After two mentally retarded men were found laboring on
respondents' farm in poor health, in squalid conditions, and in
relative isolation from the rest of society, respondents were
charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 241 by conspiring to prevent the
men from exercising their Thirteenth Amendment right to be free
from involuntary servitude, and with violating 18 U.S.C. § 1584 by
knowingly holding the men in involuntary servitude. At respondents'
trial in Federal District Court, the Government's evidence
indicated,
inter alia, that the two men worked on the farm
seven days a week, often 17 hours a day, at first for $15 per week
and eventually for no pay, and that, in addition to actual or
threatened physical abuse and a threat to reinstitutionalize one of
the men if he did not do as he was told, respondents had used
various forms of psychological coercion to keep the men on the
farm. The court instructed the jury that, under both statutes,
involuntary servitude may include situations involving any
"means of compulsion . . . sufficient in kind and degree to
subject a person having the same general station in life as the
alleged victims to believe they had no reasonable means of escape
and no choice except to remain in the service of the employer."
The jury found respondents guilty, and the court imposed
sentences. However, the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for
a new trial, concluding that the trial court's definition of
involuntary servitude was too broad, in that it included general
psychological coercion. The court held that involuntary servitude
exists only when the master subjects the servant to (1) threatened
or actual physical force, (2) threatened or actual state-imposed
legal coercion, or (3) fraud or deceit where the servant is a minor
or an immigrant or is mentally incompetent.
Held: For purposes of criminal prosecution under § 241
or § 1584, the term "involuntary servitude" necessarily means a
condition of servitude in which the victim is forced to work for
the defendant by the use or threat of physical restraint or
physical injury or by the use or threat of coercion through law or
the legal process. This definition encompasses cases in which the
defendant holds the victim in servitude by placing him or her in
fear of such physical restraint or injury or legal coercion. Pp.
487 U. S.
939-953.
(a) The Government cannot prove a § 241 conspiracy to violate
rights secured by the Thirteenth Amendment without proving that the
conspiracy
Page 487 U. S. 932
involved the use or threatened use of physical or legal
coercion. The fact that the Amendment excludes from its prohibition
involuntary servitude imposed "as a punishment for crime whereof
the party shall have been duly convicted" indicates that the
Amendment's drafters thought that involuntary servitude generally
includes situations in which the victim is compelled to work by
law. Moreover, the facts that the phrase "involuntary servitude"
was intended "to cover those forms of compulsory labor akin to
African slavery,"
Butler v. Perry, 240 U.
S. 328,
240 U. S. 332,
and that the Amendment extends beyond state action,
cf.
U.S.Const., Amdt. 14, § 1, imply an intent to prohibit compulsion
through physical coercion. These assessments are confirmed by this
Court's decisions construing the Amendment,
see, e.g., Clyatt
v. United States, 197 U. S. 207,
which have never interpreted the guarantee of freedom from
involuntary servitude to specifically prohibit compulsion of labor
by other means, such as psychological coercion. Pp.
487 U. S.
941-944.
(b) The language and legislative history of § 1584 and its
statutory progenitors indicate that its reach should be limited to
cases involving the compulsion of services by the use or threatened
use of physical or legal coercion. That is the understanding of the
Thirteenth Amendment's "involuntary servitude" phrase that
prevailed at the time of § 1584's enactment and, since Congress
clearly borrowed that phrase in enacting § 1584, the phrase should
have the same meaning in both places absent any contrary
indications. Section 1584's history undercuts the contention that
Congress had a broader concept of involuntary servitude in mind
when it enacted the statute, and does not support the Court of
Appeals' conclusion that immigrants, children, and mental
incompetents are entitled to any special protection. Pp.
487 U. S.
944-948.
(c) The Government's broad construction of "involuntary
servitude" -- which would prohibit the compulsion of services by
any type of speech or intentional conduct that, from the victim's
point of view, either leaves the victim with no tolerable
alternative but to serve the defendant or deprives the victim of
the power of choice -- could not have been intended by Congress.
That interpretation would appear to criminalize a broad range of
day-to-day activity; would delegate to prosecutors and juries the
inherently legislative task of determining what type of coercive
activities are so morally reprehensible that they should be
punished as crimes; would subject individuals to the risk of
arbitrary or discriminatory prosecution and conviction; and would
make the type of coercion prohibited depend entirely on the
victim's state of mind, thereby depriving ordinary people of fair
notice of what is required of them. These defects are not cured by
the Government's ambiguous specific intent requirement. JUSTICE
BRENNAN's position -- that § 1584 prohibits any means of coercion
that actually succeeds in reducing the victim to a condition
Page 487 U. S. 933
of servitude resembling that in which antebellum slaves were
held -- although theoretically narrower than the Government's
interpretation, suffers from the same flaws. JUSTICE STEVENS'
conclusion that Congress intended to delegate to the judiciary the
task of defining "involuntary servitude" on a case-by-case basis is
unsupported, and could lead to the arbitrary and unfair imposition
of criminal punishment. The purposes underlying the rule of lenity
for interpreting ambiguous statutory provisions are served by
construing § 241 and § 1584 to prohibit only compulsion of services
through physical or legal coercion. Pp.
487 U. S.
949-952.
(d) The latter construction does not imply that evidence of
other means of coercion, or of extremely poor working conditions,
or of the victim's special vulnerabilities, is irrelevant. The
victim's vulnerabilities are relevant in determining whether the
physical or legal coercion or threats thereof could plausibly have
compelled the victim to serve. Moreover, a trial court could
properly find that evidence of other means of coercion or of poor
working conditions is relevant to corroborate disputed evidence
regarding the use or threats of physical or legal coercion, the
defendant's intent in using such means, or the causal effect of
such conduct. Pp.
487 U. S.
952-953.
(e) Since the District Court's jury instructions encompassed
means of coercion other than actual or threatened physical or legal
coercion, the instructions may have caused respondents to be
convicted for conduct that does not violate § 241 or § 1584. The
convictions must therefore be reversed. Because the record contains
sufficient evidence of physical or legal coercion to permit a
conviction, however, a judgment of acquittal is unwarranted, and
the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion. P.
487 U. S.
953.
821 F.2d 1186, affirmed and remanded.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, SCALIA, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined.
BRENNAN, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
MARSHALL, J., joined,
post, p.
487 U. S. 953.
STEVENS, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
BLACKMUN, J., joined,
post, p.
487 U. S.
965.
Page 487 U. S. 934
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the scope of two criminal statutes enacted by
Congress to enforce the Thirteenth Amendment. Title 18 U.S.C. § 241
prohibits conspiracy to interfere with an individual's Thirteenth
Amendment right to be free from "involuntary servitude." Title 18
U.S.C. § 1584 makes it a crime knowingly and willfully to hold
another person "to involuntary servitude." We must determine the
meaning of "involuntary servitude" under these two statutes.
I
In 1983, two mentally retarded men were found laboring on a
Chelsea, Michigan, dairy farm in poor health, in squalid
conditions, and in relative isolation from the rest of society. The
operators of the farm -- Ike Kozminski, his wife Margarethe, and
their son John -- were charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 241 by
conspiring to "injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate" the two
men in the free exercise and enjoyment of their federal right to be
free from involuntary servitude. The Kozminskis were also charged
with knowingly holding, or aiding and abetting in the holding of,
the two men to involuntary servitude in violation of 18 U.S.C. §
1584 and § 2. [
Footnote 1] The
case was tried before a jury in the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan. The Government's evidence is
summarized below.
The victims, Robert Fulmer and Louis Molitoris, have
intelligence quotients of 67 and 60 respectively. Though
chronologically in their 60's during the period in question,
Page 487 U. S. 935
they viewed the world and responded to authority as would
someone of 8 to 10 years. Margarethe Kozminski picked Fulmer up one
evening in 1967 while he was walking down the road, and brought him
to work at one of the Kozminski farms. He was working on another
farm at the time, but Mrs. Kozminski simply left a note telling his
former employer that he had gone. Molitoris was living on the
streets of Ann Arbor, Michigan, in the early 1970's when Ike
Kozminski brought him to work on the Chelsea farm. He had
previously spent several years at a state mental hospital.
Fulmer and Molitoris worked on the Kozminskis' dairy farm seven
days a week, often 17 hours a day, at first for $15 per week and
eventually for no pay. The Kozminskis subjected the two men to
physical and verbal abuse for failing to do their work, and
instructed herdsmen employed at the farm to do the same. The
Kozminskis directed Fulmer and Molitoris not to leave the farm, and
on several occasions when the men did leave, the Kozminskis or
their employees brought the men back and discouraged them from
leaving again. On one occasion, John Kozminski threatened Molitoris
with institutionalization if he did not do as he was told.
The Kozminskis failed to provide Fulmer and Molitoris with
adequate nutrition, housing, clothing, or medical care. They
directed the two men not to talk to others, and discouraged the men
from contacting their relatives. At the same time, the Kozminskis
discouraged relatives, neighbors, farm hands, and visitors from
contacting Fulmer and Molitoris. Fulmer and Molitoris asked others
for help in leaving the farm, and eventually a herdsman hired by
the Kozminskis was concerned about the two men and notified county
officials of their condition. County officials assisted Fulmer and
Molitoris in leaving the farm, and placed them in an adult foster
care home.
In attempting to persuade the jury that the Kozminskis held
their victims in involuntary servitude, the Government did not rely
solely on evidence regarding their use or threatened
Page 487 U. S. 936
use of physical force or the threat of institutionalization.
Rather, the Government argued that the Kozminskis had used various
coercive measures -- including denial of pay, subjection to
substandard living conditions, and isolation from others -- to
cause the victims to believe they had no alternative but to work on
the farm. The Government argued that Fulmer and Molitoris were
"psychological hostages" whom the Kozminskis had "brainwash[ed]"
into serving them. Tr. 15, 23. [
Footnote 2]
At the conclusion of the evidence, the District Court instructed
the jurors that, in order to convict the Kozminskis of conspiracy
under § 241, they must find (1) the existence of a conspiracy
including the Kozminskis, (2) that the purpose of the conspiracy
was to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate a United States
citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of a federal right to be
free from involuntary servitude, and (3) that one of the
conspirators knowingly committed an overt act in furtherance of
that purpose. The Court further instructed the jury that § 1584
required the Government to prove (1) that the Kozminskis held the
victims in involuntary servitude, (2) that they acted knowingly or
willfully, and (3) that their actions were a necessary cause of the
victims' decision to continue working for them. The Court delivered
the following instruction on the meaning of involuntary servitude
under both statutes:
"Involuntary servitude consists of two terms."
