In the decision this week, the Third Circuit found the reading of the law — that any physical handoff of drugs constituted felony distribution — was so broad as to be “unreasonable” and a misconstruance of the original legislation, which targeted drug traffickers. The opinion found that under this interpretation of the law, two drug users sharing a pipe or a person who is handed a bag of drugs by a dealer but hands it back could all be considered to be distributing narcotics.
“Such an interpretation diverts punishment from traffickers to addicts, who contribute to the drug trade only as end users,” wrote Roth. “Moreover, given the prevalence of shared drug use, a too-broad construction of `transfer’ risks arbitrary enforcement.”
But the opinion was not held by the full court and does not constitute binding precedent.
Judge David J. Porter, who was appointed by former President Donald Trump, dissented. He argued that the dictionary definition of “transferring” drugs was clear, and that the majority was attempting to enact softer drug policies from the bench.
“Semler’s giving heroin to Werstler easily fits within the meaning,” Porter wrote. “Drug dealers and addicts, often operating in the shadows and through intermediaries, are likely to create all manner of convoluted fact patterns raising knotty questions affecting title and possession.”
Goldberger disagreed.
“We’re not saying the court shouldn’t enforce the statute because it’s bad public policy, we’re saying the statute simply doesn’t cover this conduct,” he said.
Semler, who was in a federal detention center for 2 ½ years, will now either be retried or plead out, or the government could withdraw the case.
Temple University Beasley School of Law professor Scott Burris, who filed an amicus brief on Semler’s behalf, said the opinion would, he hoped, influence President Joe Biden’s appointment of U.S. attorneys — such as McSwain’s permanent successor — and federal judges with similar philosophies.
“That’s the most important single thing that could come out of this opinion,” he said.
Burris said family members’ anger or desire for vengeance in the wake of a drug overdose were understandable, but he said it had resulted in drug enforcement policies divorced from the realities of drug usage.
“The problem is the prosecutors get the same idea and say, ‘Yeah, they’re murderers, and we should put them in jail for as long as we can,’” he said. “But they’re not murderers, they’re sharing drugs.”
A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment.
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