Salerno, United States v. 481 U.S. 739 (1987)

AuthorLeonard W. Levy
Pages2306-2307

Page 2306

In many nations of the world, governments imprison people believed to be dangerous because of their opinions. This does not happen in a free society. However, since the Bail Reform Act, passed by Congress in 1984, persons arrested for a specific category of serious offenses, those violating the RACKETEER INFLUENCES AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS ACT (RICO), may be imprisioned while awaiting trial. This is PREVENTIVE DETENTION, which is based on the supposition that the prisoner will likely commit other crimes if let out on BAIL. When the Court sustained the constitutionality of the 1984 statute, Justice THURGOOD MARSHALL, dissenting, joined only by Justice WILLIAM J. BRENNAN, made the following remarkable statement:

This case brings before the Court for the first time a statute in which Congress declares that a person innocent of any crime may be jailed indefinitely, pending the trial of allegations which are legally presumed to be untrue, if the Government shows to the satisfaction of a judge that the accused is likely to commit crimes, unrelated to the pending charges, at any time in the future. Such statutes, consistent with the usages of tyranny and the excesses of what bitter experience teaches us to call the police state, have long been thought incompatible with the fundamental human rights protected by our Constitution. Today a majority of this Court holds otherwise. Its decision disregards basic principles of justice established centuries ago and enshrined beyond the reach of governmental interference in the Bill of Rights.

Justice JOHN PAUL STEVENS, dissenting separately, agreed with Marshall that the statute violated both the presumption of innocence and the Eighth Amendment's excessive-bail clause.

Chief Justice WILLIAM H. REHNQUIST, for the majority, first rejected the contention that the statute conflicted with the Fifth Amendment's DUE PROCESS clause. No conflict existed, he held, because Congress's purpose in authorizing pretrial detention was not penal, but merely regulatory. So construed, the statute did not authorize impermissible punishment without trial; it merely employed pretrial detention to protect the community against danger. Not only was SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS not violated; the statute conformed with PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS as well, because it provided for a full adversary...

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