United States v. Valderrama Carvajal , 924 F. Supp. 2d 219 ( 2013 )


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  •                        UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    __________________________________
    )
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA           )
    )
    v.                           )    Criminal Action No. 10-106 (-2, 5) (RMC)
    )
    FRANCISCO JOSE VALDERRAMA          )
    CARVAJAL and LUIS ALBERTO          )
    MUNOZ MIRANDA,                     )
    )
    Defendants.            )
    _________________________________  )
    OPINION
    I. FACTS ....................................................................................................................................... 2
    A. Procedural History.............................................................................................................. 2
    B. The Drug Trafficking Organization and Planned November 2006 Loads .................... 4
    C. Caribbean Maritime Geography ....................................................................................... 8
    II. LEGAL STANDARD ........................................................................................................... 10
    III. ANALYSIS........................................................................................................................... 11
    A. Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act ............................................................................ 12
    1. 1980s Enactment and Legislative History ........................................................................ 12
    2. 1986 Version .................................................................................................................... 14
    3. Present Version ................................................................................................................. 15
    B. Maritime Definitional Issues ............................................................................................ 16
    C. Factual Issues—Statelessness & High Seas Travel ........................................................ 19
    1. Statelessness of Vessel ..................................................................................................... 19
    2. Travel through the High Seas ........................................................................................... 24
    D. Statutory Subject Matter Jurisdiction ............................................................................ 27
    1. Extraterritorial Application .............................................................................................. 27
    2. Charming Betsy ................................................................................................................ 29
    3. Whether MDLEA Requires Conspiring “On Board” a Vessel ........................................ 34
    4. Whether MDLEA Requires a Nexus to the United States ............................................... 37
    5. Whether Colombia’s Consent Was Required ................................................................... 38
    6. Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 43
    E. Constitutionality of MDLEA as Applied......................................................................... 43
    1. Legal Standard—Constitutionality ................................................................................... 44
    2. The Treaty Power ............................................................................................................. 45
    3. Article I, Section 8, Clause 10: The Power . . . To define and punish Piracies and
    Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations . . . . ......... 47
    F. Due Process ........................................................................................................................ 64
    IV. CONCLUSION .................................................................................................................... 69
    This prosecution under the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (MDLEA) is a
    product of the escalation of a battle. On one side are international drug traffickers, who
    constantly refine their methods for transporting illegal narcotics from country to country. On the
    other side is law enforcement, which must adapt its efforts to halt the illicit drug trade, a task
    made all the more difficult in an increasingly globalized world. In this case, the United States
    seeks to hold drug traffickers criminally responsible in circumstances not previously addressed
    by the courts.
    This case may be at the outskirts of Congress’s power to criminalize
    extraterritorial conduct. The two Defendants, Luis Alberto Munoz Miranda and Francisco Jose
    Valderrama Carvajal, were Colombian-based members of an international drug trafficking
    conspiracy. They admitted involvement in a conspiracy to use vessels with no registration and
    nationality, commonly referred to as “stateless vessels,” to transport cocaine from Colombia to a
    rendezvous point in the seas near Honduras. Two stateless vessels are involved in this case. One
    never left the dock; the other was seized by the Colombian Navy after traveling a significant
    distance at sea. The latter vessel was captured after it ran aground on an island that belongs to
    Colombia, so it was seized by Colombian authorities in Colombian territorial waters. The United
    States, prosecuting through the Department of Justice, does not claim that it can show that the
    cocaine recovered from the captured vessel was destined for this country, and it concedes that
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal never left the terra firma of Colombia at any
    relevant point prior to being extradited to the United States years after the stateless vessel and its
    crew were seized and prosecuted by Colombia.
    Defendants contest the constitutionality of applying MDLEA to foreign citizens,
    acting in a foreign country, who never set foot on a vessel transporting narcotics. Many cases
    1
    have upheld MDLEA as a valid exercise of congressional power and have denied due process
    challenges, but with varying analyses. Few cases have involved prosecutions deriving from
    vessels seized in a foreign country’s territorial waters, whether those vessels were registered in a
    foreign country or were stateless. Equally rare are MDLEA prosecutions of individuals whose
    personal involvement took place exclusively within a foreign country’s territory. This case fits
    both of those categories, which the Court understands to be a factually unprecedented scenario.
    The Court must determine whether this prosecution is constitutional. While it
    may be a close question, it is one the Court resolves in DOJ’s favor.
    I. FACTS
    A. Procedural History
    Along with three other co-defendants, 1 Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama
    Carvajal were charged by Indictment filed April 23, 2010 with conspiracy to distribute five
    kilograms or more of cocaine on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States in
    violation of the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (MDLEA), 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70503
    , 70506(b)
    and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . See Indictment [Dkt. 3]. DOJ filed a Superseding Indictment on August 25,
    2010, containing the same charge. See Superseding Indictment [Dkt. 6]. Bench warrants were
    issued for all Defendants. Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal were arrested in
    Colombia by the Colombian national police on May 12, 2011 and extradited to the United States.
