Prosecuting Overseas Crimes Committed by U.S. Contractors (S. 2598)
Do you support or oppose this bill?
What is S. 2598?
(Updated July 13, 2017)
This bill aims to ensure that American contractors and employees working outside of the country are held accountable to U.S. laws.
The Civilian Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (CEJA) would change the federal criminal code to allow U.S. authorities to penalize federal contractors and their employees for committing certain crimes while working outside of the U.S.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) would be directed to create new investigative task forces to investigate, arrest, and prosecute contractors and employees who commit serious crimes overseas. The Attorney General would also be allowed to send federal agents to arrest alleged offenders outside of the U.S., as long as there is probable cause. This bill would apply to contractors working in the service of any agency other than the Department of Defense (DOD).
Argument in favor
There is a lot of ambiguity surrounding how U.S. laws apply to overseas contractors. This bill would eliminate the confusion, protect people overseas, and hold criminals accountable.
Argument opposed
This bill needs to address whether some personnel, like intelligence employees, should be shielded from prosecution as their jobs may require them to break the law.
Impact
Overseas federal contractors and employees, people in other nations, the Department of Justice, the Attorney General, and Congress.
Cost of S. 2598
A CBO estimate of a previous version of this bill (S. 1145) in 2011 found that it would have no significant impact on the federal budget. Costs would be incurred due to investigations and prosecutions, and revenues would be collected from fines, but the overall number of cases to be tried would be small.
Additional Info
In-Depth:
The Civilian Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (CEJA) has been introduced several times by Senator Leahy (D-VT) over the years, after the passage of the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (MEJA) in 2000. Previous attempts to pass the CEJA have been stymied by debate over whether intelligence personnel should be shielded, as they may be forced to break the law while performing their job.
There has been a jurisdiction gap covering contractors employed by agencies other than the DOD. Contractors performing a military service are covered by the MEJA — but security contractors working for other agencies are not.
This created problems in handling the case of Blackwater contractors who killed 17 unarmed Iraqis in 2007, when the Justice Department attempted to try them under MEJA. A judge dismissed the case as the contractors were providing diplomatic security, which led to the accused not being considered military contractors. The case was revived with a new prosecution team, and all four Blackwater contractors were convicted, although the case is expected to continue through appellate courts.
Media:
Sponsoring Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) Press Release
Department of Justice Letter (in Support)
(Photo Credit: news.genius.com)
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