"Involuntary means 'done contrary to or without choice' --
'compulsory' -- 'not subject to control of the will.' "
Page 487 U. S. 937
"Servitude means '[a] condition in which a person lacks liberty
especially to determine one's course of action or way of life' --
'slavery' -- 'the state of being subject to a master.'"
"Involuntary servitude involves a condition of having some of
the incidents of slavery."
"It may include situations in which persons are forced to return
to employment by law."
"It may also include persons who are physically restrained by
guards from leaving employment."
"It may also include situations involving either physical and
other coercion, or a combination thereof, used to detain persons in
employment."
"
* * * *"
"In other words, based on all the evidence it will be for you to
determine if there was a means of compulsion used, sufficient in
kind and degree, to subject a person having the same general
station in life as the alleged victims to believe they had no
reasonable means of escape and no choice except to remain in the
service of the employer."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 109a-1 10a.
So instructed, the jury found Ike and Margarethe Kozminski
guilty of violating both statutes. John Kozminski was convicted
only on the § 241 charge. Each of the Kozminskis was placed on
probation for two years. In addition, Ike Kozminski was fined
$20,000 and was ordered to pay $6,190.80 in restitution to each of
the victims. John Kozminski was fined $10,000.
A divided panel of the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
affirmed the convictions. App. to Pet. for Cert. 72a. After
rehearing the case en banc, however, the Court of Appeals reversed
the convictions and remanded the case for a new trial. 821 F.2d
1186 (1987). The majority concluded that the District Court's
definition of involuntary servitude, which would bring cases
involving general psychological coercion
Page 487 U. S. 938
within the reach of § 241 and § 1584, was too broad. The Court
held that involuntary servitude exists only when
"(a) the servant believes that he or she has no viable
alternative but to perform service for the master (b) because of
(1) the master's use or threatened use of physical force, or (2)
the master's use or threatened use of state-imposed legal coercion
(
i.e., peonage), or (3) the master's use of fraud or
deceit to obtain or maintain services where the servant is a minor,
an immigrant or one who is mentally incompetent."
821 F.2d at 1192 (footnote omitted).
The dissenting judges charged that the majority had "rewritten,
rather than interpreted," § 1584. 821 F.2d at 1213. They argued
that involuntary servitude may arise from whatever means the
defendant intentionally uses to subjugate the will of the victim so
as to render the victim "
incapable of making a rational
choice.'" Id. at 1212-1213 (quoting United States v.
Shackney, 333 F.2d 475, 488 (CA2 1964) (Dimock, J.,
concurring)).
The Court of Appeals' definition of involuntary servitude
conflicts with the definitions adopted by other Courts of Appeals.
Writing for the Second Circuit in
United States v. Shackney,
supra, Judge Friendly reasoned that
"a holding in involuntary servitude means to us action by the
master causing the servant to have, or to believe he has, no way to
avoid continued service or confinement, . . . not a situation where
the servant knows he has a choice between continued service and
freedom, even if the master has led him to believe that the choice
may entail consequences that are exceedingly bad."
Id. at 486. Accordingly, Judge Friendly concluded that
§ 1584 prohibits only "service compelled by law, by force or by the
threat of continued confinement of some sort."
Id. at 487.
See also United States v. Harris, 701 F.2d 1095, 1100 (CA4
1983) (involuntary
Page 487 U. S. 939
servitude exists under § 241 and § 1584 where labor is coerced
by "threat of violence or confinement, backed sufficiently by
deeds");
United States v. Bibbs, 564 F.2d 1165, 1168 (CA5
1977) (involuntary servitude exists under § 1584 where the
defendant places the victim "in such fear of physical harm that the
victim is afraid to leave"). The Ninth Circuit, in contrast, has
not limited the reach of § 1584 to cases involving physical force
or legal sanction, but has concluded that
"[a] holding in involuntary servitude occurs when an individual
coerces another into his service by improper or wrongful conduct
that is intended to cause, and does cause, the other person to
believe that he or she has no alternative but to perform
labor."
United States v. Mussry, 726 F.2d 1448, 1453 (1984).
See also United States v. Warren, 772 F.2d 827, 833-834
(CA11 1985) ("Various forms of coercion may constitute a holding in
involuntary servitude. The use, or threatened use, of physical
force to create a climate of fear is the most grotesque example of
such coercion").
We granted the Government's petition for a writ of certiorari,
484 U.S. 894 (1987), to resolve this conflict among the Courts of
Appeals on the meaning of involuntary servitude for the purpose of
criminal prosecution under § 241 and § 1584.
II
Federal crimes are defined by Congress, and so long as Congress
acts within its constitutional power in enacting a criminal
statute, this Court must give effect to Congress' expressed
intention concerning the scope of conduct prohibited.
See
Dowling v. United States, 473 U. S. 207,
473 U. S. 213,
473 U. S. 214
(1985) (citing
United States v.
Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76,
18 U. S. 95
(1820)). Congress' power to enforce the Thirteenth Amendment by
enacting § 241 and § 1584 is clear and undisputed.
See
U.S.Const., Amdt. 13, § 2 ("Congress shall have power to
enforce
Page 487 U. S. 940
this article by appropriate legislation");
Griffin v.
Breckenridge, 403 U. S. 88,
403 U. S. 105
(1971). The scope of conduct prohibited by these statutes is
therefore a matter of statutory construction
The Court of Appeals reached its conclusions regarding the
meaning of involuntary servitude under both § 241 and § 1584 based
solely on its analysis of the language and history of § 1584. A
reading of these statutes, however, reveals an obvious difference
between them. Unlike § 1584, which by its terms prohibits holding
to involuntary servitude, § 241 prohibits conspiracies to interfere
with rights secured "by the Constitution or laws of the United
States," and thus incorporates the prohibition of involuntary
servitude contained in the Thirteenth Amendment.
See United
States v. Price, 383 U. S. 787,
383 U. S. 805
(1966). The indictment in this case, which was read to the jury,
specifically charged the Kozminskis with conspiring to interfere
with the
"right and privilege secured . . . by the Constitution and laws
of the United States
to be free from involuntary servitude as
provided by the Thirteenth Amendment of the United States
Constitution."
App. 177 (emphasis added). Thus, the indictment clearly
specified a conspiracy to violate the Thirteenth Amendment. The
indictment cannot be read to charge a conspiracy to violate § 1584,
rather than the Thirteenth Amendment, because the criminal sanction
imposed by § 1584 does not create any individual "right or
privilege" as those words are used in § 241. The Government has not
conceded that the definition of involuntary servitude as used in
the Thirteenth Amendment is limited by the meaning of the same
phrase in § 1584. To the contrary, the Government argues (1) that
the Thirteenth Amendment should be broadly construed, and (2) that
Congress did not intend § 1584 to have a narrower scope. Brief for
United States 22-32. The District Court defined involuntary
servitude broadly under both § 241 and § 1584. The Court of Appeals
reversed the convictions under both counts because it concluded
that the definition
Page 487 U. S. 941
of involuntary servitude given for each count was erroneous.
Since the proper interpretation of each statute is squarely before
us, we construe each statute separately to ascertain the conduct it
prohibits.
A
Section 241 authorizes punishment when
"two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or
intimidate any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any
right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of
the United States, or because of his having so exercised the
same."
This Court interpreted the purpose and effect of § 241 over 20
years ago in
United States v. Guest, 383 U.
S. 745 (1966), and
United States v. Price,
supra. Section 241 creates no substantive rights, but
prohibits interference with rights established by the Federal
Constitution or laws and by decisions interpreting them.
Guest,
supra, at
383 U. S.
754-755;
Price, supra, at
383 U. S. 803.
Congress intended the statute to incorporate by reference a large
body of potentially evolving federal law. This Court recognized,
however, that a statute prescribing criminal punishment must be
interpreted in a manner that provides a definite standard of guilt.
The Court resolved the tension between these two propositions by
construing § 241 to prohibit only intentional interference with
rights made specific either by the express terms of the Federal
Constitution or laws or by decisions interpreting them.
Price,
supra, at
383 U. S. 806,
n. 20;
Guest, supra, at
383 U. S.
754-755.
Cf. Screws v. United States,
325 U. S. 91,
325 U. S. 102
(1945).
The Kozminskis were convicted under § 241 for conspiracy to
interfere with the Thirteenth Amendment guarantee against
involuntary servitude. Applying the analysis set out in
Price and
Guest, our task is to ascertain the
precise definition of that crime by looking to the scope of the
Thirteenth Amendment prohibition of involuntary servitude specified
in our prior decisions.
Page 487 U. S. 942
The Thirteenth Amendment declares that
"[n]either slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place
subject to their jurisdiction."
The Amendment is "self-executing without any ancillary
legislation, so far as its terms are applicable to any existing
state of circumstances,"
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S.
3,
109 U. S. 20
(1883), and thus establishes a constitutional guarantee that is
protected by § 241.
See Price, supra, at
383 U. S. 805.
The primary purpose of the Amendment was to abolish the institution
of African slavery as it had existed in the United States at the
time of the Civil War, but the Amendment was not limited to that
purpose; the phrase "involuntary servitude" was intended to
extend
"to cover those forms of compulsory labor akin to African
slavery which in practical operation would tend to produce like
undesirable results."
Butler v. Perry, 240 U. S. 328,
240 U. S. 332
(1916).
See also Robertson v. Baldwin,
165 U.
S. 275, 165 U. S. 282
(1897); 83 U. S. 16 Wall.
36,
83 U. S. 69
(1873).
While the general spirit of the phrase "involuntary servitude"
is easily comprehended, the exact range of conditions it prohibits
is harder to define. The express exception of involuntary servitude
imposed as a punishment for crime provides some guidance. The fact
that the drafters felt it necessary to exclude this situation
indicates that they thought involuntary servitude includes at least
situations in which the victim is compelled to work by law.
