Applying Citizens United to Ordinary Corruption: With a Note on Blagojevich, McDonnell, and the Criminalization of Politics

George D. Brown
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Abstract

Federal criminal law frequently deals with the problem of corruption in the form of purchased political influence. There appear to be two distinct bodies of federal anti-corruption law — one concerning campaign finance regulation, and one addressing corruption in the form of such crimes as bribery, extortion by public officials, and gratuities to them. The latter body of law presents primarily issues of statutory construction, but it may be desirable for courts approaching these issues to have an animating theory of what corruption is and how to deal with it. At the moment, the two bodies of law look like two ships passing in the night.The Supreme Court has rendered important decisions in both areas. However, it is only in the campaign finance cases that the Court has articulated a vision of corruption. A well-known recent example is the 2010 decision in Federal Election Commission v. Citizens United. There the Court stated that “influence” and “access” brought about through campaign support, including contributions, are not corruption. The Court appears to embrace a narrow view of what is corruption, tied closely to the concept of quid pro quo.This Article raises the question whether cases such as Citizens United and other campaign finance decisions should have generative force outside the electoral context. I contend that they should not — that preventing purchased political influence, whether generalized or particularized, is central to the federal anti-corruption enterprise. The matter is presented both on a theoretical level, and through examination of Supreme Court cases in what might be called the field of “ordinary corruption.” This examination yields an unclear picture. Some cases appear to be in harmony with the campaign finance decisions, raising the possibility that the Court does hold a unified view of corruption. However, the decision in Evans v. United States embraces a broad view of corruption in construing a key federal statute: the Hobbs Act. Evans has had extraordinary generative force in the lower federal courts. In particular, they have diluted any requirement of specificity in the concept of quid pro quo by emphasizing the presence of a “stream of benefits” as a means of securing somewhat generalized influence with public officials. The lower courts have thus reached results that further broad anti-corruption goals while ignoring intimations of a narrow view in the campaign finance cases. To the extent that the Supreme Court may extend this narrow view to ordinary corruption, the result could, as it has in the past, be a major ruling reining in the lower courts. The two ships would, in effect, collide.
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将公民联合组织应用于普通腐败:兼评布拉戈耶维奇、麦克唐纳和政治的刑事化
联邦刑法经常以收买政治影响力的形式处理腐败问题。联邦反腐败法似乎有两个不同的主体——一个涉及竞选财务监管,另一个涉及以贿赂、公职人员敲诈勒索和给他们小费等犯罪形式出现的腐败。后一个法律主体主要提出了法律建构的问题,但法院处理这些问题时最好能有一个关于什么是腐败以及如何处理腐败的生动理论。目前,这两个法律体系看起来就像两艘在夜里擦肩而过的船。最高法院在这两个领域都作出了重要裁决。然而,只有在竞选资金案件中,法院才明确阐述了腐败的概念。最近一个著名的例子是2010年联邦选举委员会诉联合公民案的判决。该法院在该案中指出,通过竞选支持(包括捐款)带来的"影响"和"接触"不属于腐败。法院似乎对什么是腐败持一种狭隘的看法,与交换条件的概念密切相关。这篇文章提出了一个问题,诸如“联合公民”案和其他竞选财务决定是否应该在选举背景之外具有产生力。我认为他们不应该这样做——防止收买的政治影响,无论是普遍的还是具体的,是联邦反腐败事业的核心。这个问题既可以在理论层面上提出,也可以通过对最高法院案件的审查,即所谓的“普通腐败”领域。这一检查得出了一幅不明确的画面。有些案件似乎与竞选资金决定相一致,这增加了最高法院对腐败确实持有统一看法的可能性。然而,埃文斯诉美国案的判决在解释一项关键的联邦法规——霍布斯法案时,对腐败的看法较为宽泛。埃文斯在下级联邦法院有着非凡的创造力。特别是,它们淡化了交换条件概念的任何具体要求,强调存在"一系列利益",作为对公职人员获得某种普遍影响的手段。因此,下级法院取得了进一步扩大反腐败目标的结果,同时忽视了在竞选资金案件中出现狭隘观点的暗示。在某种程度上,最高法院可能会将这种狭隘的观点扩展到普通的腐败问题上,结果可能会像过去一样,成为一项控制下级法院的重大裁决。这两艘船实际上会相撞。
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