the choice, the Court interpreted the relevant statute so as to avoid embroiling the nation in a foreign policy dispute unforeseen by either the President or Congress. See Charming Betsy,
Charming Betsy is likely inapplicable in this case for a second, separate reason: There is no doubt that the United States may exercise jurisdiction over American nationals living abroad, regardless of where the crime is committed. See Blackmer v. United States,
. The dissent reads Reid v. Covert,
The dissent quotes selectively from these cases but, when read in context, the statements have little to do with our case. See Dissent at 1196. Two of the quotes reason from the litigating positions of government lawyers. See Reid,
Likewise, two of the quotes presume that, because the trial of Americans in domestic courts would be impractical, the trials must inevitably take place in foreign courts. See Reid,
Only one of the statements quoted by the dissent, that of Justice Whittaker, actually says that "jurisdiction of our civil courts does not extend” to "bases in foreign lands.” Kin-sella,
. While we affirm the district court on the jurisdictional ruling, we reverse the conviction because of errors later at trial. We state the reasons for this ruling in a memorandum disposition filed concurrently with this opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The central and threshold question in this appeal is whether certain sections of the federal criminal code, specifically 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241(a) and 2242(1), apply extra-territorially so as to reach crimes committed on foreign soil. I conclude that they do not and therefore respectfully dissent. As the Supreme Court so clearly stated in EEOC v. Arabian Am. Oil Co.,
In reaching the opposite conclusion, the majority creates a circuit split, see United States v. Gatlin,
I. THE NARROW ISSUE PRESENTED
The majority and I share significant common ground. I agree that neither the Constitution nor the principles of international law would prevent Congress from extending the reach of a federal criminal law to Corey, a U.S. citizen. See Aramco,
I also agree that the relevant international agreements, namely (1) the Agreement Under Article VI of the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security Between the United States of America and Japan, Regarding Facilities and Areas and the Status of United States Armed Forces in Japan (SOFA), Jan. 19, 1960, 11 U.S.T. 1652, and (2) the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and Optional Protocol on Disputes, Apr. 18, 1961, 23 U.S.T. 3227, 500 U.N.T.S. 95, provide the necessary authority for Congress to enact criminal legislation applicable to these locales. In short, there is no doubt that Congress can ensure that U.S. citizens who engage in heinous criminal activity overseas will stand trial in a United States court.
II. PRESUMPTION AGAINST EXTRATERRITORIALITY
A. The Law
Guiding our inquiry is the well-established cannon of statutory construction— the presumption against extraterritoriality — based on the understanding that Congress “is primarily concerned with domestic conditions.” Foley Bros. v. Filardo,
[w]e have in this case a question of statutory construction. The necessary locus, when not specially defined, depends upon the purpose of Congress as evinced by the description and nature of the crime and upon the territorial limitations upon the power and jurisdiction of a government to punish crime under the law of nations. Crimes against private individuals or their property, like assaults, murder, burglary, larceny, robbery, arson, embezzlement and frauds of all kinds, which affect the peace and good order of the community, must of course be committed within the territorial jurisdiction of the government where it may properly exercise it. If punishment of them is to be extended to include those committed outside of the strict territorial jurisdiction, it is natural for Congress to say so in the statute, and failure to do so will negative the purpose of Congress in this regard.
United States v. Bowman,
In light of this longstanding principle, courts have examined the extraterritorial applicability of statutes with the view that Congress knows how to place crimes committed outside our borders within the jurisdictional reach of a statute. See Argentine Republic v. Amerada Hess Shipping Corp.,
The statutes at issue here, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241(a) and 2242(1), prohibit certain forms of sexual misconduct committed ‘“in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.... ” In turn, 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) defines “special maritime and territorial jurisdiction” as
[a]ny lands reserved or acquired for the use of the United States, and under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction thereof, or any place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other needful building.
Neither precedent nor logic supports the majority’s conclusion that the extraterritoriality presumption is inapplicable because a jurisdictional statute is at play. Under Bowman, the presumption clearly applies to criminal statutes. See Bowman,
Nevertheless, the majority relies on the jurisdictional nature of § 7(3) as a reason to avoid application of the presumption.
