Monthly Archive: June 2024

Released Robber Robs Again the Next Day

On May 7, convicted robber Eric Gray was released from San Quentin. The next day he robbed a bank in Orange County, California and held three employees prisoner. He presently faces charges in federal court. The Orange County Register has this article.

The federal complaint states that “Gray has a lengthy criminal history that includes, but is not limited to, grand theft auto, robbery, sexual battery, and narcotics-related offenses. Continue reading . . .

U.S. Supreme Court Takes Wire Fraud Case

The U.S. Supreme Court will delve once again into the meaning of “wire fraud” in federal criminal cases. Today the Court granted certiorari in Kousisis v. United States, No. 23-909. The Question Presented as stated in the Government’s Brief in Opposition is:

Whether sufficient evidence supported petitioners’ convictions for conspiring to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1349, and wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1343 and 1349, where they falsely certified compliance with a requirement that they subcontract to a disadvantaged business and, as a result, overcharged the government entity with which they contracted. Continue reading . . .

Supreme Court Invalidates Bump Stock Regulation

In October 2017, a horrific crime was committed in Las Vegas, Nevada. As stated in today’s Supreme Court opinion in Garland v. Cargill, “a gunman fired on a crowd attending an outdoor music festival in Las Vegas, killing 58 people and wounding over 500 more. The gunman equipped his weapons with bump stocks, which allowed him to fire hundreds of rounds in a matter of minutes.”

Machine guns (fully automatic guns) are illegal. Should bump stocks, which enable a semiautomatic to fire a similarly rapid series of rounds, be illegal for the same reason? Of course. Who has the authority to make that law, Congress by statute or the the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) by regulation? Continue reading . . .

Newsom to Cut Funding For Law Enforcement

California Governor Gavin Newsom is proposing to cut roughly $187 million from law enforcement to reduce the state’s multi-billion dollar deficit. Hannah Grossman at Fox News reports that the cuts would include reduced funding to the state’s overburdened trial courts, eliminating 4,500 state prison beds, and reducing the number of state criminal prosecutors and county probation officers. The proposal follows a recent statement from the Governor’s office that there would be “no cuts to law enforcement.”

Continue reading . . .

No Crim. Law Decisions from SCOTUS Today

The U.S. Supreme Court issued three decisions today. All are in civil cases with no law enforcement connection. The next regularly scheduled opinion day is next Thursday, June 13, but in June the high court sometimes releases opinion on other days as well.

We are still waiting on important decisions on crime labs and expert witness testimony and local governments’ ability to cope with illegal encampments. Stay tuned.

Trans Male Convict In Women’s Prison Charged With Rape

A California law passed in 2021 requires that male convicts, who “identify” as female, to be transferred to a woman’s prison.  That law, SB 132 introduced by progressive San Francisco Senator Scott Wiener passed both houses of California’s democrat super-majority legislature before being signed by Governor Gavin Newsom.  It removed the previous policy of state corrections officials to make individualized assessments regarding the transfer of claimed transgender inmates, excluding inmates who didn’t have gender-reassignment surgery.  As reported by Chris Pandolfo and Michael Ruiz of Fox News, three months after SB 132 became law,  habitual felon Tremaine Carroll, serving 25-years-to-life in prison for multiple crimes, including sex offenses, began identifying as a female.

Continue reading . . .

Is Murder a Violent Offense?

To anyone with common sense, the title of this post seems to be a contender for the most absurd question that can possibly be asked. Yet, believe it or not, the U. S. Supreme Court today took up a case that asks that question, Delligatti v. United States, No. 23-825.

According to the government brief on the question of whether to take the case up, defendant Salvatore Delligatti was “an associate in the Genovese Crime Family,” who was hired to murder someone and then subcontracted the job. The plot failed when the police were alerted and arrested the subs. Among other crimes, Delligatti was charged with gang-related attempted murder in violation of the Violent Crimes in Aid of Racketeering Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1959, and “carrying a firearm during and in relation to any crime of violence,” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).

Delligatti was convicted on all counts and sentenced to 25 years in prison, of which 5 years were for the § 924 gun charge. He argued in the trial court and on appeal that murder as defined in New York is not a “crime of violence” within the definition of § 924(c) because that definition requires physical force, and it is possible to commit murder in New York by failure to act when one has a duty to act, which does not involve physical force. Continue reading . . .