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May 15, 2000
Court Rejects Federal Rape Law
Filed at 11:13 a.m. EDT
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court today threw out a law that let rape
victims sue their attackers in federal court, saying Congress wrongly
trampled on an area of state authority.
The 5-4 ruling in a Virginia case invalidated a key provision of the 1994
Violence Against Women Act and followed the court's recent trend of
expanding states' rights at the expense of the federal government.
Congress, in enacting the provision, overstepped its authority to regulate
interstate commerce and enforce the Constitution's equal-protection
guarantee, the justices said.
In the rape case the justices ruled that Christy Brzonkala, a former
Virginia Tech student, cannot pursue her federal lawsuit against two
football players, alleging that they raped her in a dormitory room.
Brzonkala, who has allowed her name to be disclosed, became the first person
to sue under the law in 1995.
``Petitioner Brzonkala's complaint alleges that she was the victim of a
brutal assault,'' Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist wrote for the court.
``If the allegations here are true, no civilized system of justice could
fail to provide her a remedy ... But under our federal system that remedy
must be provided by the commonwealth of Virginia, and not by the United
States.''
The justices rejected arguments by her lawyer and the Clinton administration
that the law was needed because states are not doing enough to protect rape
victims, and because gender-based violence restricts women's choices in jobs
and travel.
That argument ``would allow Congress to regulate any crime as long as the
nationwide, aggregated impact of that crime has substantial effects on
employment, production, transit or consumption,'' Rehnquist said. ``Indeed,
if Congress may regulate gender-motivated violence, it would be able to
regulate murder or any other type of violence. ...''
The chief justice's opinion was joined by Justices Sandra Day O'Connor,
Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy and Clarence Thomas.
Dissenting were Justices David H. Souter, John Paul Stevens, Ruth Bader
Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer.
Writing for the four, Souter cited ``the mountain of data assembled by
Congress, here showing the effects of violence against women on interstate
commerce. ... Violence against women may be found to affect interstate
commerce and to affect it substantially.''
Today's ruling affirmed a federal appeals court that threw out Brzonkala's
lawsuit against student athletes Antonio Morrison and James Crawford. The
appeals court said such lawsuits come under the authority of the states, not
the federal government.
The case is a followup to the Supreme Court's 1995 ruling that struck down
as unconstitutional the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act, which made it a
federal crime to possess a gun within 1,000 feet of a school.
The justices ruled then that gun possession was insufficiently linked to
interstate commerce and that the gun possession law usurped states'
authority over such crimes.
Since then, the court has issued a number of rulings that tipped the balance
of power toward the states, including one in January that shielded state
governments against federal age-bias claims by their employees.
Justice Department lawyers told the Supreme Court that in deciding to let
rape victims sue their attackers in federal court, Congress found that
``archaic prejudices and improper stereotypes'' about women were affecting
the outcomes of cases in state courts. Violent crime against women costs the
nation at least $3 billion a year, government lawyers told the court.
But the lawyer for the two athletes said that allowing Congress to enact
such laws would relegate states to a trivial role in such matters.
Rehnquist wrote, ``We accordingly reject the argument that Congress may
regulate noneconomic, violent criminal conduct based solely on that
conduct's aggregate effect on interstate commerce. The Constitution requires
a distinction between what is truly national and what is truly local.''
The Violence Against Women Act also has criminal provisions, and those were
not at issue in today's decision.
Brzonkala, who did not return to Virginia Tech after her freshman year, has
spoken publicly about the case only rarely.
At a news conference in January before the justices heard arguments, she
said, ``Rape is like having your soul torn out. This violence happens to too
many women, and we need laws on the books to fight it.''
Thirty-six states supported Brzonkala and asked the court to uphold the
provision. In February, Virginia Tech said it agreed to pay $75,000 to
Brzonkala to settle a separate lawsuit she filed against the university,
which she said protected the two men because they were athletes.
The cases are U.S. vs. Morrison, 99-5, and Brzonkala vs. Morrison, 99-29.
------
- Thread context:
- [fla-left] [activism] Protest Republican & Democratic Conventions this summer (fwd),
Michael Hoover Tue 23 May 2000, 19:35 GMT
- Fwd: Russian women: never had it so bad,
Charles Brown Tue 23 May 2000, 16:31 GMT
- Brzonkala decision,
Peter van Heusden Tue 16 May 2000, 08:50 GMT
- Fwd: now-action-list Feminists Denounce Brzonkala Decision, Justices Deliver ...,
Charles Brown Mon 15 May 2000, 20:27 GMT
- [no subject],
Charles Brown Mon 15 May 2000, 16:46 GMT
- Mother's Day Proclamation,
Charles Brown Mon 15 May 2000, 15:34 GMT
- [Fwd: violence against women],
Katha Pollitt Mon 15 May 2000, 15:08 GMT
- March for Jobs with Justice & Living Wages (Columbus, Ohio),
Yoshie Furuhashi Mon 15 May 2000, 12:09 GMT
- violence against women,
FriggaHaug Sun 14 May 2000, 09:41 GMT
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