In its effort to avoid the presumption against extraterritoriality, the majority extends Bowman far beyond its holding or any reasonable extension of it. The majority states that “the presumption does not apply where the legislation implicates concerns that are not inherently domestic” and then cites Bowman as an example, explaining that in that case “the Supreme Court held that the territorial presumption does not govern the interpretation of criminal statutes that, by their nature, implicate the legitimate interests of the United States abroad.” Maj. Op. at 1170-71.
Bowman does not stand for such a far-reaching proposition. Rather, Bowman recognizes a narrow exception to the presumption against extraterritoriality for “criminal statutes which are, as a class, not logically dependant on their locality for the Government’s jurisdiction, but are enacted because of the right of the Government to defend itself against obstruction, or fraud wherever perpetrated, especially if committed by its own citizens, officers, or agents.”
The majority offers a second reason for not applying the presumption here, namely that “[l]and subject to subsection 7(3) is not ‘extraterritorial,’ as the Supreme Court has defined the term.” Maj. Op. at 1171. In support of this statement, the majority cites to a single statement in Aramco. See Aramco,
The Second Circuit declined to go down a similar path in Kollias. The court rejected the argument that the presumption against extraterritoriality does not apply to a case involving application of the Long-shore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (the “LHWCA”) to an injury on an American flag vessel because the ship “was in effect a United States territory as it traveled across the high seas.”
In any case, the concept of extraterritoriality does not refer to the body of law that governs the dispute; if it did, extraterritorial application of United States statutes would be an impossibility because any place where United States law governed a particular dispute would be considered United States territory. Accordingly, we decline to characterize the [ship] as a kind of floating United States territory, where application of the LHWCA would not be extraterritorial.
M
Simply declaring the foreign locations to be part of U.S. territory is a semantic sleight of hand that avoids the real question of statutory interpretation and congressional intent. I turn next to an examination of the statute itself.
III. THE STATUTE
A. The Statute is Ambiguous
With the presumption against extraterritoriality application as the viewing lens, the first task is to analyze the statutory text to determine whether Congress intended § 7(3) to cover the foreign locations at issue here.
Any lands reserved or acquired for the use of the United States, and under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction thereof, or any place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other needful building.
18 U.S.C. § 7(3).
On its face, the language of § 7(3) is ambiguous and certainly does not demonstrate an intent to apply to locations outside the borders of the United States. Although “any lands” could arguably be stretched to include foreign lands, a “plausible” reading of a statute does not overcome the presumption against extraterritoriality. See Aramco,
Nor does the structure of § 7(3) support an intention to include foreign lands acquired overseas. In my view, both the first and second clauses of § 7(3) refer to lands ivithin our borders, as the federal government may acquire lands other than “by consent of the legislature” of a state. See James v. Dravo Contracting Co.,
The argument that the statute must apply extraterritorially also ignores a key term within the first clause: “reserved.” The first clause refers to “lands reserved or acquired.” “Reserved” has a special historical meaning that has nothing to do with foreign countries. See Paust, 24 Yale J. Int’l L. at 325 (“[I]f the land is not owned by the United States, the land as such is not ‘reserved’ or ‘acquired’ by the United States within the ordinary meaning of those terms or the meaning clarified by legislative history and historical context, especially the special meaning of ‘reserved lands.’ ”); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1307-08 (6th ed. 1990) (defining “reserved land” as “[pjublic land that has been withheld or kept back from sale or disposition” and “reservation” as “a tract of land ... which is by public authority withdrawn from sale or settlement, and appropriated to specific public uses; such as parks, military posts, Indian lands, etc.”).