    See Extradition Orders, Dkt. 60, Ex. E [Dkt. 60-5]. Mr. Munoz Miranda made his initial
    appearance before a magistrate judge on February 27, 2012, and Mr. Valderrama Carvajal made
    his first appearance on April 20, 2012.
    1
    Two of the co-defendants, Jorge Castro Sanchez and Francisco Vergara Neri, are fugitives and
    have not appeared in court. The fifth co-defendant, Jorge Alberto Garcia Jaramillo, has not
    joined in any of the instant motions.
    2
    Both Defendants filed numerous motions prior to their scheduled October 15,
    2012, trial date, raising various arguments against MDLEA’s constitutionality and as to whether
    MDLEA encompasses the allegations made in this case. 2 Both DOJ and the Defendants filed
    numerous briefs, and the Court held a motions hearing on October 11, 2012 to address the
    arguments advanced by Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal.
    By agreement of all parties, DOJ proceeded by evidentiary proffer and the Court
    heard oral arguments only. After extensive and articulate debate from Defendants’ counsel and
    DOJ, the Court denied the motions to dismiss. Although it noted that the motions presented
    close questions on which courts had written little, the Court held that MDLEA could be
    constitutionally applied to the facts in this case. Because Messrs. Munoz Miranda and
    Valderrama Carvajal immediately stated that they wished to enter into plea agreements with
    DOJ, there was never a full written opinion, although the Court had summarized its reasoning
    from the bench.
    The following day, October 12, 2012, both Defendants entered guilty pleas to a
    Superseding Information, Dkt. 71, charging them each with one count of conspiracy to distribute
    five hundred grams or more of cocaine on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United
    States in violation of 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70503
    (a)(1), 70506(b), and 
    21 U.S.C. § 960
    (b)(2)(B). Both
    Defendants’ pleas were reliant on Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(1)(C) and stipulated to sentences of five
    years’ imprisonment. See Plea Agr. (Munoz Miranda) [Dkt. 72] ¶ 8; Plea Agr. (Valderrama
    Carvajal) [Dkt. 76] ¶ 8. Sentencing hearings were scheduled for November 29, 2012.
    2
    Mr. Munoz Miranda sought at one point to withdraw from these motions in anticipation of
    entering a non-trial disposition, but later rejoined all of the motions discussed in this Opinion,
    including the motions for reconsideration.
    3
    Before sentencing, however, Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal
    filed motions for reconsideration of the Court’s denial of their motions to dismiss. See [Dkts. 86,
    87]. The motions for reconsideration depend in large part on an Eleventh Circuit decision issued
    on November 6, 2012, holding that MDLEA is unconstitutional as applied in that case because
    Congress lacks the power to criminalize the charged conduct. See United States v. Bellaizac-
    Hurtado, 
    700 F.3d 1245
     (11th Cir. 2012). This Court continued sentencing until the motions for
    reconsideration could be resolved. Noting that the United States had raised a novel jurisdictional
    argument in its petition for rehearing en banc in the Eleventh Circuit—that MDLEA is
    constitutional as an exercise of Congress’s power to implement treaties—the Court ordered
    further briefing on that issue. See Minute Order dated Jan. 17, 2013.
    B. The Drug Trafficking Organization and Planned November 2006 Loads
    Along with other individuals in Colombia and Mexico, Messrs. Munoz Miranda
    and Valderrama Carvajal were co-conspirators in a drug trafficking organization (DTO) that,
    “from in or about 2006 and continuing until August 25, 2010, transported narcotics from
    Colombia on stateless go-fast vessels through international waters to other countries.” Joint
    Statement of Stipulated Facts as to Defendant Munoz Miranda (“Munoz Miranda SoF”) [Dkt.
    73] ¶ 3; Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts as to Defendant Valderrama Carvajal (“Valderrama
    Carvajal SoF”) [Dkt. 77] ¶ 3. 3 The DTO provided cocaine to a drug trafficking organization in
    Mexico headed by a man named Jorge Castro. Dkt. 60, Ex. D [Dkt. 60-4], Affidavit of Agent
    3
    Both defendants entered guilty pleas after their motions to dismiss were denied and both have
    moved for reconsideration on the Court’s jurisdiction, not to withdraw their guilty pleas. Each
    defendant acknowledged the truth of his joint statement of stipulated facts under oath at the plea
    proceeding. The Court thus treats the facts stipulated by both defendants as admitted for the
    purposes of evaluating the instant motions. See generally Fed. R. Evid. 410 (governing
    admissibility of pleas, plea discussions, and related statements).
    4
    Christopher Jakim, at 3–4. 4 Defendant Valderrama Carvajal was “the organizer in the Jorge
    Castro [DTO] and the bridge between the transportation network in Colombia and the cocaine
    purchaser in Mexico.” 
    Id.
     Defendant Munoz Miranda “assisted with logistics, as well as with
    obtaining and delivering maritime supplies and reports to ensure that the cocaine arrived at its
    planned destination without law enforcement detection.” 
    Id.