Moreover, from the general intent to prohibit conditions "akin to
African slavery,"
see Butler v. Perry, supra, at
240 U. S.
332-333, as well as the fact that the Thirteenth
Amendment extends beyond state action,
compare U.S.Const.,
Amdt. 14, § 1, we readily can deduce an intent to prohibit
compulsion through physical coercion.
This judgment is confirmed when we turn to our previous
decisions construing the Thirteenth Amendment. Looking behind the
broad statements of purpose to the actual holdings,
Page 487 U. S. 943
we find that, in every case in which this Court has found a
condition of involuntary servitude, the victim had no available
choice but to work or be subject to legal sanction. In
Clyatt
v. United States, 197 U. S. 207
(1905), for example, the Court recognized that peonage -- a
condition in which the victim is coerced by threat of legal
sanction to work off a debt to a master -- is involuntary servitude
under the Thirteenth Amendment.
Id. at
197 U. S. 215,
197 U. S. 218.
Similarly, in
United States v. Reynolds, 235 U.
S. 133 (1914), the Court held that "[c]ompulsion of . .
. service by the constant fear of imprisonment under the criminal
laws" violated "rights intended to be secured by the Thirteenth
Amendment."
Id. at
235 U. S. 146,
235 U. S. 150.
In that case, the Court struck down a criminal surety system under
which a person fined for a misdemeanor offense could contract to
work for a surety who would, in turn, pay the convict's fine to the
State. The critical feature of the system was that breach of the
labor contract by the convict was a crime. The convict was thus
forced to work by threat of criminal sanction. The Court has also
invalidated state laws subjecting debtors to prosecution and
criminal punishment for failing to perform labor after receiving an
advance payment.
Pollock v. Williams, 322 U. S.
4 (1944);
Taylor v. Georgia, 315 U. S.
25 (1942);
Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.
S. 219 (1911). The laws at issue in these cases made
failure to perform services for which money had been obtained
prima facie evidence of intent to defraud. The Court
reasoned that
"the State could not avail itself of the sanction of the
criminal law to supply the compulsion [to enforce labor] any more
than it could use or authorize the use of physical force."
Bailey, supra, at
219 U. S.
244.
Our precedents reveal that not all situations in which labor is
compelled by physical coercion or force of law violate the
Thirteenth Amendment. By its terms, the Amendment excludes
involuntary servitude imposed as legal punishment for a crime.
Similarly, the Court has recognized that the prohibition against
involuntary servitude does not prevent the
Page 487 U. S. 944
State or Federal Governments from compelling their citizens, by
threat of criminal sanction, to perform certain civic duties.
See Hurtado v. United States, 410 U.
S. 578,
410 U. S. 589,
n. 11 (1973) (jury service);
Selective Draft Law Cases,
245 U. S. 366,
245 U. S. 390
(1918) (military service);
Butler v. Perry, 240 U.
S. 328 (1916) (roadwork). Moreover, in
Robertson v.
Baldwin, 165 U. S. 275
(1897), the Court observed that the Thirteenth Amendment was not
intended to apply to "exceptional" cases well established in the
common law at the time of the Thirteenth Amendment, such as "the
right of parents and guardians to the custody of their minor
children or wards,"
id. at
165 U. S. 282,
or laws preventing sailors who contracted to work on vessels from
deserting their ships.
Id. at
165 U. S.
288.
Putting aside such exceptional circumstances, none of which are
present in this case, our precedents clearly define a Thirteenth
Amendment prohibition of involuntary servitude enforced by the use
or threatened use of physical or legal coercion. The guarantee of
freedom from involuntary servitude has never been interpreted
specifically to prohibit compulsion of labor by other means, such
as psychological coercion. We draw no conclusions from this
historical survey about the potential scope of the Thirteenth
Amendment. Viewing the Amendment, however, through the narrow
window that is appropriate in applying § 241, it is clear that the
Government cannot prove a conspiracy to violate rights secured by
the Thirteenth Amendment without proving that the conspiracy
involved the use or threatened use of physical or legal
coercion.
B
Section 1584 authorizes criminal punishment of
"[w]hoever knowingly and willfully holds to involuntary
servitude or sells into any condition of involuntary servitude any
other person for any term."
This is our first occasion to consider the reach of this
statute. The pivotal phrase, "involuntary servitude," clearly was
borrowed
Page 487 U. S. 945
from the Thirteenth Amendment. Congress' use of the
constitutional language in a statute enacted pursuant to its
constitutional authority to enforce the Thirteenth Amendment
guarantee makes the conclusion that Congress intended the phrase to
have the same meaning in both places logical, if not inevitable. In
the absence of any contrary indications, we therefore give effect
to congressional intent by construing "involuntary servitude" in a
way consistent with the understanding of the Thirteenth Amendment
that prevailed at the time of § 1584's enactment.
See United
States v. Shackney, 333 F.2d 475 (CA2 1964) (Friendly,
J.).
Section 1584 was enacted as part of the 1948 revision to the
Criminal Code. At that time, all of the Court's decisions
identifying conditions of involuntary servitude had involved
compulsion of services through the use or threatened use of
physical or legal coercion.
See, e.g., Clyatt v. United States,
supra; United States v. Reynolds, supra; Pollock v. Williams,
supra; Bailey v. Alabama, supra. By employing the
constitutional language, Congress apparently was focusing on the
prohibition of comparable conditions.
The legislative history of § 1584 confirms this conclusion and
undercuts the Government's claim that Congress had a broader
concept of involuntary servitude in mind. No significant
legislative history accompanies the 1948 enactment of § 1584; the
statute was adopted as part of a general revision of the Criminal
Code. The 1948 version of § 1584 was a consolidation, however, of
two earlier statutes: the Slave Trade statute, as amended in 1909,
formerly 18 U.S.C. § 423 (1940 ed.), and the 1874 Padrone statute,
formerly 18 U.S.C. § 446 (1940 ed.). There are some indications
that § 1584 was intended to have the same substantive reach as
these statutes.
See, e.g., A. Holtzoff, Preface to Title
18 U.S.C.A. (1969) ("In general, with a few exceptions, the Code
does not attempt to change existing law"); Revision of Titles 18
and 28 of the United States Code: Hearings on H.R. 1600 and H.R.
2055 before Subcommittee No. 1 of the
Page 487 U. S. 946
House Committee on the Judiciary, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., 13-14
(1947) (statement of advisory committee member Justin Miller).
But see United States v. Shackney, 333 F.2d at 482
(viewing changes made in the course of consolidation as significant
and § 1584 as positive law). Whether or not § 1584 was intended to
track these earlier statutes exactly, it was most assuredly not
intended to work a radical change in the law. We therefore review
the legislative history of the Slave Trade statute and the Padrone
statute to inform our construction of § 1584.
The original Slave Trade statute authorized punishment of
persons who
"hold, sell, or otherwise dispose of any . . . negro, mulatto,
or person of colour, so brought [into the United States] as a
slave, or to be held to service or labour."
Act of Apr. 20, 1818, ch. 91, § 6, 3 Stat. 452. This statute was
one of several measures passed in the early 19th century for the
purpose of ending the African slave trade. A 1909 amendment removed
the racial restriction, extending the statute to the holding of
"any person" as a slave. This revision, however, left unchanged
that portion of the statute describing the condition under which
such persons were held.
See 42 Cong.Rec. 1114 (1908). The
Government attempts to draw a contrary conclusion from a comment by
Senator Heyburn to the effect that the 1909 amendment was intended
to protect vulnerable people who were brought into the United
States for labor or for immoral purposes.
Id. at 1115.
This comment is inconclusive, however. Other Senators expressly
disagreed with the view that the elimination of the racial
restriction changed the meaning of the word "slavery."
See
id. at 1114-1115. Moreover, the 1909 reenactment of the Slave
Trade statute was part of a general codification of the federal
penal laws, which Senator Heyburn himself stated was "in no
instance to change the practice of the law."
Id. at 2226.
Thus, we conclude that nothing in the history of the Slave Trade
statute suggests that it was intended to extend
Page 487 U. S. 947
to conditions of servitude beyond those applied to slaves,
i.e., physical or legal coercion.
The other precursor of § 1584, the Padrone statute, reflects a
similarly limited scope. The "padrones" were men who took young
boys away from their families in Italy, brought them to large
cities in the United States, and put them to work as street
musicians or beggars. Congress enacted the Padrone statute in 1874
"to prevent [this] practice of enslaving, buying, selling, or using
Italian children." 2 Cong.Rec. 4443 (1874) (Rep. Cessna). The
statute provided that
"whoever shall knowingly and wilfully bring into the United
States . . . any person inveigled or forcibly kidnapped in any
other country, with intent to hold such person . . . in confinement
or to any involuntary service, and whoever shall knowingly and
wilfully sell, or cause to be sold, into any condition of
involuntary servitude, any other person for any term whatever, and
every person who shall knowingly and wilfully hold to involuntary
service any person so sold and bought, shall be deemed guilty of a
felony."
Act of June 23, 1874, ch. 464. 18 Stat. 251.
This statute, too, was aimed only at compulsion of service
through physical or legal coercion. To be sure, use of the term
"inveigled" indicated that the statute was intended to protect
persons brought into this country by other means. But the statute
drew a careful distinction between the manner in which persons were
brought into the United States and the conditions in which they
were subsequently held, which are expressly identified as
"confinement" or "involuntary servitude." Our conclusion that
Congress believed these terms to be limited to situations involving
physical or legal coercion is confirmed when we examine the actual
physical conditions facing the victims of the padrone system. These
young children were literally stranded in large, hostile cities in
a foreign country. They were given no education or other assistance
toward self-sufficiency. Without such assistance,
Page 487 U. S. 948
without family, and without other sources of support, these
children had no actual means of escaping the padrones' service;
they had no choice but to work for their masters or risk physical
harm. The padrones took advantage of the special vulnerabilities of
their victims, placing them in situations where they were
physically unable to leave.
