On September 13, 2019, the Sixth Circuit dismissed the appeal of United States v. Nagarwala, a federal district court decision that had held unconstitutional the federal statute criminalizing the female genital mutilation (FGM) of minors. Jumana Nagarwala, an emergency room doctor, was one of eight defendants charged by the Department of Justice (DOJ) for performing or assisting in performing FGM on nine girls, at least some of whom were around age seven.Footnote 1 The federal district court judge in Nagarwala rejected arguments that Congress had the constitutional authority—under either its power to implement treaty obligations or its power to regulate interstate commerce—to enact the statute at issue. Although the DOJ appealed this decision, it changed its position while the case was on appeal and declined to defend the constitutionality of the statute. The Sixth Circuit's dismissal of the appeal came at the request of the DOJ, which opposed an effort by the House of Representatives to intervene in the case in defense of the statute's constitutionality.
In 1996, Congress passed several measures aimed at combatting FGM.Footnote 2 These measures included: (1) the criminalization of the practice of FGM on girls under the age of 18; (2) a directive to the Department of Health and Human Services to compile data on FGM and engage in educational outreach efforts to relevant communities; (3) a directive to the Immigration and Naturalization Service to provide information to new immigrants on the effects of FGM and on its criminalization; and (4) instructions to U.S. directors of international financial institutions to oppose certain types of loans to countries that had yet to take preventative measures against FGM.Footnote 3Nagarwala concerned the first of these provisions, which is codified at 18 U.S.C. § 116 (FGM Criminalization Statute).
The FGM Criminalization Statute provides that “whoever knowingly circumcises, excises, or infibulates the whole or any part of the labia majora or labia minora or clitoris of another person who has not attained the age of 18 years shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.”Footnote 4 The statute exempts certain operations necessary for the health of the minor (such as during childbirth), but makes clear that “no account shall be taken” of any beliefs “that the operation is required as a matter of custom or ritual.”Footnote 5 As findings accompanying the statute, Congress observed that FGM “often results in the occurrence of physical and psychological health effects that harm the women involved” and that “the unique circumstances surrounding the practice of [FGM] place it beyond the ability of any single State or local jurisdiction to control.”Footnote 6 Congress also found that it had the authority to criminalize FGM pursuant to specific provisions of the Constitution, pointing to its “affirmative power under section 8 of article I, the necessary and proper clause, section 5 of the fourteenth Amendment, as well as under the treaty clause.”Footnote 7
Since its enactment, the FGM Criminalization Statute had remained mostly untested, as federal prosecutors apparently filed charges based on it only once before the charging of Nagarwala in 2017.Footnote 8 Nagarwala's case eventually expanded to include seven co-defendants: another doctor, two assistants, and four mothers who had arranged for the performance of FGM on their young daughters.Footnote 9 While most of the federal charges stemmed from the FGM Criminalization Statute, Nagarwala was also charged with “conspiracy to travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct,” and four defendants were also charged with conspiring to tamper with witnesses.Footnote 10 The defendants moved to dismiss the charges that were based on the FGM Criminalization Statute on the ground that Congress lacked the constitutional authority to pass this statute.
In response, the DOJ defended the constitutionality of the FGM Criminalization Statute on two separate bases. The first was that Congress had the constitutional authority to pass the statute under the Necessary and Proper Clause, which, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Missouri v. Holland, gives Congress the power to implement treaties through legislation.Footnote 11 The government argued that the FGM Criminalization Statute advances the objectives of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), including two of its specific provisions.Footnote 12 One of these was Article 3, under which the signatories “undertake to ensure the equal right of men and women to the enjoyment of all civil and political rights set forth in the present Covenant.”Footnote 13 The other was Article 24, which provides that “[e]very child shall have, without any discrimination as to race, colour, sex, language, religion, national or social origin, property or birth, the right to such measures of protection as are required by his status as a minor, on the part of his family, society and the State.”Footnote 14 In arguing that the FGM Criminalization Statute was necessary and proper in light of these treaty provisions, the DOJ emphasized that “the U.N. body tasked with overseeing implementation of the ICCPR, the Human Rights Committee, has identified FGM as a gender-based impediment to women and girls’ equal enjoyment of rights provided in the Covenant.”Footnote 15 As its second, separate defense of the statute's constitutionality, the DOJ argued that Congress had the authority to pass this statute as part of its power to regulate commerce.Footnote 16
Judge Bernard Friedman of the Eastern District of Michigan rejected both of the DOJ's arguments. He held that “Congress had no authority to pass this statute under either the Necessary and Proper Clause or the Commerce Clause.”Footnote 17
On the first issue, the district court concluded that “there is no [rational] relationship between the ICCPR and the FGM [Criminalization Statute]” and therefore that Congress's treaty-implementing power did not provide Congress with authority to pass the statute.Footnote 18 The court's analysis focused exclusively on the text of the ICCPR, without addressing how it had been interpreted and applied by the Human Rights Committee.Footnote 19 The court stated:
[T]here is no rational relationship between the FGM [Criminalization Statute] and Article 3 [of the ICCPR] … . This article seeks to ensure equal civil and political rights (e.g., the freedom of expression, the right to participate in elections, and protections for defendants in criminal proceedings) for men and women, while the FGM Criminalization Statute seeks to protect girls aged seventeen and younger from a particular form of physical abuse. There is simply no rational relationship between Article 3 and the FGM statute. The latter does not effectuate the purposes of the former in any way.