    4
    The Court refers to the parties’ briefs by their docket numbers to avoid confusion from the
    large number of filings, most of which have similar names that do not identify the specific
    arguments made therein. The filings are:
    Defendants:
    • Joint Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction of the United States [Dkt. 34]
    • Reply to Government’s Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of
    Jurisdiction of the United States [Dkt. 51]
    • Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Indictment [Dkt. 53]
    • Joint Motion to Dismiss Indictment for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction [Dkt. 54]
    • Reply to Government’s Omnibus Response [Dkt. 61]
    • Defendants’ Reply to Section H of Government’s Omnibus Response to Defendants’
    Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. 65]
    • Motion for Reconsideration of the Court’s Denial of the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
    Indictment for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction [Dkt. 84]
    • Joint Motion for Reconsideration of Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss [Dkt. 85]
    • Defendants’ Reply to Government’s Response to Motion to Reconsider Defendants’
    Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. 91] (duplicate at [Dkt. 93])
    • Reply to Government’s Opposition, ECF #89 [Dkt. 96]
    • Defendants’ Reply to Government’s Response to Court’s Minute Order Dated January
    17, 2013 [Dkt. 99]
    Government:
    • Government’s Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction of
    the United States [Dkt. 47]
    • Government’s Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Indictment—Failure to
    State a Crime and Joint Motion to Dismiss Indictment for Lack of Subject Matter
    Jurisdiction [Dkt. 60]
    • Government’s Opposition to Defendants’ Joint Motion for Reconsideration of
    Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss [Dkt. 88]
    • Government’s Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Reconsideration of the Court’s
    Denial of the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Indictment for Lack of Subject Matter
    Jurisdiction [Dkt. 89]
    • Government’s Response to Court’s January 17, 2013 Minute Order [Dkt. 98]
    5
    During November 2006, “pursuant to a lawfully authorized interception order,
    Colombia law enforcement officers were listening to telephone calls of some of the conspirators
    in this case. Based on the intercepted calls, the officers concluded that the Defendants were
    planning to move a large load of cocaine from the north coast of Colombia.” Dkt. 60 at 2; see
    also Dkt. 60, Ex. C [Dkt. 60-3] (Wiretap Transcriptions).
    The DTO’s intended November 2006 shipment involved at least two separate
    loads. For both shipments, the DTO planned to use a go-fast boat, a term used by Coast Guard
    officials to refer to vessels that “can travel at high rates of speed, which makes them a favored
    vehicle for drug and alien smuggling operations.” United States v. Tinoco, 
    304 F.3d 1088
    , 1092
    (11th Cir. 2002). The vessels were to transport cocaine from the north coast of Colombia that
    was “to be ultimately delivered to a co-defendant in Mexico.” Munoz Miranda SOF ¶ 3;
    Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 5. The go-fast boat for the first shipment, which “was not registered
    in Colombia and did not fly a Colombian flag,” “was standing by with a crew and was ready to
    transport the cocaine.” Munoz Miranda SOF ¶ 3; see also Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 5.
    “However, the day before the cocaine was to be loaded on the go-fast boat, the cocaine was
    stolen from the custody of others who had been entrusted with the cocaine . . . .” Munoz
    Miranda SOF ¶ 3. The DTO’s efforts to recover the stolen load were fruitless. 
    Id.
    A different shipment of approximately 2000 kilograms of cocaine was
    successfully loaded aboard a go-fast vessel that left Colombia’s north coast on November 16,
    2006. Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 5. 5 Neither Mr. Munoz Miranda nor Mr. Valderrama
    5
    The facts regarding the November 16, 2006 shipment do not appear in Mr. Munoz Miranda’s
    Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts, but DOJ’s theory of the case has been that both defendants
    were complicit in planning and arranging both shipments. E.g., Dkt. 60 at 2. Mr. Munoz
    Miranda has not argued that this asymmetry in the factual proffers is in any way relevant to the
    motions before the Court.
    6
    Carvajal was aboard; instead, the boat was crewed by five Colombians who were hired by
    various intermediaries. See Crew Statements, Dkt. 60, Ex. B [Dkt. 60-2]. The vessel was a
    “launch with a dark blue hull,” “shaped like a large racing boat,” “about 40 feet in length,” and
    equipped with three Yamaha 200-horsepower motors. Dkt. 60 at 2; Statement of Colombian
    Naval Lieutenant Gustavo Adolfo Espinosa Redondo, Dkt. 60, Ex. A [Dkt. 60-1], at 3. The go-
    fast boat flew no flag, was not registered in Colombia or any other country, and carried no
    registration information. Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3.
    The go-fast boat “headed towards the San Andres Islands, and was to rendezvous
    with another vessel near the coast of Honduras, where the cocaine would be transferred to the
    other vessel.” Dkt. 60 at 2; see also Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3 (“The captain of the go-fast
    boat admitted . . . that the cocaine was to be offloaded onto another vessel near the coast of
    Honduras.”). The precise path taken by the go-fast vessel is unknown, as discussed below.
    On November 18, 2006, “the Colombia Navy and Air Force intercepted the go-
    fast vessel near Roncador Island, a tiny, essentially uninhabited rock island” that belongs to
    Colombia and is also sometimes called Roncador Cay; following a brief chase, the go-fast vessel
    ran aground on Roncador. Dkt. 60 at 3; see also Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3. The Colombian
    Navy arrested the five crewmembers. Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3. One of the crew members
    identified himself as the captain. 