This proposition is illustrated by the legislative history of the precursors to § 7(3) and the Assimilated Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. § 13, which adopts the criminal law of the states, territories, possessions, or districts as the criminal laws for “places now exist
[I]t was held that ... under section 5391, this law did not apply to any territory that had been obtained since [the statute was enacted in] 1825 except by cession, and it was discovered that a great deal of property, for military reservations, for arsenals, post-offices, custom-houses, quarantine stations, and court-houses had been acquired by reservation; that the United States, owning the land, existing in territorial form, would reserve a portion of it for Federal purposes, and then admit the State to the Union. The Supreme Court said, “Your act does not cover that class of cases. It is specific. It relates to territory subsequently acquired by cession. It relates to the laws of the United States that were in force at the time you passed it, to lands ceded to the United Sates by the legislature of a State in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, but it does not relate to territory that has been subsequently acquired in any other way.”
42 Cong. Rec. 584 (1908); accord id. at 593; Paust, 24 Yale J. Int’l L. at 316-17.
Even if, as the majority concludes, § 7(3) applies “outside the borders of the fifty states,” Maj. Op. at 1172, that conclusion does not perforce mean that Congress intended it to cover lands that remain part of foreign countries. As the majority itself points out, see Maj. Op. at 1173-74, new lands became a part of the United States through, among other means annexation, conquest, and purchase.
Finally, the highly piecemeal fashion in which § 7 was compiled undermines the majority’s attempt to read the statute holistically. See Maj. Op. at 1171-72. “[I]t makes little sense to inquire into congressional intent by looking at the statute as a whole since most subsections of § 7 were enacted separately by Congress and have their own legislative histories.” Gatlin,
In conclusion, although the structure of § 7(3) reinforces the conclusion that the United States may acquire lands in more than one fashion, it is a dead end in terms of analyzing whether Congress meant to include lands outside the United States and within the borders of other nations. To suggest, as the majority does, that “Congress unmistakably had foreign locales in mind when it set about defining that jurisdiction,” and that the statute “extends the jurisdiction ... to areas where American citizens and property need protection, yet no other government effectively safeguards those interests,” Maj. Op. at 1171, is to manufacture congressional intent by substituting a judicial policy judgment for a congressional one. The most one can conclude is that the language manifests no clear congressional intent. This statute is a poster-child for ambiguity— every court attempting to construe and harmonize the statute goes through contortions trying to explain what Congress meant but did not say. In this instance, we should look to other “available evidence,” namely, the legislative history. Sale,
B. Legislative History
The legislative history of § 7(3) and its precursors, see Act of 1790, ch. 9, 1 Stat. 112 (1790); 70 Rev. Stat., ch. 3, § 5539 (1874); Act of March 4, 1909, ch. 321, 35 Stat. 1088 (1909), reinforces the presumption against extraterritoriality. Nothing in that history suggests that Congress intended the statute to apply to foreign localities, such as embassy housing and military bases, within foreign countries; indeed, the legislative history counsels that Congress intended to address domestic, not foreign, jurisdiction.
Addressing the identical question presented here, in the context of a military base in Germany, the Second Circuit in Gatlin exhaustively traced the history of § 7(3) and concluded that “the legislative history of § 7(3) and its precursors demonstrates unequivocally that Congress, in fact, intended the statute to apply exclusively to the territorial United States.”
Gatlin lays out the legislative history in detail and there is no need to reproduce a similar analysis here. The key to the legislative history and to interpretation of this statute lies in examination of the statute at three points in time: upon enactment in 1790, at the time of recodification in 1909, and when the statute was amended in 1940.
The statute can be traced to legislation passed by the First Congress, “An Act for the Punishment of certain Crimes Against the United States.” Act of April 30, 1790, ch. 9, 1 Stat. 112 (1790). Unlike the current substantive criminal law, which references a separate statutory section that defines jurisdiction, the 1790 Act incorporated jurisdiction into the substantive definition of the offense, limiting it to certain lands “under the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.” Id. at §§ 3, 6-7. As noted in Gatlin, “the fact that the 1790 Act delimited the jurisdiction of the federal courts to lands over which the United States exercised exclusive legislative jurisdiction ‘virtually guarantees’ that the provision was not intended to apply to offenses committed in a foreign territory.” Gatlin,
The 1790 Act remained essentially unchanged until 1909, when Congress undertook a comprehensive codification of the criminal code. For the first time, the section defining jurisdiction was codified in a separate statute, but again, this precursor
It was not until 1940 that Congress expanded the statutory scope to include land over which the federal government had “concurrent” jurisdiction. See Act of June 11, 1940, ch. 323, 54 Stat. 304 (1940) (“When committed within or on any lands reserved or acquired for the use of the United States, and under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction thereof, or any place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other needful building.”).