The history of the Padrone statute reflects Congress' view that
a victim's age or special vulnerability may be relevant in
determining whether a particular type or a certain degree of
physical or legal coercion is sufficient to hold that person to
involuntary servitude. For example, a child who is told he can go
home late at night in the dark through a strange area may be
subject to physical coercion that results in his staying, although
a competent adult plainly would not be. Similarly, it is possible
that threatening an incompetent with institutionalization or an
immigrant with deportation could constitute the threat of legal
coercion that induces involuntary servitude, even though such a
threat made to an adult citizen of normal intelligence would be too
implausible to produce involuntary servitude. But the Padrone
statute does not support the Court of Appeals' conclusion that
involuntary servitude can exist absent the use or threatened use of
physical or legal coercion to compel labor. Moreover, far from
broadening the definition of involuntary servitude for immigrants,
children, or mental incompetents, § 1584 eliminated any special
distinction among, or protection of, special classes of
victims.
Thus, the language and legislative history of § 1584 both
indicate that its reach should be limited to cases involving the
compulsion of services by the use or threatened use of physical or
legal coercion. Congress chose to use the language of the
Thirteenth Amendment in § 1584, and this was the scope of that
constitutional provision at the time § 1584 was enacted.
Page 487 U. S. 949
C
The Government has argued that we should adopt a broad
construction of "involuntary servitude," which would prohibit the
compulsion of services by any means that, from the victim's point
of view, either leaves the victim with no tolerable alternative but
to serve the defendant or deprives the victim of the power of
choice. Under this interpretation, involuntary servitude would
include compulsion through psychological coercion as well as almost
any other type of speech or conduct intentionally employed to
persuade a reluctant person to work.
This interpretation would appear to criminalize a broad range of
day-to-day activity. For example, the Government conceded at oral
argument that, under its interpretation, § 241 and § 1584 could be
used to punish a parent who coerced an adult son or daughter into
working in the family business by threatening withdrawal of
affection. Tr. of Oral Arg. 12. It has also been suggested that the
Government's construction would cover a political leader who uses
charisma to induce others to work without pay or a religious leader
who obtains personal services by means of religious indoctrination.
See Brief in Opposition 4; Brief for the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness of California, Inc., as
Amicus Curiae 25. As these hypotheticals suggest, the
Government's interpretation would delegate to prosecutors and
juries the inherently legislative task of determining what type of
coercive activities are so morally reprehensible that they should
be punished as crimes. It would also subject individuals to the
risk of arbitrary or discriminatory prosecution and conviction.
Moreover, as the Government would interpret the statutes, the
type of coercion prohibited would depend entirely upon the victim's
state of mind. Under such a view, the statutes would provide almost
no objective indication of the conduct or condition they prohibit,
and thus would fail to provide fair notice to ordinary people who
are required to conform
Page 487 U. S. 950
their conduct to the law. The Government argues that any such
difficulties are eliminated by a requirement that the defendant
harbor a specific intent to hold the victim in involuntary
servitude. But in light of the Government's failure to give any
objective content to its construction of the phrase "involuntary
servitude," this specific intent requirement amounts to little more
than an assurance that the defendant sought to do "an unknowable
something."
Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. at
325 U. S.
105.
In short, we agree with Judge Friendly's observation that
"[t]he most ardent believer in civil rights legislation might
not think that cause would be advanced by permitting the awful
machinery of the criminal law to be brought into play whenever an
employee asserts that his will to quit has been subdued by a threat
which seriously affects his future welfare, but as to which he
still has a choice, however painful."
United States v. Schackney, 333 F.2d at 487.
Accordingly, we conclude that Congress did not intend § 1584 to
encompass the broad and undefined concept of involuntary servitude
urged upon us by the Government.
JUSTICE BRENNAN would hold that § 1584 prohibits not only the
use or threatened use of physical or legal coercion, but also any
means of coercion "that actually succeeds in reducing the victim to
a condition of servitude resembling that in which slaves were held
before the Civil War."
Post at
487 U. S. 962.
This formulation would be useful if it were accompanied by a
recognition that the use or threat of physical or legal coercion
was a necessary incident of pre-Civil War slavery, and thus of the
"
slave-like' conditions of servitude Congress most clearly
intended to eradicate." Post at 487 U. S. 961.
Instead, finding no objective factor to be necessary to a
"slave-like condition," JUSTICE BRENNAN would delegate to
prosecutors and juries the task of determining what working
conditions are so oppressive as to amount to involuntary
servitude.
Page 487 U. S. 951
Such a definition of involuntary servitude is theoretically
narrower than that advocated by the Government, but it suffers from
the same flaws. The ambiguity in the phrase "slave-like conditions"
is not merely a question of degree, but instead concerns the very
nature of the conditions prohibited. Although we can be sure that
Congress intended to prohibit "
slave-like' conditions of
servitude," we have no indication that Congress thought that
conditions maintained by means other than by the use or threatened
use of physical or legal coercion were "slave-like." Whether other
conditions are so intolerable that they, too, should be deemed to
be involuntary is a value judgment that we think is best left for
Congress.
JUSTICE STEVENS concludes that Congress intended to delegate to
the judiciary the inherently legislative task of defining
"involuntary servitude" through case-by-case adjudication.
Post at
487 U. S. 965.
Neither the language nor the legislative history of § 1584 provides
an adequate basis for such a conclusion. Reference to the Sherman
Act does not advance JUSTICE STEVENS' argument, for that Act does
not authorize courts to develop standards for the imposition of
criminal punishment. To the contrary, this Court determined that
the objective standard to be used in deciding whether conduct
violates the Sherman Act -- the rule of reason -- was evinced by
the language and the legislative history of the Act.
Standard
Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U. S. 1,
221 U. S. 60
(1911). It is one thing to recognize that some degree of
uncertainty exists whenever judges and juries are called upon to
apply substantive standards established by Congress; it would be
quite another thing to tolerate the arbitrariness and unfairness of
a legal system in which the judges would develop the standards for
imposing criminal punishment on a case-by-case basis.
Sound principles of statutory construction lead us to reject the
amorphous definitions of involuntary servitude proposed by the
Government and by JUSTICES BRENNAN and STEVENS.
Page 487 U. S. 952
By construing § 241 and § 1584 to prohibit only compulsion of
services through physical or legal coercion, we adhere to the
time-honored interpretive guideline that uncertainty concerning the
ambit of criminal statutes should be resolved in favor of lenity.
See, e.g., McNally v. United States, 483 U.
S. 350 (1987);
Dowling v. United States,
473 U. S. 207,
473 U. S. 229
(1985);
Liparota v. United States, 471 U.
S. 419,
471 U. S. 427
(1985);
Rewis v. United States, 401 U.
S. 808,
401 U. S. 812
(1971). The purposes underlying the rule of lenity -- to promote
fair notice to those subject to the criminal laws, to minimize the
risk of selective or arbitrary enforcement, and to maintain the
proper balance between Congress, prosecutors, and courts -- are
certainly served by its application in this case.
III
Absent change by Congress, we hold that, for purposes of
criminal prosecution under § 241 or § 1584, the term "involuntary
servitude" necessarily means a condition of servitude in which the
victim is forced to work for the defendant by the use or threat of
physical restraint or physical injury, or by the use or threat of
coercion through law or the legal process. This definition
encompasses those cases in which the defendant holds the victim in
servitude by placing the victim in fear of such physical restraint
or injury or legal coercion. Our holding does not imply that
evidence of other means of coercion, or of poor working conditions,
or of the victim's special vulnerabilities is irrelevant in a
prosecution under these statutes. As we have indicated, the
vulnerabilities of the victim are relevant in determining whether
the physical or legal coercion or threats thereof could plausibly
have compelled the victim to serve. In addition, a trial court
could properly find that evidence of other means of coercion or of
extremely poor working conditions is relevant to corroborate
disputed evidence regarding the use or threatened use of physical
or legal coercion, the defendant's intention in using such means,
or the causal effect of such conduct. We hold only that the
jury
Page 487 U. S. 953
must be instructed that compulsion of services by the use or
threatened use of physical or legal coercion is a necessary
incident of a condition of involuntary servitude.
The District Court's instruction on involuntary servitude, which
encompassed other means of coercion, may have caused the Kozminskis
to be convicted for conduct that does not violate either statute.
Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the
convictions must be reversed and the case remanded for a new
trial.
We disagree with the Court of Appeals to the extent it
determined that a defendant could violate § 241 or § 1584 by means
other than the use or threatened use of physical or legal coercion
where the victim is a minor, an immigrant, or one who is mentally
incompetent. But because we believe the record contains sufficient
evidence of physical or legal coercion to enable a jury to convict
the Kozminskis even under the stricter standard of involuntary
servitude that we announce today, we agree with the Court of
Appeals that a judgment of acquittal is unwarranted.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed, and the case
is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Title 18 U.S.C. § 2 provides, in pertinent part, that
"[w]hoever commits an offense against the United States or aids,
abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures its commission, is
punishable as a principal."
[
Footnote 2]
The Government produced an expert witness who testified that the
Kozminskis' general treatment of the two men caused the men to
undergo an "involuntary conversion" to complete dependency. App. to
Pet. for Cert. 15a. The Court of Appeals held that this expert
testimony was admitted in violation of Federal Rule of Evidence
702. The Government has not sought review of this ruling, and we do
not address it.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL joins, concurring in
the judgment.
I agree with the Court that the construction given 18 U.S.C. §
1584 by the District Court and the Government either sweeps beyond
the intent of Congress or fails to define the criminal conduct with
sufficient specificity, and that a new trial under different
instructions is therefore required. I cannot, however, square the
Court's decision to add a physical or legal coercion limitation to
the statute with either the statutory text or legislative history,
and would adopt a different statutory construction that, I think,
defines the crime with sufficient specificity, but comports better
with the evident intent of Congress.
Page 487 U. S. 954
I
It is common ground among the parties and all the courts and
Justices that have interpreted § 1584 [
Footnote 2/1] that it encompasses, at a minimum, the
compulsion of labor via the use or threat of physical or legal
coercion. That much need not be belabored, for the use of the
master's whip and the power of the State to compel one human to
labor for another were clearly core elements of slavery that the
Thirteenth Amendment and its statutory progeny intended to
eliminate. As the Government points out, however, the language of
both the Thirteenth Amendment and § 1584 simply prohibits
"involuntary servitude," and contains no words limiting the
prohibition to servitude compelled by particular methods. "[The
Thirteenth] amendment denounces a status or condition, irrespective
of the manner or authority by which it is created."