    Id.
     None of the crew members claimed Colombian registry for
    the vessel. 
    Id.
     When the Colombian Navy personnel inquired as to “where the papers were that
    proved the ownership of the launch and the motors,” the crew responded that “it had no papers
    and that they did not know who the owner was and that they knew no one, that they were simply
    hired to go find a fishing boat in that area named SI SE PUEDE that was supposedly adrift.”
    Statement of Lt. Espinosa Redondo at 3. The Colombian Navy recovered cocaine from the go-
    7
    fast vessel and the ocean. Dkt. 60 at 3. The search also uncovered approximately twenty 55-
    gallon gasoline drums; no other documents and “[n]o other item such as GPS, cellular phones, or
    two-way radios were found, because the captain told [the Colombian Navy] that the person who
    had been carrying the knapsack containing the equipment had dropped it in the water.”
    Statement of Lt. Espinosa Redondo at 3.
    C. Caribbean Maritime Geography
    Understanding the geography at issue in this case is useful to the following
    discussion. There is an historical dispute between Nicaragua and Colombia as to ownership of
    the seas and islands in the area, referred to as the San Andres Islands. The parties do not dispute
    where the territories and seas are located, and they agree on a beginning point and an endpoint
    for the go-fast vessel: (1) it left from some port on the northern coast of Colombia, and (2) it
    ended up aground on Roncador. The International Court of Justice prepared a sketch of the area
    in question, referred to as “Map A.” Roncador appears in the upper center of the map.
    8
    Territorial & Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia), 2012 I.C.J. No. 124 (“ICJ Decision”),
    at 64. The shaded area shows Roncador and other scattered islands, not land.
    “Roncador is an atoll located on a bank 15 km long and 7 km wide. It is about
    190 nautical miles to the east of the mainland of Nicaragua, 320 nautical miles from the
    mainland of Colombia, 75 nautical miles east of the island of Providencia and 45 nautical miles
    from Serrana. Roncador Cay, located half a mile from the northern border of the bank, is some
    550 metres long and 300 metres wide.” ICJ Decision ¶ 24(c). This Court takes judicial notice of
    the geography depicted in Map A and as explained in the ICJ’s ruling. See Fed. R. Evid. 201.
    The dispute between Nicaragua and Colombia over the ownership of the islands
    depicted in Map A has its origin in the eighteenth century. The countries tried to settle the
    matter through a treaty in 1928, but Nicaragua renounced the treaty in the 1980s and claimed that
    the islands belonged to it. “UN ruling gives Colombia islets but Nicaragua more sea,” BBC,
    9
    Nov. 19, 2012, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-20391180 (last
    accessed Feb. 19, 2013) (“BBC Article”). In 2007, a preliminary ICJ decision held that three of
    the biggest islands in the archipelago belonged to Colombia. 
    Id.
     In the November 2012 ruling,
    the ICJ upheld Colombia’s claim to all of the islands in question, including Roncador. See ICJ
    Decision ¶ 103. The parties have briefed this case on the assumption that Roncador belongs to
    Colombia, so the ICJ’s ruling does not change matters. The ICJ also determined the rights of
    Nicaragua and Colombia with respect to the waters surrounding the islands. This issue is
    discussed in the context of other maritime definitional issues below.
    II. LEGAL STANDARD
    “[A]t any time while the case is pending, the court may hear a claim that the
    indictment or information fails to invoke the court’s jurisdiction or to state an offense.” Fed. R.
    Crim. P. 12(b)(3)(B). The jurisdiction of a United States court under MDLEA “is not an element
    of an offense,” and jurisdictional issues in MDLEA prosecutions are “preliminary questions of
    law to be determined solely by the trial judge.” 
    46 U.S.C. § 70504
    ; see also United States v.
    Mitchell-Hunter, 
    663 F.3d 45
    , 51 (1st Cir. 2011) (“[T]he purpose of the MDLEA’s jurisdictional
    requirement is not to protect a defendant’s rights, but instead to maintain comity between foreign
    nations . . . .”). 6 Courts have required the government to establish jurisdiction by a
    preponderance of the evidence, e.g., United States v. Matos-Luchi, 
    627 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 2010),
    and the Court imposes that standard here.
    6
    Current § 70504 was added to MDLEA in 1996. See Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1996,
    Pub. L. 104-324, § 1138(a)(5), 
    110 Stat. 3901
    . Prior courts had held that jurisdiction was an
    element of the offense to be determined by the jury. See United States v. Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d 816
    , 828–29 (9th Cir. 2003) (discussing effect of 1996 amendment). Courts have upheld
    the constitutionality of the delegation to the trial judge to rule on the motion to dismiss. E.g.,
    United States v. Tinoco, 
    304 F.3d 1088
    , 1104–12 (11th Cir. 2002).
    10
    Other judges of this Court have addressed whether motions to reconsider are
    properly entertained in criminal cases and, if so, what standards govern. See United States v.
