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To: TimF who wrote (18195)7/24/2002 7:17:08 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
EARLY AMERICANS MEMORIALIZED TRIUMPH, NOT DEFEAT
Tue Jul 2, 9:02 PM ET

By Maggie Gallagher

story.news.yahoo.com

____________

Congress clogs courts with too many federal crimes
Wed Jul 24, 1:53 PM ET

Paul Rosenzweig

Remember when one could say, ''don't make a federal case out of it,'' and the phrase meant something? Only the most serious crimes were labeled federal criminal cases. The saying simply acknowledged that a particular controversy wasn't as earth-shattering as it seemed to the participants.

The phrase, however, no longer means what it did. That helps explain why we
now have too few federal judges considering far too many federal cases.

Part of the problem is the well-publicized backlog of judicial nominees in the
Senate. While getting some of those confirmed certainly will help, it does not
solve the courts' problems. In addition to the 91 federal court vacancies mired in
political gridlock, the U.S. Judicial Conference says the country needs at least
54 new judgeships, bringing the shortage up to 145.

We need so many more federal judges because we're asking the ones we do
have to handle an increasing number of cases. Since 1990, the courts have
added 19 judgeships, an increase of 2.5%. Meanwhile, federal appeals filings
have risen 39% and filings in the federal district courts have gone up 22%. The
workload can be crushing; in San Diego, each judge handles more than 1,000
cases a year, most of them criminal.

Bottlenecks are inevitable. It takes almost two years for an average federal civil case to get to trial.
Since 1995, the number of civil cases pending for at least three years has more than doubled.

Congress deserves the blame -- but not just because it fails to confirm judges in a timely manner. We
wouldn't need so many judges if lawmakers would exercise some restraint in creating federal crimes.

Today, there are some 3,500 distinct federal crimes. Nobody knows the precise total because there
are so many, they're so diverse and they're so widely scattered in the federal code that it's impossible
to find every one of them. Of the thousands of crimes we do know about, more than 40% have been
added since 1970 and roughly 25% since 1980. Even worse, Congress has embedded criminal
prohibitions in at least 10,000 federal regulations.

Is it any wonder that we need a massive influx of new judges to monitor the violation of so many
federal laws?

There is no need for so many federal crimes. The growth comes from political expediency, not from
any impartial conclusion that certain offenses ought to be federal crimes because they either are of
overwhelming national significance or the states are unable to deal with them. Instead, some
high-profile case captures national attention and Congress reacts to the public outrage that ensues by
making the crime a federal offense, regardless of whether doing so actually will curtail the problem.

By making federal crimes out of local offenses, Congress undermines an already overburdened
federal criminal-justice system. Without evidence that state courts aren't punishing perpetrators of a
specific crime or that the states can't solve those crimes, a federal law isn't necessary.

In today's misdirected federal court system, 27% of the criminal caseload involves larceny, theft and
fraud, and 7.3% of the cases are drunken-driving and traffic offenses. Only 5.3% of federal cases
involve violent offenses and only 4.6% of cases involve crimes for which there is no state equivalent.

We also must rethink whether some of the crimes that Congress has voted into existence ought to be
crimes at all. Should it be a federal crime to pretend to be a member of the 4-H Club? Thanks to 18
U.S.C. Section 916, it is.

Congress has lost sight of the main purpose of criminal law: deterring wrongful, harmful activity.
That won't happen if federal courts are clogged with cases that don't belong there. Our court system
would improve if Congress refocused its attention on crimes that are truly federal in nature -- such as
immigration, terrorism and espionage -- and left the state crimes for the states and the accidents and
mistakes for civil courts.

Paul Rosenzweig, an attorney, is a senior legal research fellow at The Heritage Foundation.

story.news.yahoo.com