The legislative history of the 1940 amendment indicates that Congress did not intend to expand the scope of federal criminal jurisdiction by adding “concurrent,” and surely not to foreign lands. Rather, according to the legislative history, Congress intended to respond to a 1937 Supreme Court decision that held that states consensually transferring lands to the United States may retain partial or concurrent jurisdiction:
Prior to the decision of the Supreme Court in James v. Dravo Contracting Company (302 U.S. 134 ,58 S.Ct. 208 ,82 L.Ed. 155 ) (December 1937), it was the accepted view that the United States acquired exclusive jurisdiction over any lands purchased with the consent of the State fdr any of the purposes enumerated in article I, section 8, clause 17, of the Constitution, and that any provision of a State statute retaining partial or concurrent jurisdiction was inoperable. In the Dravo case it was held that a State may properly retain partial or concurrent jurisdiction.
The provisions of the Criminal Code ... limited the criminal jurisdiction of the Federal Government to such Federal reservations in respect to which the United States had acquired exclusive jurisdiction.
This bill simply restores to the Federal Government the jurisdiction it was recognized as having until the Dravo decision was handed down.
The most significant effect of this bill is to grant Federal courts concurrent criminal jurisdiction on reservations where the United States does not have exclusive jurisdiction.
H.R.Rep. No. 76-1623, at 1 (1940); see also Gatlin,
The addition of “concurrent” in 1940, without any contemporary indication that the change was brought about by a desire to include locations in foreign countries, undermines the majority’s reliance on the statute’s reference to “concurrent” jurisdiction. I cannot agree with the majority’s unsupported assertion that there is no reason “to presume that when, in 1940, Congress extended criminal jurisdiction to those lands under the concurrent authority of the United States, it intended to limit the reach of subsection 7(3) to areas under the concurrent authority of the states, but not those under the concurrent authority of other sovereigns.” Maj. Op. at 1175. Although the presumption against extraterritoriality applies to this statute, we do not need to presume anything here — an examination of the statute and its history indicates that § 7(3) does not extend to lands abroad. The majority’s quantum leap from the statute’s long-standing reference to “exclusive” jurisdiction to assertion of jurisdiction over crimes in foreign countries cannot be sustained.
The legislative history points to one conclusion: § 7(3) applies only in the domestic context, not to federal criminal jurisdiction beyond our borders.
IV. RESORT TO HISTORY
The majority’s effort to find support through reference to the history of our nation’s westward expansion and overseas acquisitions in no way informs the question here. ' Rather the history demonstrates simply that Congress knew how to extend explicitly the reach of the federal criminal code when it so desired. I am not persuaded by the majority’s attempts to locate in the general history of our country’s nineteenth century expansion evidence of an intent that a provision, which at the time covered only lands over which the United States had “exclusive” jurisdiction, would apply to places undoubtedly located in foreign countries.
The majority begins with the statement that, at the turn of the century (when the precursor to § 7(3) spoke only of lands over which the U.S. had “exclusive” jurisdiction), Americans “may have believed that, so long as territory remained unequivocally foreign, it lay outside the jurisdiction of the United States, [but] they were well aware that territory could change hands, and the United States could gain exclusive jurisdiction over territory that other countries claimed as their own.” Maj. Op. at 1173. Indeed, as the majority points out, the turn of the century marked a period of great expansion in our nation’s history, which suggests that “[t]his was clearly not a time when Americans thought of their borders as static or of foreign territory as sacrosanct.” Id. at 1173. True enough, but, at risk of being perceived as glib, I ask, so what? Neither was this a time when Americans viewed themselves as having exclusive jurisdiction over land clearly within the territorial boundaries of a foreign sovereign.
