May 14, 2002
No-Think Nation IV: Illegal Immigrant Damage Suit Typifies Law’s Collapse
By Paul Craig Roberts
Fourth
in a series on America’s imperiled future.[I,
II, III,
V,
VI]
Americans reassure themselves about
their country’s competitive future by invoking the U.S.
legal system. Americans think that they need not worry
about corporations deserting the protection of the U.S.
legal system merely to gain access to cheap labor
abroad. Americans believe that cheap labor countries are
legally undeveloped and cannot compete with the rule of
law and protection of contracts and property that the
U.S. provides.
Fifty years ago this argument was
valid. Today the U.S. legal system has been laid low by:
a
great profusion of law and regulation, much of which
is contradictory;
class action and
plaintiff civil suits that blame deep pocket
defendants for the
plaintiffs’ mistakes; unscrupulous prosecutors who
abuse their powers; asset freeze and forfeiture laws
that have destroyed the security of property; and
Benthamite legal influences that have stripped away
the individual’s protections, which were once the glory
of the Anglo-American legal system.
Today not even lawyers know what the law is. This is
due not only to the law’s sheer bulk, but also to the
ability of prosecutors and regulators to create law on
the spot by interpreting statutes and regulations to
suit their purposes. In effect, law has become a kind of
silly putty out of which
prosecutors and
police fashion bills of attainder.
Most “white collar crimes” are
based on nothing more than the fact that a businessman
or his attorney interpreted a complex regulation
differently from the way a regulator or prosecutor chose
to interpret it in order to bring charges.
Can law become more arbitrary than
this? Mexico and China, where difficulties that arise
can be handled with a bribe or a political
understanding, have fewer legal unknowns and risks than
the U.S. There is ample evidence that the once-vaunted
U.S. legal system has lost its worth. Look at the number
of U.S. corporations that are moving production and R&D
to China, and the number of firms that are reorganizing
as offshore foreign entities.
Attorneys point out that in the
U.S. it is much easier and less risky for prosecutors to
frame a wealthy white collar defendant than to frame a
poor minority. Common law crimes associated with the
poor, such as theft, assault, and murder, are well
defined. Frame-ups for these crimes require prosecutors
to withhold exculpatory evidence, suborn perjury, and
coerce false confessions. In contrast a white collar
victim can be framed merely by how a prosecutor
interprets a regulation.
The Exxon Valdez oil
spill is a prime example. The U.S. Department of Justice
chose to
interpret an accident as a deliberate criminal
intent to dump refuse (valuable crude oil) without a
permit and to kill migratory birds without a license. To
get the criminal charges dropped, Exxon had to pay the
DOJ hundreds of millions of dollars more than China or
Mexico would have extorted.
In the U.S. today, law is so
absurd that an American lawyer, A. James Clark, has
filed suit against the U.S. government for $41
million on behalf of families of 11 Mexicans, who
died of thirst while illegally attempting to enter
into Arizona from Mexico. The plaintiffs’
legal claim is that the U.S. government was
negligent for not leaving water tanks along the route to
aid the immigrants in their illegal entry.
Any day now a burglar, injured
while breaking into a home, will sue the homeowner for
not leaving the key in the lock. (I will not be
surprised if I receive 100 letters asking: “Where have
you been? It has already happened!”)
Microsoft’s rivals can use
political donations and an ambitious federal
prosecutor seeking name recognition to immobilize the
software giant with an antitrust suit.
President Clinton can use the
IRS
to audit his opponents.
Apple juice maker Ben Lacy can be
criminally prosecuted, exhausting his life savings,
because he made a
few mistakes filling out a routine environmental
form.
Janet Reno can make a name for
herself by prosecuting innocents on
bogus child abuse charges (see Wall St. Journal,
10-28-96, p. A18.
The Pursuit of Justice In Dade County)
Charles Keating on the West coast and
Clark Clifford on the East coast--and everyone in
between--can be indicted on the basis of nothing but a
prosecutor’s “novel
theory.”
Financial privacy is ceasing to
exist. It is even illegal to use the official legal
tender to make a cash purchase of a $10,000 used
car.
These complaints just scratch the
surface.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
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