OPINION
We hold today that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar the defendant’s federal criminal prosecution for a violation of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 7412, *419 7413(c), even though the defendant was previously assessed a civil penalty for the same conduct by the Clark County, Nevada Health District for a violation of county asbestos-removal regulations that mirror the federal standards.
I.Background
The Landmark Hotel and Casinо in Las Vegas, Nevada hired AB-HAZ Environmental as its on-site representative to supervise the removal of all regulated asbestos-containing materials from the buildings prior to their demolition in accordаnce with federal and local regulations. In 1994, the Clark County Health District issued a Notice of Violation to AB-HAZ alleging that the company’s activities at the Landmark violated Section 13.1.7 of the Clark County Health District Air Pollution Control Regulations. In 1995, AB-HAZ entered into a settlement agreement with the Clark County Health District. The agreement provided in pertinent part:
WHEREAS, the Clark County Health District (“District”) issued Notice of Violation # 2695 (“NOV”), dаted November 18, 1994, to AB-HAZ Environmental (“AB-HAZ”);
WHEREAS, the District alleges in the NOV that AB-HAZ is liable for violations of Section 13.1.7 (Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants) of the District’s Air Pollution Control Regulations in connection with an asbestos abatement project at the Landmark Hotel and Casino....
NOW THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows.
II.CIVIL PENALTY
2.AB-HAZ shall pay a civil penalty of Eighteen Thousand Dollars ($18,-000.00) to the District. The parties agree that this civil penalty is being paid for purposes of settlement of the District’s NOV....
III.FULL SETTLEMENT
3.This Settlement Agreement constitutes a full settlement of any and all violations of Section 13.1.7 of the District’s Air Pollution Control Regulations arising out of or related to the allegations in the NOV.... The District shall not commence any further enforcement action whatsoever against AB-HAZ arising out of the facts or violations set forth in the NOV.
The agreement was signed on behalf of the Clark County Health District by its director, and on behalf of AB-HAZ by its president, Dennis Price. Below the the District director’s signature, the following additional language was hand-written in: “This agreement has no legal status until it is accepted and approvеd by the Air Pollution Control Hearing Board.”
In 1996, a federal grand jury in the District of Nevada indicted AB-HAZ, Price, and two AB-HAZ employees on the following charges: Count I, Conspiring to Violate the Clean Air Act (18 U.S.C. § 371); and Count II, Violation оf the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 7412 and 7413(c)(1)). These charges stemmed from the defendants’ participation in the 1994 asbestos removal project at the Landmark. Specifically, the indictment alleged that the defendаnts knowingly violated federal work practice standards for the removal of asbestos-containing materials by causing quantities of asbestos-containing debris to be left behind in the building when the debris should have beеn gathered, while wet, and placed in leak-proof containers for proper disposal.
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The case was tried to a jury and Price was convicted of knowingly violating the Clean Air Act under Count II of thе indictment. Due to an error in the jury instructions, we reversed the conviction and remanded the case for a new trial.
United States v. Dipentino,
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
We will exercise jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal of denial of a motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds if the double jeopardy claim is “colorable.”
See Richardson v. United States,
The district court’s denial of a motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds is reviewed
de novo. United States v. James,
III. Discussion
Under the separate sovereign doctrine, a single act that violаtes the laws of two separate sovereigns constitutes two separate crimes, and prosecutions by each of these sovereigns does not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause.
See Heath v. Alabama,
Price argues that under 42 U.S.C. § 7412 the federal government has delegated to the State of Nevada authority to enforce the Clean Air Act standards, which Nevada thereby delegated to the Clark County Health District. Therefore, he argues, the Clark County Health District is acting under federal authority and the separate sovereign doctrine does not apply. This is incоrrect.
Asbestos is a hazardous air pollutant (“HAP”) regulated under 42 U.S.C. § 7412.
Id.
§ 7412(a)(6) & (b)(1). Under this provision of the Clean Air Act, the EPA is directed to prescribe and enforce emission standards for HAPs.
Id.
§ 7412(d). However, where emission standards arе not feasible, the EPA is directed instead to promulgate work practice standards designed to reduce emissions.
Id. §
7412(h)(1). The EPA determined that asbestos pollution cannot be reduced through emission standards, and therefore, promulgated work practice standards aimed at reducing asbestos emissions during the removal of asbestos-containing ma
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terials.
See
40 C.F.R. § 61.145;
see also United States v. Pearson,
In the State of Nevada, regulation of air pollution is the responsibility of local agencies. The state enacted Nevada Revised Statute 445B.500 authorizing the district boards of health to establish a program for control of air pollution and to administer the рrogram within their jurisdiction. See Nev.Rev.Stat. 445B.500. Pursuant to this statute, the Clark County Health District promulgated air pollution control regulations “in the exercise of the police power of this county ... as required by state lаw.” Preamble, Clark County Air Quality Management Board, Air Quality Regulations at ¶ 5. The District’s asbestos regulations establishing work practice standards are identical to those promulgated by the EPA under the Clean Air Act.
Under the statutory framework of the Clean Air Act, states are not preempted from adopting and enforcing their own regulations.
See
42 U.S.C. § 7416 (noting the “Retention of State authority” to adopt and enforce air pоllution provisions at least as stringent as the minimum federal standards set out in § 7412);
see also Louisiana Envtl. Action Network v. Browner,
A state or local agency may choose to develop its own plan for regulation of HAPs in its jurisdiction and to submit it to the EPA for approval. 42 U.S.C. § 7412(Z )(1) & (8). The only requirement § 7412 places on this plan is that the plan’s standards must be at least as stringent as the minimum federal standards in the Clean Air Act.
See id.
§§ 7412(i )(1), 7416. Once the EPA has approved the plan and upon request of the state, the EPA delegates the responsibility to implement and enforce the plan’s standards to the state.
Id.
§ 7412(i )(1). Any actions taken subsequent to this are the actions of the state, not of the federal government.
See Shell Oil Co. v. Train,
The Sixth Circuit in
United States v. Louisville Edible Oil Prods., Inc.,
Here the state prosecution was directed by the Air Pollution Board, which derives its jurisdiction from state law; as a state actor the Air Pollution Board is a“separate soverеign [ ] with respect to *422 the Federal Government because each state’s power to prosecute is derived from its own ‘inherent sovereignty,’ not from the federal government.” Accordingly, the Jefferson County Air Pollution Board and the United States, through the Environmental Protection Agency, may each pursue claims against Louisville Edible for the same conduct without subjecting the defendant to double jeopаrdy.
Id. at 587 (internal citations omitted). Price attempts to distinguish this case by arguing that in Louisville Edible there was evidence that the State of Kentucky exercised independent thought and judgment in deciding which federal standards to adopt, while Nevada merely cribbed the federal standards verbatim. However, a state does not act under federal authority just because it chooses to adopt regulations that mirror the minimum federal standаrds. Nevada was free to adopt more stringent standards if it wished.
Because the Clark County Health District and the United States government are separate sovereigns, enforcement action taken by thе former did not create a double jeopardy bar to criminal prosecution by the latter. 1
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because we decide this case on the basis of the separate sovereign doctrine, it would not matter — and therefore we need not decide— whether the Clark County Health District's enforcement action was a criminal prosecution or civil in nature.