    Bloch, 
    794 F. Supp. 2d 15
    , 18–19 (D.D.C. 2011) (“In sum, while judges of this court have, on
    occasion, entertained motions for reconsideration of interlocutory orders in criminal cases, no
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure, or Local Criminal Rule of the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia, provides for such motions.”). This Court, like others, e.g., United
    States v. Sunia, 
    643 F. Supp. 2d 51
    , 60 (D.D.C. 2009), assumes that such motions are available
    but need not resolve the issue for two reasons. First, and most importantly, Messrs. Munoz
    Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal challenge the Court’s jurisdiction. Second, the motions
    provide the Court with an opportunity to amplify its oral ruling for appeal in a case of first
    impression. To that extent, the motions addressed herein are essentially the original motions to
    dismiss. Justice is best served if the Court considers the claims advanced by the Defendants,
    however styled. See 
    id.
     (applying “as justice requires” standard to similar motion for
    reconsideration after denial of motion to dismiss).
    III. ANALYSIS
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal raise multiple jurisdictional
    challenges to their prosecutions. Many of their arguments overlap issues that are analytically
    distinct. The small-but-growing body of MDLEA case law has evolved over time, has
    interpreted a statute that has been amended on numerous occasions, and has addressed a number
    of legal questions that can be difficult to separate. This Court attempts to distinguish and treat
    each legal issue separately.
    The Court first reviews the statute, discussing the provisions and history
    necessary to understand the issues presented here and to read prior MDLEA decisions correctly.
    Next, the Court addresses a number of factual matters that must be determined before reaching
    11
    the Defendants’ legal arguments, including the status of the vessel seized by the Colombian
    Navy, what constitutes the “high seas,” and whether this particular go-fast vessel traveled on the
    high seas. Third, the Court addresses statutory subject matter jurisdiction, considering whether
    MDLEA applies to the facts of this case. The constitutionality of MDLEA as applied is
    addressed fourth. Finally, the Court considers whether the prosecution of Messrs. Munoz
    Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal comports with due process.
    A. Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act
    1. 1980s Enactment and Legislative History
    In 1980, Congress enacted what would later become MDLEA as part of
    legislation “to facilitate increased enforcement by the Coast Guard of laws relating to the
    importation of controlled substances.” §§ 1–4, Pub. L. 96-350, 
    94 Stat. 1159
    . The first version
    of the statute was codified at 21 U.S.C. 955a et seq., and the earliest cases interpreting the
    statutory language of MDLEA—those from the early 1980s—cite to this statute. MDLEA itself
    was enacted as §§ 3201–02 of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 and codified at 46 U.S.C. app.
    § 1901 et seq. See Pub. L. 99-570, 
    100 Stat. 3207
    . In 2006, the MDLEA was moved to its
    present location at 
    46 U.S.C. § 70501
     et seq. without any amendment relevant to this case. See
    Act of Oct. 6, 2006, § 10(2), Pub. L. 109-304, 
    120 Stat. 1485
    .
    According to the legislative history, the 1980 legislation was enacted to “facilitate
    enforcement by the Coast Guard of laws relating to the importation of illegal drugs and other
    purposes.” S. Rep. No. 96-855, 1980 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2785, 2785 (July 16, 1980). The Coast
    Guard had faced difficulty because the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act
    of 1970 inadvertently “repeal[ed] the criminal provision under which drug smugglers
    apprehended on the high seas were prosecuted without creating a new provision to replace it.”
    
    Id.
     The repeal created a “statutory void” because if the government wished to prosecute
    12
    offenders seized on the high seas, it had to prosecute conspiracy or attempt to import narcotics.
    
    Id.
     at 2785–86. However, “in most cases, evidence to prove importation or conspiracy beyond a
    reasonable doubt [was] impossible to obtain.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, although the Coast Guard could
    “seize and confiscate the ship and the illegal drugs,” it could not “prosecute the crew or others
    involved in the smuggling operation,” creating a situation in which there was “little deterrent
    effect on the crews or the trafficking organizations in the highly lucrative trade in illegal drugs”
    because the organizations considered occasional seizures “part of the cost of doing business.” 
    Id. at 2786
    . The Senate Report also states that the 1980 legislation was intended to “give the Justice
    Department the maximum prosecutorial authority permitted under international law” and “to
    address acts committee [sic] outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.” Id.; see also
    
    id.
     (MDLEA “would apply to prohibited acts even if such acts occurred outside the territorial
    jurisdiction of the United States”). The statute explicitly stated that it would apply
    extraterritorially because some courts declined to give statutes extraterritorial effect without an
    explicit statement from Congress. 
    Id.
    The 1980 version of the statute contained provisions nearly identical to those
    under which Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal are charged. The statute
    provided: “[I]t is unlawful for any person . . . on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the
    United States on the high seas, to knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or to
    possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance,” 21 U.S.C. § 955a(a),
    and it extended its reach to “[a]ny person who attempts or conspires to commit any offense
    defined in this Act,” id. § 955c. The statute made clear that it was “intended to reach acts of
    possession, manufacture, or distribution committed outside the territorial jurisdiction of the
    United States.” Id. § 955a(h).