The relationship between the FGM [Criminalization Statute] and Article 24 is arguably closer … [but still] tenuous. Article 24 is an anti-discrimination provision, which calls for the protection of minors without regard to their race, color, sex, or other characteristics. As laudable as the prohibition of a particular type of abuse of girls may be, it does not logically further the goal of protecting children on a nondiscriminatory basis.Footnote 20
As an alternative holding, the district court stated that “even assuming the treaty and the FGM [Criminalization Statute] are rationally related, federalism concerns deprive Congress of the power to enact this statute.”Footnote 21 The court observed that, in advising and consenting to the ICCPR, the Senate had included an understanding indicating that federalism principles were relevant to the implementation of the ICCPR.Footnote 22 The court quoted at length from the Supreme Court's 2014 decision in Bond v. United States, which drew upon federalism principles in narrowly interpreting a criminal statute implementing the Chemical Weapons Convention.Footnote 23 After making these two references, the court concluded that “[l]ike the common law assault at issue in Bond, FGM is local criminal activity which, in keeping with longstanding tradition and our federal system of government, is for the states to regulate, not Congress.”Footnote 24
The district court separately held that Congress did not have the power under the Commerce Clause to enact the FGM Criminalization Statute.Footnote 25 The court determined that FGM could not be deemed an economic or commercial activity, concluding that the DOJ had failed to show an interstate market beyond the facts of the present case and that FGM could not be regulated as health care, notwithstanding its performance by medical professionals, because it “is a form of physical assault, not anything approaching a healthcare service.”Footnote 26 The court also noted the absence of a jurisdictional element in the statute requiring that the victims or providers of FGM “traveled in, or had any effect on, interstate commerce.”Footnote 27
The DOJ appealed the district court decision to the Sixth Circuit.Footnote 28 But on April 10, 2019, after receiving two extensions to file an opening brief on appeal, the DOJ reversed its stance in identical letters from the solicitor general to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees.Footnote 29 The letters, as required by 28 U.S.C. § 530D (530D Letters),Footnote 30 acted as official notice to Congress that the DOJ would not defend the constitutionality of the FGM Criminalization Statute on appeal. The solicitor general stated that while FGM performed on minors is “an especially heinous practice … that should be universally condemned,” the DOJ had “reluctantly determined that … it lacks a reasonable defense of the [FGM Criminalization Statute], as currently worded.”Footnote 31 In the solicitor general's view, the FGM Criminalization Statute could not be defended as an exercise of Congress's treaty-implementing power and, as written, lacked the nexus to commerce necessary for it to be defensible as an exercise of Congress's commerce power. The solicitor general suggested that Congress could cure the constitutional issue with respect to the Commerce Clause by amending the FGM Criminalization Statute to include a nexus to interstate or foreign commerce as an element of the crime.Footnote 32
The solicitor general offered the following explanation for why the DOJ would not defend the FGM Criminalization Statute as an exercise of Congress's treaty-implementing power:
[T]he [DOJ] has determined that it does not have an adequate argument that Section 116(a) is within Congress's authority to enact legislation to implement the ICCPR, which does not address FGM. None of the ICCPR's provisions reference FGM at all. Nor do they provide a basis for the federal government itself (rather than the individual States) to criminalize FGM of minors by private parties. This case is therefore not analogous to Holland, which involved a treaty that more directly addressed the parties’ obligation to protect certain migratory birds and to propose legislation to do so. Thus, even maintaining the full continuing validity of Holland, the [DOJ] does not believe it can defend Section 116(a) on this ground.Footnote 33
On April 30, 2019, the House of Representatives filed a motion to intervene in the Nagarwala appeal in order to defend the constitutionality of the FGM Criminalization Statute.Footnote 34 In an accompanying press release, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi explained that the “Trump Administration's sudden refusal to advance legal arguments to defend a long-standing federal statute criminalizing this horrific act disrespects the health and futures of vulnerable women and girls.”Footnote 35 In its motion, the House observed that 28 U.S.C. § 530D(b)(2) requires the DOJ to notify Congress of a decision not to defend the constitutionality of a statute “‘within such time as will reasonably enable the House of Representatives and the Senate to take action, separately or jointly, to intervene in timely fashion in the proceeding.’”Footnote 36 The House pointed to several prior instances in which it had intervened in civil proceedings to defend a statute's constitutionality and argued that the same standard should be applicable to appeals in criminal cases.Footnote 37 The House reasoned that its intervention would “ensur[e] that the FGM [Criminalization Statute] receives a vigorous constitutional defense” since the “Executive Branch and defendants agree—incorrectly—that the FGM [Criminalization Statute] is unconstitutional.”Footnote 38
