DUI:
A Crime of Violence? The Supreme Court Gets it Right
Information
courtesy of Lawrence Taylor - DUIblog
It
is difficult for members of the public to recognize and appreciate
the degree to which a double standard exists in the drunk driving
field. The laws are increasingly unrealistic, procedures unfair,
evidence unreliable and constitutional protections largely ignored.
An example of this was recently demonstrated in a United States
Supreme Court decision (Leocal v. Ashcroft, No. 03-583; November
9, 2004).
The
Court was faced with the appeal of Josue Leocal, a lawful permanent
resident of 20 years, who pleaded guilty to DUI with injury. As
a result, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) commenced
proceedings to have him deported as an alien convicted of an "aggravated
felony". The INS regulations defined an aggravated felony as
"a crime of violence", which in turn is defined as "an
offense that has as an element the use...of physical force against
the person or property of another." An Immigration Judge ordered
the deportation, and the Board of Immigration Appeals upheld the
order. Leocal went to the U.S. Court of Appeals, which promptly
denied his petition for review.
Fortunately,
the Supreme Court reversed the deportation order. In a rare unanimous
decision, the Court stated the obvious: DUI is simply not a crime
of violence, even if someone is injured in its commission. A deportable
"crime of violence", the Court said, required "a
higher mens rea [mental state] than the merely accidental or negligent
conduct involved in a DUI offense." In other words, the requirement
of "the use of physical force against" a person necessarily
involves the intent to use that force. Put yet another way: How
can you be accidentally violent?
The
point here, of course, is that everyone right up to the Supreme
Court of the United States was perfectly willing to twist the clear
wording of the law when the politically unpopular crime of drunk
driving was involved. At every level, the nationss agencies
and courts pretended that a crime clearly involving no intent was,
in fact, a crime involving the intentional commission of a violent
act against someone.
As
we see so often in DUI cases, the Red Queen was right: "A word
means exactly what I say it means".
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