Clyatt v.
United States, 197 U. S. 207,
197 U. S. 216
(1905).
Page 487 U. S. 955
If, as a factual matter, the use or threat of physical or legal
coercion were the only methods by which a condition of involuntary
servitude could be created, then the constitutional and statutory
text might provide some support for the Court's conclusion. But the
Court does not dispute that other methods can coerce involuntary
labor -- indeed, it is precisely the broad range of nonphysical
private activities capable of coercing labor that the Court cites
as the basis for its vagueness concerns.
See ante at
487 U. S. 949;
see also 487
U.S. 931fn2/5|>n. 5,
infra. I address those
concerns below, but the point here is only that those concerns,
however serious, are not textual concerns, for the text suggests no
grounds for distinguishing among different means of coercing
involuntary servitude. Nor do I know of any empirical grounds for
assuming that involuntary servitude can be coerced only by physical
or legal means. [
Footnote 2/2] To
the contrary, it would seem that certain psychological, economic,
and social means of coercion can be just as effective as physical
or legal means, particularly where the victims are especially
vulnerable, such as the mentally disabled victims in this case.
Surely threats to burn down a person's home or business or to rape
or kill a person's spouse or children can have greater coercive
impact than the mere threat of a beating, yet the coercive impact
of such threats turns not on any direct physical effect that would
be felt by the laborer, but on the psychological, emotional,
social, or economic injury the
Page 487 U. S. 956
laborer would suffer as a result of harm to his or her home,
business, or loved ones. And drug addiction or the weakness
resulting from a lack of food, sleep, or medical care can eliminate
the will to resist as readily as the fear of a physical blow.
Hypnosis, blackmail, fraud, deceit, and isolation are also
illustrative methods -- but it is unnecessary here to canvas the
entire spectrum of nonphysical machinations by which humans coerce
each other. It suffices to observe that one can imagine many
situations in which nonphysical means of private coercion can
subjugate the will of a servant.
Indeed, this case and others readily reveal that the typical
techniques now used to hold persons in slave-like conditions are
not limited to physical or legal means. The techniques in this
case, for example, included: disorienting the victims with frequent
verbal abuse and complete authoritarian domination; inducing poor
health by denying medical care and subjecting the victims to
substandard food, clothing, and living conditions; working the
victims from 3 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. with no days off, leaving them
tired and without free time to seek alternative work; denying the
victims any payment for their labor; and active efforts to isolate
the victims from contact with outsiders who might help them.
[
Footnote 2/3] Without considering
these techniques (and their particular effect on a mentally
disabled person), one would hardly have a complete picture of
whether the coercion inflicted on the victims was sufficient to
Page 487 U. S. 957
make their servitude involuntary. Other involuntary servitude
cases have also chronicled a variety of nonphysical and nonlegal
means of coercion including: trickery; isolation from friends,
family, transportation or other sources of food, shelter, clothing,
or jobs; denying pay or creating debt that is greater than the
worker's income by charging exorbitant rates for food, shelter, or
clothing; disorienting the victims by placing them in an unfamiliar
environment, barraging them with orders, and controlling every
detail of their lives; and weakening the victims with drugs,
alcohol, or by lack of food, sleep, or proper medical care.
See, e.g., United States v. Warren, 772 F.2d 827 (CA11
1985);
United States v. Mussry, 726 F.2d 1448 (CA9 1984);
United States v. Ingalls, 73 F.
Supp. 76 (SD Cal.1947). One presumes these methods of coercion
would not reappear with such depressing regularity if they were
ineffective. [
Footnote 2/4]
My reading of the statutory language as not limited to physical
or legal coercion is strongly bolstered by the legislative history.
Section 1584 was created out of the consolidation of the slave
trade statute and the padrone statute.
Ante at
487 U. S. 945.
I agree with the Government that the background of both those
statutes suggests that Congress intended to protect persons
subjected to involuntary servitude by forms of coercion more subtle
than force. The padrone statute, for example, was designed to
outlaw what was known as the "padrone system" whereby padrones in
Italy inveigled from their parents young boys who the padrones then
used without pay as beggars, bootblacks, or street musicians. Once
in this country, without relatives to turn to, the children had
little choice but to submit to the demands of those asserting
authority over them, yet this form of coercion was deemed
sufficient -- without any evidence of physical or legal coercion --
to hold the boys in "involuntary servitude."
See
Page 487 U. S.
958
United States v. Ancarola, 1 F. 676, 682-684 (CC SDNY
1880). Given the nature of the system the padrone statute aimed to
eliminate, the statute's use of the words "involuntary servitude"
demonstrates not that the statute was "aimed only at compulsion of
service through physical or legal coercion,"
ante at
487 U. S. 947,
but that Congress understood "involuntary servitude" to cover
servitude compelled through other means of coercion. [
Footnote 2/5] Indeed, the official title of
the padrone statute was "An act to protect persons of foreign birth
against forcible constraint
or involuntary servitude," Act
of June 23, 1874, ch. 464, 18 Stat. 251 (emphasis added); 2
Cong.Rec. 4443 (1874), and the legislative history describes the
statute as broadly "intended to prevent the practice of enslaving,
buying, selling, or
using Italian children,"
ibid. (Rep. Cessna) (emphasis added). [
Footnote 2/6]
Page 487 U. S. 959
In light of this legislative history, the Court of Appeals below
concluded that § 1584 must at least be construed to criminalize
nonphysical means of private coercion used to obtain the services
of particularly vulnerable victims such as minors, immigrants, or
the mentally disabled. 821 F.2d 1186, 1190-1192 (CA6 1987). I agree
with the Court, however, that this creation of specially protected
classes of victims is both textually unsupported and inconsistent
with Congress' decision to eliminate such distinctions in enacting
§ 1584,
ante at
487 U. S. 950,
and thus turn to the task of defining what I regard as the proper
construction of the statute.
II
Based on an analysis of the statutory language and legislative
history similar to that set forth in
487 U.
S. the Government concludes that § 1584 criminalizes any
conduct that intentionally coerces involuntary service. It is, of
course, not easy to articulate when a person's actions are
"involuntary." In some minimalist sense, the laborer always has a
choice, no matter what the threat: the laborer can choose to work,
or take a beating; work, or go to jail. We can all agree that these
choices are so illegitimate that any decision to work is
"involuntary." But other coercive choices, even if physical or
legal in nature, might present closer questions. Happily, our task
is not to resolve the philosophical meaning of free will, but to
determine what coercion Congress would have regarded as sufficient
to deem any resulting labor "involuntary" within the meaning of §
1584.
The Government concludes that the statute encompasses any
coercion that either leaves the victim with "no tolerable
alternative" but to serve the defendant or deprives the victim of
"the capacity for rational calculation." Brief for United States
19, 33. As the Court notes, however, such a statutory construction
potentially sweeps in a broad range of conduct that Congress could
not have intended to criminalize.
Ante at
487 U. S. 949.
The Government attempts to avoid many of
Page 487 U. S. 960
these problems by stressing that a victim does not lack
"tolerable alternatives" when he simply has "no attractive or
painless options"; the alternatives must be as bad for the victim
as physical injury. Brief for United States 33. One can, however,
imagine troublesome applications of that test, such as the employer
who coerces an employee to remain at her job by threatening her
with bad recommendations if she leaves, the religious leader who
admonishes his adherents that, unless they work for the church,
they will rot in hell, or the husband who relegates his wife to
years of housework by threatening to seek custody of the children
if she leaves. Surely being unable to work in one's chosen field,
suffering eternal damnation, or losing one's children can be far
worse than taking a beating, but are all these instances of
involuntary servitude? The difficulty with the Government's test is
that although nonphysical forms of private coercion can indeed be
as traumatic as physical force, their coercive impact is more
highly individualized than that of physical and legal threats. I
thus agree with the Court that criminal punishment cannot turn on a
case-by-case assessment of whether the alternatives confronting an
individual are sufficiently intolerable to render any continued
service "involuntary." Such an approach either renders the test
hopelessly subjective (if it relies on the victim's assessment of
what is tolerable) or delegates open-ended authority to prosecutors
and juries (if it relies on what a reasonable person would consider
intolerable). [
Footnote 2/7]
Similarly, I agree with the Court that the difficulty of
distinguishing the victim deprived of "the capacity for rational
calculation" from the victim influenced by love,
Page 487 U. S. 961
charisma, persuasive argument, or religious fervor is
sufficiently great that the standard fails to define the criminal
conduct with sufficient specificity.
The solution, however, lies not in ignoring those forms of
coercion that are perhaps less universal in their effect than
physical or legal coercion, but in focusing on the "slave-like"
conditions of servitude Congress most clearly intended to
eradicate. That the statute prohibits "involuntary servitude,"
rather than "involuntary service," provides no small insight into
the central evil the statute unambiguously aimed to eliminate.
[
Footnote 2/8] For "servitude"
generally denotes a relation of complete domination and lack of
personal liberty resembling the conditions in which slaves were
held prior to the Civil War. Thus, in 1910 and 1949, Webster's
defined "servitude" as the
"[c]ondition of a slave; slavery; serfdom; bondage; state of
compulsory subjection to a master. . . . In French and English
Colonies of the 17th and 18th centuries, the condition of
transported or colonial laborers who, under contract or by custom,
rendered service with temporary and limited loss of political and
personal liberty."
Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language.
And in 1913 and 1944, Funk and Wagnalls defined "servitude" as
"[t]he condition of a slave; a state of subjection to a master or
to arbitrary power of any kind," and cited the same colonial
practice. Funk and Wagnalls, New Standard Dictionary of the
Page 487 U. S. 962
English Language. [
Footnote 2/9]
Our cases have expressed the same understanding.
"The word servitude is of larger meaning than slavery, as the
latter is popularly understood in this country, and the obvious
purpose was to forbid all shades and conditions of African
slavery."
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 69
(1873).
"[T]he term involuntary servitude was intended to cover those
forms of compulsory labor akin to African slavery which, in
practical operation, would tend to produce like undesirable
results."
Butler v. Perry, 240 U. S. 328,
240 U. S. 332
(1916).
See also Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.