    13
    2. 1986 Version
    The version of MDLEA enacted in 1986 is very similar to the version in effect
    today, apart from its different location in the United States Code. See 46 U.S.C. App. §§ 1902–
    03. The statute was moved to its present location at 
    46 U.S.C. § 70501
     et seq. in 2006.
    Importantly, the predecessors of the sections with which Messrs. Munoz Miranda and
    Valderrama Carvajal are charged included substantially the same statutory text as the present
    versions, making reliance on cases from 1986 to 2006 feasible even though they cite to a
    different section of the United States Code. See 46 U.S.C. App. § 1903(a) (2002) (“It is unlawful
    for any person . . . on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States . . . to
    knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or
    distribute, a controlled substance.”); id. § 1903(c)(1)(A) (“[A] ‘vessel subject to the jurisdiction
    of the United States' includes a vessel without nationality . . .”); id. § 1903(j) (“Any person who
    attempts or conspires to commit any offense defined in this chapter shall be subject to the same
    penalties as those prescribed for the offense . . .”). However, it bears noting that the “on the high
    seas” language present in the 1980 version was omitted from the 1986 version. Compare 21
    U.S.C. § 955a(a) (1980) (“[I]t is unlawful for any person . . . on board a vessel subject to the
    jurisdiction of the United States on the high seas, to knowingly or intentionally manufacture or
    distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance . . . .”
    (emphasis added)), with 46 U.S.C. App. § 1903(a) (2002) (“It is unlawful for any person . . . on
    board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States . . . to knowingly or intentionally
    manufacture or distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled
    substance.”).
    14
    3. Present Version
    The present version of MDLEA retains as a preamble from the 1986 version a
    statement that “Congress finds and declares that trafficking in controlled substances aboard
    vessels is a serious international problem, is universally condemned, and presents a specific
    threat to the security and societal well-being of the United States . . . .” 
    46 U.S.C. § 70501
    (1).
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal are charged with violating 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70503
    (a)(1) & 70506(b). The substantive offense provision, § 70503(a)(1), provides:
    “An individual may not knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or possess with
    intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance on board a vessel of the United States
    or a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States . . . .” Furthermore, § 70506(b)
    provides that “[a] person attempting or conspiring to violate section 70503 of this title is subject
    to the same penalties as provided for violating section 70503.”
    As to extraterritorial application, MDLEA states explicitly that § 70503(a)
    “applies even though the act is committed outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United
    States.” Id. § 70503(b). Moreover, the statute provides that individual defendants charged with
    violating MDLEA have no standing to raise an international-law violation as a defense:
    A person charged with violating section 70503 of this title . . . does
    not have standing to raise a claim of failure to comply with
    international law as a basis for a defense. A claim of failure to
    comply with international law in the enforcement of this chapter
    may be made only by a foreign nation. A failure to comply with
    international law does not divest a court of jurisdiction and is not a
    defense to a proceeding under this chapter.
    Id. § 70505.
    A “vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States” is defined in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c), which provides:
    15
    (1) . . . [T]he term “vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United
    States” includes—
    (A) a vessel without nationality;
    ...
    (C) a vessel registered in a foreign nation if that nation has
    consented or waived objection to the enforcement of United
    States law by the United States;
    (D) a vessel in the customs waters of the United States;
    (E) a vessel in the territorial waters of a foreign nation if
    the nation consents to the enforcement of United States law
    by the United States . . . .
    (2) Consent or waiver of objection.—Consent or waiver of
    objection by a foreign nation to the enforcement of United States
    law by the United States under paragraph (1)(C) or (E)—(A) may
    be obtained by radio, telephone, or similar oral or electronic
    means; and (B) is proved conclusively by certification of the
    Secretary of State or the Secretary’s designee.
    The statute and case law further define “vessel without nationality,” as discussed
    below.
    B. Maritime Definitional Issues
    For purposes of a ruling here, the Court must determine the meaning of “the high
    seas” as used in the United States Constitution Article I § 8, clause 10, which provides that
    Congress is empowered “[t]o define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high
    Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations.” Complicating matters is that the terminology
    for bands of water at differing ranges from a nation’s coast is complex and not uniform. The
    following terms are relevant to the instant analysis:
    Customs Waters: Refers to “three miles of water from any point of land out to
    sea.” United States v. Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d 527
    , 530 n.3 (3d Cir. 2003). “[I]n the case of a
    foreign vessel subject to a treaty or other arrangement between a foreign government and the
    16
    United States enabling or permitting the authorities of the United States to board, examine,
    search, seize, or otherwise to enforce upon such vessel upon the high seas the laws of the United
    States, [customs waters are] the waters within such distance of the coast of the United States as
    the said authorities are or may be so enabled or permitted by such treaty or arrangement and, in
    the case of every other vessel, the waters within four leagues of the coast of the United States.”
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1401
    (j).