This historical digression does not advance our inquiry, for we are dealing here with embassy housing and a military base, not lands that became part of our country through annexation, purchase or conquest, and as such fell within our exclusive jurisdiction. Nor are we dealing with land over which United States sovereignty or jurisdiction is disputed. See Maj. Op. at 1175 (“Courts had no hesitation about treating these territories as within our exclusive jurisdiction, even though foreign governments claimed the territory as their own.”).
The discussion of legislation extending federal criminal jurisdiction to territory under Indian control and islands claimed by Americans for their guano deposits also fails to provide support for the majority’s decision. See Maj. Op. at 1174-75.
V. LEASED HOUSING AND MILITARY BASES
Because I conclude that § 7(3) does not extend the reach of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241(a) and 2242(1) extraterritorially, it is unnecessary to consider whether the United States exercises “exclusive or concurrent” jurisdiction over the leased housing or military base in this case. Nonetheless, some discussion of the nature of these locations is useful, as it illustrates the far-reaching consequences of the majority opinion and the tremendous conflict it creates with the long-held understanding of the Supreme Court, Congress, the military, and the commentators.
A. Leased Housing
Bearing in mind that § 7(3) was intended at the outset to extend only to lands under the exclusive control of the United States, an apartment leased by the United States in a foreign country is both legally and conceptually far afield from that category. The United States is not an infrequent tenant abroad. Under the majority’s approach, criminal jurisdiction would extend to more than 10,000 properties leased by the United States in foreign countries, ranging from Australia to the Vatican City, and not including extensive property leased by defense agencies. See United States Gen. Servs. Admin., Summary Report on Real Property Leased by the United States Throughout the World as of September 30, 1999, at 13 (1999). Absent congressional directive, we should not treat lightly such a far flung extension of criminal jurisdiction.
B. Military Bases and the Jurisdictional Gap
Jurisdiction over civilians accompanying the military abroad presents a special case. The United States typically negotiates this jurisdiction with other countries via Status of Forces Agreements (“SOFAs”). See Steven J. Lepper, A Primer on Foreign Criminal Jurisdiction, 37 A.F. L.Rev. 169, 171 (1994) (“Today, it is widely agreed that in the absence of a treaty like SOFA, jurisdiction over foreign forces rests exclusively with the host state.”).
Although the Court was not addressing § 7(3), Reid suggests that the Court was aware of the jurisdictional gap issue. For example, Justice Frankfurter noted that the government argued that an adverse decision meant that “only a foreign trial could be had.”
Three years after Reid, in Kinsella v. United States ex rel. Singleton,
The majority gives short shrift to the conclusion that such a jurisdictional gap exists. See Maj. Op. at 1172 n. 3. But Congress recently passed legislation specifically to close the gap. See Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000, S. 768, 106th Cong. (2000). I view the recent legislation as confirmatory “icing on the cake” and not, as the majority suggests, evidence of congressional intent in 1790. The gap is not illusory. Prior to this new legislation, Congress made numerous efforts to enact legislation to fill the gap. See Gatlin,
My conclusion that a jurisdictional gap exists — and that § 7(3) does not fill it — is consistent with the consensus among the Supreme Court, Congress, the military, and commentators. I agree with the Second Circuit that “the existence of this jurisdictional gap is an issue that ... warrants serious congressional consideration.” Gatlin,
VI. CONCLUSION
Regardless of whether we see this as a problem that requires fixing, it is a problem that the federal courts are without power to fix. Simply put, the onus is not on the courts to provide for jurisdiction in this case. Congress has the power under both the Constitution and international law to extend the reach of our criminal laws beyond the borders of the United States. The question is not whether jurisdiction should extend extraterritorially, but whether, under this statute, Congress in fact extended the jurisdiction. The an-Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
