Denezpi v. United States

Denezpi v. United States

Unbiased Case Analysis:

            Merle Denezpi is a member of the Navajo tribe. He was charged with raping a woman and later accepted a plea deal in the Court of Indian Offenses. He was given 140 days to serve in jail and was eventually released in December of 2017. He was later charged again and indicted in a federal court. Merle Denezpi challenged the federal court’s ruling arguing that his prosecution violated the Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause. He argued on the grounds that the Court of Indian Offenses was essentially a federal court. Therefore, he was charged by two federal courts for the same crime. The district court ruled against Denezpi with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit later affirming.

            The case was brought before the Supreme Court. The Court ruled 6-3 against Denezpi. The Court’s majority did not believe the Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause protected Denezpi. Denezpi was charged by two distinct sovereigns. He committed one crime that constituted two distinct offenses. Justice Neil Gorsuch authored a dissenting opinion not agreeing with the majority’s interpretation of the Constitution. Justices Sotomayor and Kagan joined him.

Personal Perspective:

            I agree with the Court’s ruling. The Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause is not a broad protection as it is popularly believed to be. It specifically protects citizens from being prosecuted more than once for violating the same law for the same crime. Prosecutors have a variety of ways of getting around the Double Jeopardy Clause such as the dual-sovereignty rule. The same law under distinct governments is considered a separate offense if committed in overlapping jurisdictions. Denezpi was first prosecuted by the Court of Indian Offenses which represents a Native American reservation. He was then charged by the federal government. Although I do not like the narrow protections of the Double Jeopardy Clause, nothing can be done unless the Constitution is amended.

Media Critique and Analysis:

            Unfortunately, Denezpi v. United States did not receive major media coverage. Notable outlets such as Fox News neglected to report on the case. Left leaning outlets such as CNN criticized the Corut’s ruling and seemed to paint Denezpi in a more positive light. Right leaning outlets such as National Review did not necessarily criticize the Court’s ruling but focused on the narrow protections of the Double Jeopardy Clause. CNN noticeably used the term “aggravated sexual abuse” while other outlets used the term “rape” to describe Denezpi’s offense.

Sources:

Denezpi v. United States | Oyez

Double jeopardy doesn’t apply to overlapping federal and tribal prosecutions, Supreme Court rules | CNN Politics

Double-Jeopardy Protections Narrower Than Thought | National Review

Supreme Court rules that Native Americans prosecuted in tribal courts can also be prosecuted in federal court | PBS NewsHour

Comments

  1. This is a very intresting case while i agree with the 6-3 supreme court ruling against Denezpi especially due to the crime he committed again, his notion to bring up the Double Jeapordy Clause was honestly pretty smart on his part. Because while he did technally get serve twice the courts have so many loop holes they can use to get around this specific clause.

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  2. Well, anytime a garbage person convicted of such an atrocity goes free easy, I wish further punishment. If they need to charge him with other assault offenses or anything to get him in prison, find a way. I am glad the court let him be charged. Let him be charged 100 times if he is guilty.

    Shame on the Court of Indian Offenses to be honest.

    Another good post.

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