S. 219,
219 U. S. 241
(1911);
Hodges v. United States, 203 U. S.
1,
203 U. S. 17
(1906).
I thus conclude that whatever irresolvable ambiguity there may
be in determining (for forms of coercion less universal than
physical or legal coercion) the degree of coercion Congress would
have regarded as sufficient to render any resulting labor
"involuntary" within the meaning of § 1584, Congress clearly
intended to encompass coercion of any form that actually succeeds
in reducing the victim to a condition of servitude resembling that
in which slaves were held before the Civil War. [
Footnote 2/10] While no one factor is dispositive,
complete
Page 487 U. S. 963
domination over all aspects of the victim's life, oppressive
working and living conditions, and lack of pay or personal freedom
are the hallmarks of that slave-like condition of servitude.
Focusing on such a slave-like condition not only accords with the
type of servitude Congress unambiguously intended to eliminate, but
also comports well with the policies behind the statute, for the
concern that coerced laborers will be unable to relieve themselves
from harsh work conditions by changing employers is less likely to
be implicated if that laborer has a normal job with time off,
personal freedom, and some money, and has contact with other
people. [
Footnote 2/11]
This focus on the actual conditions of servitude also provides
an objective benchmark by which to judge either the
"intolerability" of alternatives or the victim's capacity for
"rational" thought: the alternatives can justifiably be deemed
intolerable, or the victim can justifiably be deemed incapable of
thinking rationally, if the victim actually felt compelled to live
in a slave-like condition of servitude. True, in marginal cases, it
may well be difficult to determine whether a slave-like condition
of servitude existed, but the ambiguity will be a matter of degree
on a factual spectrum, [
Footnote
2/12] not, as in the "no
Page 487 U. S. 964
tolerable alternative" or "improper or wrongful conduct" tests,
a matter of value on which one would expect wide variation among
different prosecutors or jurors. The risk of selective or arbitrary
enforcement is thus minimized, and the defendant who, as a result
of intentional coercion, employs persons in conditions resembling
slavery, has fair notice regarding the applicability of the
criminal laws. And many of the more troublesome applications of the
Government's open-ended test would be avoided. For example, § 1584
would not encompass a claim that a regime of religious
indoctrination psychologically coerced adherents to work for the
church unless it could also be shown that the adherents worked in a
slave-like condition of servitude and (given the intent
requirement) that the religious indoctrination was not motivated by
a desire to spread sincerely held religious beliefs, but rather by
the intent to coerce adherents to labor in a slave-like condition
of servitude.
This restrictive construction of limiting the statute to
slave-like conditions, although necessary to comply with the rule
of lenity, given the inherent ambiguity of the statute
Page 487 U. S. 965
where the coercion is neither physical nor legal, is not,
however, necessary where the defendant compels involuntary service
by the use or threat of legal or physical means. Because the
coercive impact of legal or physical coercion is less
individualized than other forms of coercion, we need be less
concerned about selective or arbitrary enforcement; and the
defendant who intentionally employs physical or legal means to
coerce labor has fair notice his acts may be criminal. The
ambiguity justifying a restrictive reading is, moreover, not
present when the means of coercion are those at the heart of the
institution of slavery, and it seems clear that Congress would have
regarded a victim working under a legal or physical threat as
serving in a condition of servitude, however limited in time or
scope. [
Footnote 2/13]
III
In sum, I conclude that § 1584 reaches cases where the defendant
intentionally coerced the victim's labor by the use or threat of
legal or physical means or the defendant intentionally coerced the
victim into a slave-like condition of servitude by other forms of
coercion or by rendering the defendant incapable of rational
choice. I therefore concur in the judgment.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The District Court instructed the jury to incorporate the
definition of "involuntary servitude" from § 1584 into 18 U.S.C. §
241. The parties did not challenge this incorporation either below
or in this Court, but rather argued only that the § 1584 definition
the District Court incorporated was incorrect. 821 F.2d 1186, 1188,
n. 3 (CA6 1987). I therefore believe it appropriate to address only
the proper construction of § 1584. I note also that the § 241 count
of the indictment charged a conspiracy to interfere with the
"free exercise and enjoyment of the right and privilege secured
to [the victims] by the Constitution
and laws of the
United States to be free from involuntary servitude as provided by
the Thirteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution."
App. 177 (emphasis added). Thus, the parties may have assumed
that § 1584 is a "la[w] of the United States" specifying the
content of the constitutional right to be free from involuntary
servitude,
cf. ante at
487 U. S. 941,
and that, accordingly, if respondents' actions violated § 1584, the
conspiracy to engage in those actions would necessarily constitute
a violation of § 241. Such an assumption does not strike me as at
all unreasonable. At any rate, for whatever reason, the parties
never raised the argument that the definition of "involuntary
servitude" under § 241 should differ from that under § 1584, and I
think it imprudent to decide that issue in the first instance in
this Court and without briefing.
[
Footnote 2/2]
In other contexts, we have recognized that nonphysical coercion
can induce involuntary action. For example, we have interpreted the
federal crime of kidnaping to include the imposition of "an
unlawful physical
or mental restraint" to confine the
victim against his will.
Chatwin v. United States,
326 U. S. 455,
326 U. S. 460
(1946) (emphasis added). Similarly, in determining when confessions
are involuntary, we have noted
"coercion can be mental as well physical. . . . [T]he efficiency
of the rack and the thumbscrew can be matched, given the proper
subject, by more sophisticated modes of 'persuasion.'"
Blackburn v. Alabama, 361 U. S. 199,
361 U. S. 206
(1960). "When a suspect speaks because he is overborne, it is
immaterial whether he has been subjected to a physical or a mental
ordeal."
Watts v. Indiana, 338 U. S.
49,
338 U. S. 53
(1949) (plurality opinion of Frankfurter, J.).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Although not detailed by the Court, the Government introduced
evidence that the Kozminskis: (1) ripped a phone off the wall in
the barn when one of the victims was caught using it, and did not
simply "discourage" contact with relatives, but falsely told
relatives who asked to speak to the victims that the victims did
not want to see them, and falsely told the victims that their
relatives were not interested in them; (2) falsely told neighbors
that the victims were in their custody as wards of the State; and
(3) refused to allow the victims to seek medical care, even when
one was gored by a bull and the tip of the other's thumb was cut
off (both victims eventually became very ill while serving the
Kozminskis). The Court also neglects to mention that the Government
has conceded that the victims were not forcibly held to work on the
farm. 821 F.2d at 1188.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Because the Court today adopts an expansive but rather obscure
understanding of what "physical" coercion encompasses,
see
nn.
487
U.S. 931fn2/5|>5,
487
U.S. 931fn2/12|>12,
infra, it is difficult to tell
which, if any, of the means of coercion described in the last two
paragraphs the Court would deem "physical."
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Court attempts to evade the inconsistency between its
interpretation of § 1584 and the coercion covered by the padrone
statute by asserting that the child victims of the padrone system
were in a "situatio[n] involving physical . . . coercion."
Ante at
487 U. S. 947.
Yet the coercion involved, even as the Court describes it, was
obviously psychological, social, and economic in nature:
"These young children were literally stranded in large, hostile
cities in a foreign country. They were given no education or other
assistance toward self-sufficiency."
Ibid. Although it is heartening that the Court
recognizes that strange environs and the lack of money, maturity,
education, or family support can establish the coercion necessary
for involuntary servitude, labeling such coercion "physical" is, at
best, strained, and (other than making the legislative history fit
the Court's statutory interpretation) accomplishes little but the
elimination of whatever certainty the "physical or legal coercion"
test would otherwise provide.
See 487
U.S. 931fn2/12|>n. 12,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The legislative history of the slave trade statute is less
conclusive, but, in explaining the necessity of reenacting this ban
on importing slaves despite the abolition of slavery and without
the statute's original limitation to blacks, Senator Heyburn did
make clear that the new statute was intended to protect those who
come here
"without being a party to the disposition of their services or
the control of their rights, whether they be children of
irresponsible years and conditions or whether they be people who,
because of their environment or the condition of their lives,
cannot protect themselves."
42 Cong.Rec. 1115 (1908).
[
Footnote 2/7]
These problems are not solved by limiting the Government's test
to
"
improper or wrongful conduct that is intended to
cause, and does cause, the other person to believe that he or she
has no alternative but to perform the labor,"
United States v. Mussry, 726 F.2d 1448, 1453 (CA9 1984)
(emphasis added), for the criminal has no way of knowing what
conduct the prosecutor or jury will deem sufficiently improper or
wrongful to criminalize.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Because, as a criminal statute, § 1584 must be interpreted to
conform with special doctrines concerning notice, vagueness, and
the rule of lenity, the issue here focuses on what
central
evil the words "involuntary servitude" unambiguously encompass in a
way that can be defined with specificity. The interpretation of
"involuntary servitude" here is thus necessarily narrower than it
would be if the issue were what enforceable civil rights the
Thirteenth Amendment provides of its own force, or if the issue
here concerned the scope of Congress' Thirteenth Amendment
authority to pass laws for abolishing all badges or incidents of
slavery or servitude.
See Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co.,
392 U. S. 409,
392 U. S.
437-444 (1968).
[
Footnote 2/9]
See also 9 Oxford English Dictionary 522 (1933) ("The
condition of being a slave or serf, or of being the property of
another person; absence of personal freedom. Often, and now
usually, with the added notion of subjection to the necessity of
excessive labor"); Webster's American Dictionary of the English
Language 1207 (1869) ("the state of voluntary or involuntary
subjection to a master; service; the condition of a slave; slavery;
bondage; hence, a state of slavish dependence").
[
Footnote 2/10]
The case involving the crime of holding to slavery that is most
contemporaneous with the 1948 passage of § 1584 defined a slave
mainly in terms of total domination of person and services and lack
of freedom.
United States v. Ingalls, 73 F. Supp.
76, 78-79 (SD Cal.1947).
Significantly, the padrone statute, which encompassed coercion
through other than physical or legal means,
see supra at
487 U. S.
957-958, was designed to prevent boys from being "held
in a condition of practical slavery," 42 Cong.Rec. 1122 (1908)
(Sen. Lodge), or "in something kindred to slavery," 2 Cong.Rec. 2
(1873) (Sen. Sumner).