    Territorial Waters or Territorial Seas: Refers to twelve miles of water from any
    point of land of any country out to sea. Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d at
    530 n.3. “[I]nternational
    law today sets the breadth of the territorial sea which the coastal State has the right to establish at
    12 nautical miles. . . . Colombia has established a 12-nautical-mile territorial sea in respect of
    all its territories.” ICJ Decision ¶ 177; see also id. ¶ 178 (discussing how the Court of
    Arbitration and International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea have reached the same result
    regarding the extent of territorial seas); 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
    (UNCLOS), opened for signature Dec. 10, 1982, 1833 U.N.T.S. 397 (entered into force Nov. 16,
    1994), Art. 3. “In accordance with long-established principles of customary international law, a
    coastal State possesses sovereignty over the sea-bed and water column in its territorial sea.” ICJ
    Decision ¶ 177 (citation omitted). The ICJ’s 2012 decision included a finding that Roncador is
    entitled to a twelve-mile territorial sea. Id. ¶ 180.
    Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and Continental Shelf: Exclusive Economic
    Zone refers to two-hundred miles of water from the baseline of a coastal state, UNCLOS Art. 57,
    and the Continental Shelf is “the seabed and subsoil of the submarine areas that extend beyond
    its territorial sea throughout the natural prolongation of its land territory to the outer edge of the
    continental margin, or to a distance of 200 nautical miles from the baselines from which the
    17
    breadth of the territorial sea is measured where the outer edge of the continental margin does not
    extend up to that distance,” id. Art. 76. “States enjoy specific rights, rather than sovereignty,
    with respect to the continental shelf and exclusive economic zone.” ICJ Decision ¶ 177. In its
    2012 ruling, the ICJ set out a line of maritime delimitation to divide the continental-shelf and
    EEZ rights of Colombia and Nicaragua. See ICJ Decision ¶¶ 184–247; see also id. Map no. 11
    (illustrating maritime boundary fixed by the ICJ). This ruling has upset Colombia because its
    EEZ has been reduced in size and because two of its islands—Roncador not among them—are
    now surrounded by waters in the Nicaraguan EEZ, notwithstanding the 12-mile territorial sea
    around them belonging to Colombia. See Jim Wyss, “World court: Colombia loses swath of sea
    but keeps islands in dispute with Nicaragua,” Miami Herald, Nov. 19, 2012, available at
    http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/11/19/3104915/world-court-colombia-loses-swath.html (last
    accessed Feb. 20, 2012).
    The High Seas: Courts treat “the high seas” as the waters not within any nation’s
    territorial seas—i.e., the high seas are the waters beyond the coastal state’s sovereignty, meaning
    those greater than twelve miles from the coast. E.g., United States v. Romero-Galue, 
    757 F.2d 1147
    , 1149 (11th Cir. 1985) (MDLEA case) (citing United States v. Williams, 
    617 F.2d 1063
    ,
    1073 n.6 (5th Cir. 1980) (en banc); other citations omitted); see also Convention on the High
    Seas, Sept. 30, 1962, art. 1, 13 U.S.T. 2312 (“The term ‘high seas’ means all parts of the sea that
    are not included in the territorial sea or in the internal waters of a State.”); In re Air Crash Off
    Long Island, New York, on July 17, 1996, 
    209 F.3d 200
    , 205 (2d Cir. 2000) (surveying United
    18
    States and international law on meaning of “high seas” and concluding that the “high seas” are
    those outside territorial waters). 7
    C. Factual Issues—Statelessness & High Seas Travel
    Before turning to issues of statutory subject matter jurisdiction, constitutionality,
    and due process, the Court makes two findings of fact that guide its legal analysis: (1) the vessel
    seized by the Colombian Navy off Roncador and the vessel planned to transport the stolen load
    were “stateless vessels” subject to United States jurisdiction under 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1), (d);
    and (2) the vessel seized by the Colombian Navy traveled on the high seas before being seized
    off Roncador in the territorial waters of Colombia.
    1. Statelessness of Vessel
    DOJ relies on the theory that the vessels were “without nationality” and thus
    subject to United States jurisdiction under 
    42 U.S.C. §§ 70502
    (c)(1), (d). See Dkt. 47 at 2. For
    the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that both vessels were “without nationality.”
    A “‘vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States’ includes a vessel
    without nationality.” 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(A). MDLEA in turn defines a “vessel without
    nationality” to include three different categories of vessels. 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (d)(1). Those
    categories are:
    7
    There is some authority that the “high seas” begin outside the 200-mile economic zone. See,
    e.g., UNCLOS Art. 86. The Court declines to adopt that definition; defining the “high seas” as
    those waters beyond any country’s sovereignty is the better reasoned understanding that has long
    been in use. E.g., United States v. Morel, 
    26 F. Cas. 1310
    , 1312 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1834) (No.
    15,807) (“The open sea, the high sea, the ocean, is that which is . . . under the particular right or
    jurisdiction of no sovereign . . . .”); see also United States v. Salad, __ F. Supp. 2d __, Cr. No.
    2:11cr34, 
    2012 WL 6097444
    , at *3–4 (E.D. Va. Nov. 30, 2012) (rejecting argument that Somalia
    is entitled to 200-mile territorial sea because “the twelve-mile [territorial sea] limit accurately
    describes customary international law”).