. The majority creates a circuit split with regard to application of the presumption against extraterritoriality. Gatlin holds that the presumption is applicable; the majority disagrees. When the Fourth Circuit interpreted § 7(3) more than 25 years ago, it did not address the issue. See United States v. Erdos,
. Whether the 'jurisdiction” at issue here is labeled subject-matter jurisdiction (of the district court) or legislative (also referred to as prescriptive) jurisdiction (in other words, the power of Congress to legislate), see Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. California,
. In fact, the criminal code is replete with examples of unambiguous congressional intent to apply U.S. law overseas. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 112(e) (protection of foreign officials, official guests, and internationally protected persons); 18 U.S.C. § 175 (prohibitions with respect to biological weapons); 18 U.S.C. § 351(i) (congressional, cabinet, and Supreme Court assassination, kidnaping, and assault); 18 U.S.C. § 1621 (perjury); 18 U.S.C. § 2381 (treason). The clear manifestation rule has been followed outside the criminal context as well. See Wade Estey, Note, The Five Bases of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction and the Failure of the Presumption Against
. See Maj. Op. at 1171 ("When Congress is considering the scope of federal jurisdiction, its attention is focused precisely on how far U.S. law should reach. Unlike ordinary domestic statutes, jurisdictional statutes inherently present the question of how far Congress wishes U.S. law to extend. There is therefore no reason to presume that Congress did, or did not, mean to act extraterritorially.”).
. As the Second Circuit in Gatlin explained, In the present case, both parties appear to agree that the presumption against extraterritoriality applies. However, in a recent opinion involving the same jurisdictional provision at issue here, 18 U.S.C. § 7(3), Judge Sand declined to apply the presumption against extraterritoriality. See United States v. Bin Laden,
We respectfully disagree with Judge Sand. Although § 7(3) is the immediate focus of our inquiry, the ultimate question here is whether a criminal statute — i.e., 18 U.S.C. § 2243(a) — applies extraterritorially. The presumption against extraterritoriality plainly applies to criminal statutes (other than the Bowman variety ...), so § 2243(a) applies extraterritorially only if there is a clear manifestation of Congress's affirmative intent. That this inquiry requires us tolook to Congress’s intent in enacting 18 U.S.C. § 7, which is incorporated by reference in § 2243(a), does not, in our view, alter the applicable rule of statutory interpretation. Indeed, to accept Judge Sand’s view would seriously undermine the presumption against extraterritoriality since Congress often enacts jurisdictional provisions that are then incorporated by reference elsewhere.
Gatlin,
. This exception, however, applies to statutes involving crimes against the government, see, e.g., United States v. Cotten,
. See Skiriotes,
.The majority’s citation to Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Massey,
. Although in my view the presumption against extraterritoriality applies with full force here and plainly directs the analysis, I agree with the Second Circuit’s conclusion that the same result would be reached even if the presumption did not apply. See Gatlin,
It also bears noting that we are dealing with a punitive statute, and as such the rule of lenity resonates, even if not directly applicable. See generally Staples v. United States,
. The presumption against extraterritoriality is not insurmountable. For example, in Vermilya-Brown Co. v. Connell,
. The 1874 version of the statute appeared as Section 5391 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. That section provided, in relevant part:
If any offense be committed in any place which has been or may hereafter be, ceded to and under the jurisdiction of the United States, which offense is not prohibited, or the punishment thereof is not specially provided for, by any law of the United States, such offense shall be liable to, and receive, the same punishment as the laws of the State in which such place is situated.... 70 Rev. Stat. § 5391 (1874) (emphasis added).
. The amended Section 5391 provided: "Whoever, within the territorial limits of any State, organized Territory, or District, but within or upon any of the places now existing or hereafter reserved or acquired, described in [Section 272] of this'Act,” shall commit an act which is not criminalized by the United States shall be prosecuted under state law. See Act of March 4, 1909. ch. 321, § 289, 35 Stat. 1145 (emphasis added). As discussed infra, § 272(3) was the 1909 precursor to § 7(3) in which Congress similarly referred to lands "reserved or acquired.”