See also United States v. Ancarola,
1 F. 676, 682-683 (CC SDNY 1880) (determining whether such boys
were held to involuntary servitude by relying on the defendant's
control over the boys and his use of them for his profit and to the
injury of their morals). These slave-like conditions can presumably
be contrasted with the conditions normally implicated by "
the
right of parents and guardians to the custody of their minor
children or wards.'" Ante at 487 U. S. 944,
quoting Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.
S. 275, 165 U. S. 282
(1897).
[
Footnote 2/11]
"The undoubted aim of the Thirteenth Amendment . . . was not
merely to end slavery, but to maintain a system of completely free
and voluntary labor throughout the United States. . . . [I]n
general, the defense against oppressive hours, pay, working
conditions, or treatment is the right to change employers. When the
master can compel and the laborer cannot escape the obligation to
go on, there is no power below to redress and no incentive above to
relieve a harsh overlordship or unwholesome conditions of
labor."
Pollock v. Williams, 322 U. S. 4,
322 U. S. 17-18
(1944).
[
Footnote 2/12]
"That there may be marginal cases in which it is difficult to
determine the side of the line on which a particular fact situation
falls is no sufficient reason to hold the language too ambiguous to
define a criminal offense."
United States v. Petrillo, 332 U. S.
1,
332 U. S. 7 (1947)
(rejecting vagueness challenge to statute making it a crime to
coerce the employment of "persons in excess of the number of
employees needed"). Ambiguity over such matters of degree is not
obviated by the Court's test, since it requires a determination of
whether the degree of physical or legal coercion used was
sufficient to compel "involuntary" service.
Cf. Steward Machine
Co. v. Davis, 301 U. S. 548,
301 U. S. 590
(1937). Indeed, the Court introduces a far more profound
uncertainty by adopting an understanding of "physical" coercion
that encompasses a broad array of what might commonly be understood
to be nonphysical forms of coercion.
See 487
U.S. 931fn2/5|>n. 5,
supra. Although these forms of
coercion certainly deserve to be encompassed within § 1584, it is
at best obscure under the Court's test what line divides the forms
of coercion that are covered by § 1584 from those that are not,
because the Court never defines its rather unique understanding of
"physical" coercion. Instead, the Court seems to use "physical" as
no more than a formal label it applies to those forms of coercion
it deems sufficiently egregious to criminalize. Such a mode of
analysis is, of course, conclusory. Worse, it merely reintroduces
all the difficulties of the Government's test in a more obscure and
exacerbated form.
[
Footnote 2/13]
Like the Court, I put aside the exceptional cases it discusses
ante at
487 U. S.
944.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BLACKMUN joins, concurring in
the judgment.
No matter what we write, this case must be remanded for a new
trial, because the Court of Appeals held that expert testimony was
erroneously admitted and the Government has not asked us to review
that holding. My colleagues' opinions attempting to formulate an
all-encompassing definition of the term "involuntary servitude"
demonstrate that this legislative task is not an easy one. They
also persuade me that Congress probably intended the definition to
be developed in
Page 487 U. S. 966
the common law tradition of case-by-case adjudication, much as
the term "restraint of trade" has been construed in an equally
vague criminal statute.
In rejecting an argument that the Sherman Act was
unconstitutionally vague, Justice Holmes wrote:
"But, apart from the common law as to restraint of trade thus
taken up by the statute, the law is full of instances where a man's
fate depends on his estimating rightly, that is, as the jury
subsequently estimates it, some matter of degree. If his judgment
is wrong, not only may he incur a fine or a short imprisonment, as
here; he may incur the penalty of death. 'An act causing death may
be murder, manslaughter, or misadventure according to the degree of
danger attending it' by common experience in the circumstances
known to the actor."
"The very meaning of the fiction of implied malice in such cases
at common law was that a man might have to answer with his life for
consequences which he neither intended nor foresaw."
Commonwealth v. Pierce, 138 Massachusetts, 165, 178
[(1884)].
Commonwealth v. Chance, 174 Massachusetts, 245,
252 [(1899)].
"The criterion in such cases is to examine whether common social
duty would, under the circumstances, have suggested a more
circumspect conduct."
"[1 E. East, Pleas of the Crown 262 (1803)]."
Nash v. United States, 229 U.
S. 373,
229 U. S. 377
(1913).
A similar approach to the statute before us in this case was
expressed by Judge Guy in his dissenting opinion in the Court of
Appeals:
"It is clear that 18 U.S.C. § 1584 is lacking in definitional
precision when it makes criminal the holding of one in 'involuntary
servitude.' Whether this is the genius of this section or a
deficiency to be cured by judicial legislation is not so clear. The
majority apparently concludes it is a deficiency, and proceeds to
cure it by
Page 487 U. S. 967
substituting an arbitrary definition that raises more questions
than it answers. In discussing this specific section, Judge Dimock,
who concurred in
Shackney, prophetically wrote:"
"To have an arbitrary classification which will resolve with
equal facility all of the cases that would arise under the statute
is indeed a tempting prospect. It is much harder to have to work
under a statute which will raise difficult questions in the
borderline cases inevitable whenever the application of a statute
depends upon an appraisal of the state of the human mind. 333 F.2d
at 488."
"
* * * *"
"This is not an easy definitional question, and it is one on
which reasonable minds and federal circuits might differ. I write
in dissent, however, primarily because I believe the majority has
rewritten, rather than interpreted, 18 U.S.C. § 1584."
821 F.2d 1186, 1212-1213 (CA6 1987). I have a similar reaction
to both JUSTICE O'CONNOR's opinion for the Court and to JUSTICE
BRENNAN's concurring opinion. They are both unduly concerned with
hypothetical cases that are not before the Court, and that, indeed,
are far removed from the facts of this case. Although these
hypothetical cases present interesting and potentially difficult
philosophical puzzles, I doubt that they have any significant
relationship to real world decisions that will be faced by possible
defendants, prosecutors, or jurors. [
Footnote 3/1]
Page 487 U. S. 968
The text of § 1584 identifies three components of this criminal
offense. [
Footnote 3/2] First, the
defendant must have acted "knowingly and willfully." As the
District Court instructed the jury, the Government has the burden
of proving that the defendants had "the specific intent" to commit
the offense. [
Footnote 3/3]
Infra at
487 U. S. 975.
Second, they must have imposed an "involuntary" condition upon
their victims. As the District Court correctly stated, the term
"involuntary" means "
done contrary to or without choice' --
`compulsory' -- `not subject to control of the will.'"
Infra at 487 U. S. 971.
Third, the condition that must have been deliberately imposed on
the victims against their will must have been a condition of
"servitude." As the District Court explained, the term "servitude"
means
"'[a] condition in which a person lacks liberty especially to
determine
Page 487 U. S. 969
one's course of action or way of life' -- 'slavery' -- 'the
state of being subject to a master.' [
Footnote 3/4]"
Ibid. The judge further instructed the jury that the
defendants could not be found guilty unless they had used
"a means of compulsion . . . sufficient in kind and degree to
subject a person having the same general station in life as the
alleged victims to believe they had no reasonable means of escape,
and no choice except to remain in the service of the employer."
Infra at
487 U. S.
972.
I agree with JUSTICE BRENNAN that the reach of the statute
extends beyond compulsion that is accompanied by actual or
threatened physical means or by the threat of legal action.
See
ante at
487 U. S.
954-959. The statute applies equally to "physical or
mental restraint,"
cf. Chatwin v. United States,
326 U. S. 455,
326 U. S. 460
(1946), and I would not distinguish between the two kinds of
compulsion. However, unlike JUSTICE BRENNAN, I would not impose the
additional requirement in cases involving mental restraint that the
victim be coerced into a "slave-like condition of servitude." To
the extent the phrase "slave-like condition of servitude" simply
mirrors the term "involuntary servitude," I see no reason for
imposing this additional level of definitional complexity. In my
view, individuals attempting to conform their conduct to the rule
of law, prosecutors, and jurors are just as capable of
understanding and applying the term "involuntary servitude" as they
are of applying the concept of "slave-like condition." Moreover, to
the extent "slave-like condition of servitude" means something less
than "involuntary servitude," I see no
Page 487 U. S. 970
basis for reading the statute more narrowly than written.
Instead, in determining whether the victims' servitude was
"involuntary," I would allow the jury to consider the "totality of
the circumstances," just as we do when it is necessary to decide
whether a custodial statement is voluntary or involuntary,
see,
e.g., Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U. S. 385,
437 U. S. 401
(1978). In this case, however, the burden is of course on the
Government to prove that the victims did not accept the terms of
their existence voluntarily.
In sum, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the
Government,
see Glasser v. United States, 315 U. S.
60,
315 U. S. 80
(1942), I am persuaded that the statute gave the defendants fair
notice that their conduct was unlawful, and that the trial court's
instructions, read as a whole, adequately informed the jury as to
the elements of the crime. I think they were fairly convicted.
Nevertheless, as I stated at the outset, I must concur in the
Court's judgment.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Although the Government conceded at oral argument that "a parent
who coerced an adult son or daughter into working in the family
business by threatening withdrawal of affection" might be in
violation of the statute,
ante at
487 U. S. 949,
I cannot believe that we need adopt a narrow construction of § 1584
to avoid uncertainty as to such cases. No parent would expect to be
prosecuted, no responsible prosecutor would seek indictment, and no
reasonable jury would convict, for this sort of conduct. Of course,
increasingly difficult hypothetical cases can be developed to a
point at which reasonable persons may disagree. No legal rule,
however, produces certainty, and I am convinced that § 1584 is
sufficiently definite on its face to apprise the public of what it
may and may not do. The seemingly unambiguous rule adopted by the
majority itself admits of grey area. The Court asserts:
"The history of the Padrone statute reflects Congress' view that
a victim's age or special vulnerability may be relevant in
determining whether a particular type or a certain degree of
physical or legal coercion is sufficient to hold that person to
involuntary servitude."
Ante at
487 U. S. 948.
Thus, the public is left to ask how young is too young, how
vulnerable is too vulnerable, and how much coercion is permissible
in light of the victim's age or vulnerability? The answer to each
question, however, like the question presented in this case, is
best -- if not only -- resolved on a case-by-case basis.
