Skip to content
Part of the Law Professor Blogs Network

An interesting (and dubitante) SCOTUS argument in Dubin

I flagged in this post from last November the Supreme Court’s cert grant in Dubin v. United States, which concerns the reach of the federal criminal law that adds a mandatory two-year prison term for using another person’s identity in the process of committing another crime.  That statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1028A, is titled “Aggravated identity theft,” but the statutory language would seem to cover a whole lot more conduct than what most think of as identify theft.  In fact, the government seem to be claiming that waiter who adds for himself an unauthorized $1 tip when swiping a patron’s credit card would be guilty of credit card fraud and an additional two-year mandatory prison term under § 1028A.  

This matter was argued before the Supreme Court yesterday and the lengthy argument had all sorts of interesting elements.  (The transcript, running over 100 pages, is available hereavailable here.)  As detailed in the pieces linked below, it seems nearly all the Justices believe there have to be some limiting principles for application of this statute.  But while the Justices seem to generally doubt the government’s broad statutory reading, it is unclear what part of the statutory text may provide real limits and on what terms.  Stay tuned:

From Bloomberg Law, “Justices Appear Ready to Limit Breadth of Identity Theft Law

From the New York Times, “Supreme Court Seems Skeptical of Broad Sweep of Identity Theft Law

From SCOTUSblog, “Justices lean toward narrow reading of aggravated identity theft

From Security Boulevard, “Supreme Court: Does BIlling Fraud Violate Federal ID Theft Statutes?