Los Angeles Times

Gorsuch sides with liberals on gun violence case

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday struck down part of a 1980sera crime law that adds longer prison terms for offenders who carried a gun during a “crime of violence,” with Justice Neil M. Gorsuch speaking for the court and Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh in dissent.

The court by a 5-4 vote ruled for two Dallas men who were convicted of robbing several convenienc­e stores and then were given an extra 25 years in prison for carrying a sawed-off shotgun during the crime.

The dispute highlights a sharp difference between President Trump’s two appointees. Gorsuch is a libertaria­n who is skeptical of the government, and Kavanaugh is a more traditiona­l law-and-order conservati­ve.

Gorsuch, speaking for the court, said the justices should not uphold “vague” laws that do not “give ordinary people fair warning about what the law demands of them.”

Maurice Davis and Andre Glover were convicted of robberies. In addition, they were charged with a “conspiracy” to carry a gun during an act that “by its nature, involves a substantia­l risk that physical force will be used.” That conviction added 25 years to their terms, for a total of about 50 years for Davis and 41 for Glover.

But Gorsuch, joined by the court’s four liberals, said law regarding a “crime of violence” was unconstitu­tionally vague.

“Vague statutes threaten to hand responsibi­lity for defining crimes to relatively unaccounta­ble police, prosecutor­s and judges, eroding the people’s ability to oversee the creation of the law they are expected to abide,” Gorusch wrote in United States vs. Davis.

Kavanaugh, in dissent, called the ruling “a serious mistake” and said it would “likely mean that thousands of inmates who committed violent gun crime will be released far earlier than Congress specified.”

He said the federal crime laws of the 1980s “contribute­d to the decline of violent crime in America .... Yet today, after 33 years and tens of thousands of federal prosecutio­ns, the court suddenly finds a key provision of [one law] to be unconstitu­tional because it is supposedly too vague. That is a surprising conclusion.”

The justices also disagreed on what would happen next. Gorsuch said prosecutor­s could focus on specific crimes when seeking extra prison terms.

And he said Congress could pass more specific laws.

Kavanaugh said the ruling could permit thousands of violent criminals to seek their release if they had already served part of their term. “The court’s decision will thwart Congress’ law enforcemen­t policies, destabiliz­e the criminal justice system and undermine safety in American communitie­s,” he said. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. joined in dissent.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? JUSTICE Neil M. Gorsuch helped strike down a law targeting offenders who carried a gun during certain crimes.
Susan Walsh Associated Press JUSTICE Neil M. Gorsuch helped strike down a law targeting offenders who carried a gun during certain crimes.

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