[
Footnote 3/2]
As the Court of Appeals noted,
"[t]he trial court instructed the jury to incorporate the
definition of involuntary servitude from § 1584 into § 241, which
encompasses the Thirteenth Amendment."
821 F.2d 1186, 1188, n. 3 (CA6 1987). Because the parties did
not challenge this process of incorporation, the Court of Appeals
did not reach the question whether § 241 requires a different set
of instructions from § 1584 concerning the meaning of "involuntary
servitude."
Ibid. Because our decision in this case does
not affect the ultimate disposition -- that is, a new trial is
necessary in any event -- I would not extend our analysis beyond
the scope of the question considered by the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 3/3]
The full text of the relevant jury instructions appears as an
487
U.S. 931app|>appendix to this opinion.
[
Footnote 3/4]
This definition of "servitude" closely resembles the definitions
found in the dictionaries that JUSTICE BRENNAN considers in drawing
the conclusion that psychological coercion is only covered by the
statute if accompanied by a "
slave-like' conditio[n] of
servitude." See ante at 487 U. S. 961,
and n. 9 ("[I]n 1910 and 1949, Webster's defined `servitude' as the
`[c]ondition of a slave; slavery; serfdom; bondage; state of
compulsory subjection to a master. . . . In French and English
Colonies of the 17th and 18th centuries, the condition of
transported or colonial laborers who, under contract or by custom,
rendered service with temporary and limited loss of political and
personal liberty'").
|
487
U.S. 931app|
APPENDIX
RELEVANT JURY INSTRUCTIONS
(App. to Pet. for Cert. 108a-114a.)
"[Court:] In order to find a particular defendant guilty as
charged in Counts II and III of the Indictment, the government must
prove beyond a reasonable doubt each of the following elements as
to Robert Fulmer for Count II and as to Louis Molitoris for Count
III:"
"1. That a particular defendant held or aided and abetted in the
holding of Robert Fulmer under Count II or Louis Molitoris under
Count III to involuntary servitude for a term."
"2. That the act or acts of the defendants were done knowingly
or willfully."
"If you find that the government has proved the above two
elements as to a particular defendant and as to a particular
Page 487 U. S. 971
count beyond a reasonable doubt, then your verdict will be
guilty as to that count and that defendant."
"If, however, you find that the government has failed to prove
either or both of the elements set forth above as to a particular
defendant and as to a particular count, then your verdict will be
not guilty as to that defendant and that count."
"As stated before, the burden is always upon the prosecution to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt every element essential to the
crime charged; the law never imposes upon the defendant in a
criminal case the burden or duty of calling any witnesses or of
producing any evidence."
"A person who willfully aids and abets another in the commission
of an offense is punishable as a principal."
"In order to aid and abet another to commit a crime, it is
necessary that the accused willfully associate himself in some way
with the criminal venture, and willfully participate in it as in
something he wishes to bring about; that is to say, that he
willfully seeks, by some act or omission, to make the criminal
venture succeed."
"You, of course, may not find a defendant guilty as to a
particular count unless you find beyond a reasonable doubt that
every element of the particular offense as defined in these
instructions was committed by some person or persons, and that that
defendant participated in its commission."
"The government is not required to prove that a defendant
personally committed the offense charged. Rather, the government
bears the burden of showing (1) that every element of a particular
offense as defined in these instructions was committed by some
person or persons, and (2) that a defendant (a) was that person or
one of those persons, or (b) aided and abetted that person or those
persons in the commission of the offense."
"Involuntary servitude consists of two terms."
"Involuntary means 'done contrary to or without choice' --
'compulsory' -- 'not subject to control of the will.' "
Page 487 U. S. 972
"Servitude means '[a] condition in which a person lacks liberty,
especially to determine one's course of action or way of life' --
'slavery' -- 'the state of being subject to a master.'"
"Involuntary servitude involves a condition of having some of
the incidents of slavery."
"It may include situations in which persons are forced to return
to employment by law."
"It may also include persons who are physically restrained by
guards from leaving employment."
"It may also include situations involving either physical and
other coercion, or a combination thereof, used to detain persons in
employment."
"It may include situations in which the coercive acts or words
cause persons in employment to believe they cannot freely leave
employment if the acts are done or the words spoken with the intent
to cause this result."
"In other words, based on all the evidence, it will be for you
to determine if there was a means of compulsion used, sufficient in
kind and degree, to subject a person having the same general
station in life as the alleged victims to believe they had no
reasonable means of escape, and no choice except to remain in the
service of the employer. In this respect, you are instructed that
you may find that not all persons are of like courage and firmness.
You may consider the character and condition of life of the
parties, the relative inferiority or inequality between the persons
who perform the service and the persons exercising the force or
influence to compel its performance, and the defendants' knowledge
of these matters."
"The matter involves the knowledge and intent of the person
charged, as well as the character and understanding of the alleged
victim."
"It is not part of the Government's burden of proof, in order
for you to return a verdict of guilty, to show that an alleged
victim named in the Indictment made an attempt to escape. You may,
however, consider any evidence of escape attempts, as well as the
opportunities to leave and the voluntary
Page 487 U. S. 973
remaining or returning as bearing upon the voluntariness of the
person's labor."
"In determining whether the service was involuntary, you are
instructed that it makes no difference whether or not the persons
alleged to have been held in involuntary servitude initially agreed
voluntarily to work. If a person desires to withdraw, and then is
forced to remain and perform services against his will, his service
is involuntary."
"In the same sense, the failure to pay a person who voluntarily
performs labor does not transform that labor into an 'involuntary
servitude.'"
"Of course, an employer can use any legitimate means to retain
the services of an employee, such as offering the employee
benefits, or seeking to convince the employee that he would be
better off if he continued in his employment."
"Payment of wages to the alleged victims or the conferring of
other benefits on them is of course a proper means of attempting to
retain their services. You should take evidence of such payment or
benefits into account in your determination of whether or not the
improper conduct of a particular defendant, if you find such
improper conduct to have occurred, was a necessary cause of the
decision of one or both of the alleged victims to remain on the
farm. However, the fact that the alleged victims were paid or were
given other benefits does not necessarily mean that they were not
held in involuntary servitude."
"As I have instructed you, you must consider all of the factors
that might have influenced the decision of both of the alleged
victims to remain on the farm. The desire to receive wages and
benefits may have been one such factor. However, you must still
determine whether or not the improper conduct of a defendant, if
any, was a necessary cause of the decision of one or both of the
alleged victims to remain."
"In order to find that a particular defendant is guilty of
holding one or both of the alleged victims in involuntary
servitude, in addition to the necessary coercion and intention
on
Page 487 U. S. 974
the part of the defendants, you must find that those means were
an actual and necessary cause of the decision of one or both of the
alleged victims to continue working for the Kozminskis. In other
words, you must determine if one or both of the alleged victims
would have left the employment if they had not been subjected to
improper conduct on the part of that particular defendant."
"In determining whether or not the improper means was a
necessary cause of the decision of the alleged victim to continue
working for the Kozminskis, you must evaluate all of the factors
that might have affected that decision, including any legitimate
means used by that defendant to convince the alleged victim to
retain the employment. After considering all of the factors that
might have affected that decision, you must decide whether or not
the decision of either or both of the alleged victims to remain on
the farm would have been made if improper means had not been used
by a particular defendant."
"If you determine that either or both of the alleged victims
would have continued to work for the Kozminskis regardless of the
use of improper means by that particular defendant, then you must
find that the improper conduct of that defendant was not a
necessary cause of the decision of both victims to retain their
employment."
"In making the determination involving involuntary servitude,
you may consider all of the evidence in this case to determine if a
particular defendant held or aided and abetted in the holding of
either Louis Molitoris or Robert Arthur Fulmer to involuntary
servitude."
"I caution you again, as I have before, however, the defendants
are not on trial for failure to comply with minimum wage laws, or
for violating certain social regulations, or for assault or
battery, or for using bad language in a coercive way. Neither are
they on trial for neglect, for misappropriation of money, or for
breach of an employment contract. Your attention
Page 487 U. S. 975
must be directed to the discrete charge outlined in these
instructions."
"You will note that Element One requires proof that the victim
was held 'for a term,' that is, a period of time. In that respect,
I instruct you that it is not necessary for the Government to prove
any given specific term of an appreciable length of time. If the
person was held for any term, regardless of how short such term may
be, it would come within the 'held for a term' provisions of the
statute."
"Element Two requires that the acts of the defendants were done
knowingly and willfully."
"An act, omission, or failure to act is done 'knowingly' if done
voluntarily and intentionally, and not because of mistake or
accident or other innocent reason."
"The word 'knowingly' is used to insure that no one will be
convicted for an act done because of mistake, or accident, or other
innocent reason."
"An act, omission, or failure to act is done 'willfully' if done
voluntarily and intentionally, and with the specific intent to do
something the law forbids; that is to say, with bad purpose either
to disobey or to disregard the law."
"You will note that to act knowingly requires that the act be
done intentionally. The crimes charged requires proof of specific
intent before a defendant can be convicted. Specific intent, as the
term implies, means more than the general intent to commit the act.
To establish specific intent, the government must prove that the
defendant knowingly did an act which the law forbids, or knowingly
failed to do an act which the law requires, purposely intending to
violate the law."
"Such intent may be determined from all the facts and
circumstances surrounding the case. Specific intent must be proved
beyond a reasonable doubt before there can be a conviction."
"Intent ordinarily may not be proved directly, because there is
no way of fathoming or scrutinizing the operations of
Page 487 U. S. 976
the human mind. But, you may infer the defendant's intent from
the surrounding circumstances."
"You may consider any statement made by the defendant, and all
other facts and circumstances in evidence which indicate the state
of mind. You may consider it reasonable to draw the inference and
find that a person intends the natural and probable consequences of
acts knowingly done or knowingly omitted."
"As I have said, it is entirely up to you to decide what facts
to find from the evidence."
"You will note that the Indictment charges that the offense was
committed 'on or about' a certain date. The proof need not
establish with certainty the exact date of the alleged offense. It
is sufficient if the evidence in the case establishes, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the offense was committed on a date
reasonably near the date alleged."
"That is the end of the instructions relating to Counts II and
III of the Indictment."