By John R. Byrne
Not SDFLA related, but fascinating nonetheless. Is there a Zone of Death in this country where you can commit a crime without consequence? Arguably, yes. The other day, attorney Derek Leon told me about a crazy federal criminal case arising out of the District of Wyoming.
Back in 2005, a man named Michael Belderrain shot and killed an elk within the Montana section of Yellowstone National Park (the park spans three states--Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho). Because Congress, for administrative convenience, placed the entire park within the federal district of Wyoming, federal prosecutors charged him in the District of Wyoming with unlawfully transporting illegally possessed wildlife, among other charges.
Belderrain objected to the prosecution, arguing he wasn't subject to prosecution because of the interplay between two provisions of the U.S. Constitution. Specifically, Article III, Section 2 states that "[t]he Trial of all Crimes . . . shall be by Jury; and such Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed.” But the Sixth Amendment's vicinage requirement demands that the jury be "of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed." In Belderrain's case, that was impossible. No jurors lived within that sliver of land that fell within the state of Montana and the district of Wyoming. (Note: no prosecution under state law was possible because Yellowstone is a federal enclave and states can't enforce state law within the park).
Ultimately, the district court rejected Belderrain's argument, though it acknowledged the problem, writing: "The District of Wyoming is the only district court that includes land in multiple states. Congress created this anomaly when it placed Yellowstone National Park in the District of Wyoming. The Court recognizes the conundrum that presents itself because the literal interpretation of Article III and the Sixth Amendment make it impossible to satisfy both provisions when a crime is committed in the portions of Yellowstone National Park that fall outside of the state of Wyoming." United States v. Belderrain, No. 07-CR-66-D, 2007 WL 9718010, at *2 (D. Wyo. Aug. 8, 2007), aff'd, 309 F. App'x 259 (10th Cir. 2009).
Belderrain ended up taking a plea deal where he promised not to appeal the issue to the 10th Circuit. The Atlantic covered the story in a podcast you can find here.
Before Belderrain committed his crime, a Michigan State Law professor had sounded the alarm about the Zone of Death in a law review article, which I've posted below. Still, he hasn't succeeded in getting Congress to close the loophole.
Be careful in Yellowstone National Park!
The Perfect Crime by John Byrne on Scribd