. For example, Congress did not presume that "Indian country” fell within the. sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, but rather explicitly provided that ".the general laws of the United States as to the punishment of crimes committed in any place within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States ... shall extend to the Indian country.” Ex parte Crow Dog,
. The majority's discussion of Watts v. United States,
Watts suggests that determining whether criminal jurisdiction exists involves a two-part inquiry, namely: (1) whether the land was within the U.S. and, if so, (2) whether the U.S. had sole and exclusive jurisdiction over that land. See also id. at 301 (Jacobs, C.J., dissenting) (“We all agree that the phrase 'sole and exclusive jurisdiction’ as used in the [act] has no reference to a claim of jurisdiction made by any foreign power, but to state and federal jurisdiction, or as we are situated, to federal as contradistinguished from Territorial jurisdiction.”). The implication of this reasoning is that the “exclusive or concurrent” language of § 7(3) as it reads today similarly pertains to the federal government vis a vis the states.
The majority’s reliance on Jones v. United States,
.See United States v. Spelar,
. The majority's recognition that the “original 1790 Act provided basic criminal laws for lands outside the jurisdiction of any other sovereign,” Maj. Op. at 1173, carries little weight here, for neither of these locations is "outside the jurisdiction of any other sovereign.” Although embassy officials may be immune from prosecution in the host state, that does not imply that the host state does not have jurisdiction over the embassy. See Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States § 466 cmt. a (1986) ("That [embassy] premises are inviolable does not mean that they are extraterritorial. Acts committed on those premises are within the territorial jurisdiction of the receiving state....”). Similarly, under the U.S. — Japan SOFA, the two countries have concurrent jurisdiction over criminal acts committed on military bases in Japan (presuming the acts are in fact criminal under the laws of both countries). See SOFA, art. XVII. In light of this situation, the government’s alternative argument — that jurisdiction lies under § 7(7), which provides that the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction also includes "Any place outside the jurisdiction of any nation with respect to an offense by or against a national of the United States,” is misplaced.
. The guano islands are more akin to newly discovered, previously unclaimed territory over which the United States may assert exclusive jurisdiction, see Jones v. United States,
. See generally 1 Oppenheim’s International Law § 558, at 1157 (Robert Jennings & Arthur Watts eds., 9th ed. 1992) ("The view, formerly widely held, that the force was in all respects to be regarded as beyond the jurisdiction of the territorial state ,.. and subject only to that of its own authorities can no longer be maintained. The fiction of extraterritoriality has in this area, as in others, been discarded.”) (footnote omitted).
. Article XVII provides:
1. Subject to the provisions of this Article,
(a) the military authorities of the United States shall have the right to exercise within Japan all criminal and disciplinary jurisdiction conferred on them by the law of the United States over all persons subject to the military law of the United States;
(b) the authorities of Japan shall have jurisdiction over the members of the United States armed forces, the civilian component, and their dependants with respect to offenses committed within the territory of Japan and punishable by the law of Japan.
A complete reading of the SOFA suggests that the land remained Japanese territory. See, e.g., Art. XXIII ("The Government of Japan agrees to seek such legislation and to take such other action as may be necessary to ensure the adequate security and protection within its territory of installations, equipment, property, records and official information of the United States, and for the punishment of offenders under the applicable laws of Japan.”) (emphasis added).
.Article XVII § 2(b) provides for Japan’s jurisdiction over dependents of the U.S. military in Japan for offenses punishable under the law of Japan by not under the law of the U.S.; "The authorities of Japan shall have the right to exercise exclusive jurisdiction over members of the United States armed forces, the civilian component, and their dependants with respect to offenses ... punishable by its law but not by the law of the United States.”
. The majority dismisses the views of the military as well as those of academics regarding the “jurisdictional gap.” See Maj. Op. at -. Although I am well aware that these views are not entitled to special deference, I also recognize that the military has a particular interest in this issue, and its conclusion that a gap exists is noteworthy.