In response, the DOJ both opposed the House's intervention and moved to voluntarily dismiss the appeal.Footnote 39 The DOJ argued that the House had no authority to intervene in criminal proceedings, stating that “the Executive Branch has exclusive authority and absolute discretion to decide whether to prosecute a case” and “[n]o court has ever permitted the Legislature to … extend a federal criminal prosecution that the United States has determined no longer to pursue on appeal.”Footnote 40 The DOJ argued that the “proper role of the House in ensuring the viability of future prosecutions for [FGM] is its participation in the bicameralism and presentment process for enacting new laws.”Footnote 41
On September 13, 2019, the Sixth Circuit granted the DOJ's motion to voluntarily dismiss the appeal.Footnote 42 The court did not address the House's motion to intervene. Instead, it simply granted the motion to voluntarily dismiss the case, thus making the House's pending motion moot.Footnote 43 The court noted that it “generally grant[s] motions to voluntarily dismiss unless it would be unjust or unfair to do so” and found “no reason to disregard our general rule” after “[h]aving considered the parties’ arguments.”Footnote 44
On the same day that the Sixth Circuit dismissed Nagarwala, the D.C. Circuit upheld a different congressional statute as a valid exercise of Congress's treaty-implementing power.Footnote 45United States v. Park concerned the constitutionality of a federal statute that criminalized the sexual abuse of children by U.S. citizens abroad.Footnote 46 Reversing the federal district court, the D.C. Circuit held that Congress had the authority to enact this statute in order to implement the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography, which the United States had ratified in 2002.Footnote 47 While the court acknowledged that the Optional Protocol only required the criminalization of child prostitution “‘for remuneration or any other form of consideration,’” the court concluded that “the Optional Protocol's goal of eliminating commercial child sexual exploitation, including global sex tourism, could be undercut if Congress failed to criminalize non-commercial child sex abuse by U.S. residents abroad.”Footnote 48 As one of its reasons, the court noted that while the “government may not simply point to any tangentially related treaty to defend a constitutionally suspect statute,” nevertheless Congress's “power to give the treaty practical effect … is not confined to the Optional Protocol's minimum requirements.”Footnote 49 The D.C. Circuit's decision is one of several federal appellate decisions in recent years upholding the constitutionality of an exercise of Congress's treaty-implementing power.Footnote 50
The statutes at issue in both Nagarwala and Park reflect a congressional commitment to deterring and punishing abuses committed against children. In the wake of the DOJ's decision not to defend the FGM Criminalization Statute, the House passed an unopposed nonbinding resolution denouncing the practice of FGM and calling on the international community and the Department of State and United States Agency for International Development to accelerate efforts to eliminate it.Footnote 51 Members of Congress have also introduced various bills to fund efforts to combat FGM and to amend the FGM Criminalization Statute so that it includes a more explicit nexus to commerce.Footnote 52
The district court decision in Nagarwala and the DOJ's subsequent decision not to defend the statute may animate efforts for more state law protection against FGM.Footnote 53 Roughly half of the states currently have laws specifically criminalizing FGM, at least with respect to minors, and the perpetration of FGM could also fall within the elements of more broadly phrased crimes.Footnote 54 There is considerable variation among these state laws, including whether they criminalize travel outside the state for the performance of FGM and what sentences they impose for FGM.Footnote 55 Unless Congress amends the FGM Criminalization Statute or the DOJ reverses its position that the statute is unconstitutional, there is no federal alternative to these state laws for the prosecution of FGM as a crime. But other federal criminal laws may be brought to bear against the perpetrators of FGM. In the Eastern District of Michigan, the DOJ continues to pursue charges against Jumana Nagarwala for the crime of conspiracy to travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct.Footnote 56