    19
    (A) a vessel aboard which the master or individual in charge makes
    a claim of registry that is denied by the nation whose registry is
    claimed;
    (B) a vessel aboard which the master or individual in charge fails,
    on request of an officer of the United States authorized to enforce
    applicable provisions of United States law, to make a claim of
    nationality or registry for that vessel; and
    (C) a vessel aboard which the master or individual in charge makes
    a claim of registry and for which the claimed nation of registry
    does not affirmatively and unequivocally assert that the vessel is of
    its nationality.
    
    Id.
     Moreover, MDLEA limits to three the ways in which a vessel can make a “claim of
    nationality or registry” in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (e):
    A claim of nationality or registry under this section includes
    only—
    (1) possession on board the vessel and production of
    documents evidencing the vessel’s nationality as provided
    in article 5 of the 1958 Convention on the High Seas;
    (2) flying its nation’s ensign or flag; or
    (3) a verbal claim of nationality or registry by the master or
    individual in charge of the vessel.
    (emphasis added).
    Because MDLEA’s list of what constitutes a “vessel without nationality” is not
    exhaustive, see 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (d)(1) (“the term ‘vessel without nationality’ includes . . .”
    (emphasis added)), courts have held that MDLEA’s definition of a “vessel without nationality”
    also encompasses vessels considered “stateless” or “without nationality” under international law.
    See United States v. Rosero, 
    42 F.3d 166
    , 171 (3d Cir. 1994) (“T]he residual category of vessels
    ‘without nationality’ [in the MDLEA] . . . are those that would be regarded as without nationality
    or stateless under international law.”); see also United States v. Henriquez, 
    731 F.2d 131
    , 134 n.5
    (2d Cir. 1984) (“[T]he term ‘vessel without nationality’ clearly encompasses vessels not
    20
    operating under the authority of any sovereign nation.”). Essentially, “the core of the concept of
    a vessel that is ‘without nationality’ or stateless is that the vessel lacks authorization to fly the
    flag of any recognized state.” Rosero, 
    42 F.3d at 171
    .
    Both Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal conceded in their factual
    proffers that both vessels the DTO used in this case were stateless. See Munoz Miranda SOF ¶ 3
    (“[The DTO] . . . transported narcotics from Colombia on stateless go-fast vessels . . . .”);
    Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶¶ 3 (same).
    However, the Defendants had argued prior to entering guilty pleas that
    statelessness was unresolved as a factual matter. See Dkt. 34 at 3 (“[I]t appears the Colombian
    Navy believed the vessel was Colombian as it asserted its jurisdiction over the vessel. There is
    no evidence that the Colombian Navy questioned or considered the nationality of the vessel to be
    anything other than Colombian.”); see also Dkt. 61 at 8–9, 10 (“[T]he ‘statelessness of the
    vessel’ has in fact not been proven.”). They speculate that, prior to the seizure in Colombian
    territorial waters, “there may well have been aboard the boat at some point documents relating to
    the nationality of the vessel. . . . [H]ad the vessel . . . been seized on the high seas, it may have
    very well maintained ‘documents’ on board,” asserted a claim of nationality when seized, or
    carried a flag. Dkt. 51 at 5. In their motions for reconsideration, Defendants also raised a legal
    argument: the vessels cannot have been stateless because “[u]nder international law, only a
    vessel in international waters[ ] can be ‘stateless’ or without nationality.” Dkt. 91 at 3 (citing
    Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Maritime Law 5th ed., 2012, Vol. 1, § 3-12).
    DOJ responds that the vessels were “without nationality.” Dkt. 47 at 5. “[T]here
    was no name or markings on the vessel, and the go-fast boat was not flying a flag. Moreover, a
    search of the vessel did not reveal any registration documents. Additionally, when questioned,
    21
    none of the crew members indicated that the vessel was registered to a particular country,
    identified the vessel’s owner, or provided paperwork documenting ownership or registration with
    the Colombian government.” Dkt. 47 at 4–5; see also Dkt. 60 at 14, Dkt. 89 at 9–11.
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal agreed at the motions hearing
    that they would not present any evidence on the issue of statelessness. Both from their pleas and
    the entire record, the Court concludes that DOJ has met its burden of proving statelessness. 8 In
    Mr. Munoz Miranda’s factual proffer, he conceded that the stolen load was to be shipped aboard
    a boat that “was not registered in Colombia and did not fly a Colombia flag.” Munoz Miranda
    SOF ¶ 3. Mr. Valderrama Carvajal likewise admitted that the vessel that ran aground off
    Roncador “did not fly a flag, was not registered in Colombia or any other nation, and contained
    no registration identification” and that “[n]o one in the crew, including the captain, claimed that
    the go-fast boat was registered in Colombia.” Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3. Accordingly, there
    was no “claim of nationality or registry” as to either vessel at any time. See 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (e). Moreover, because neither boat was registered, had a “claim of nationality or
    registry” been made, it inevitably would have been rejected. See 
    id.
     § 70502(d)(1).
    These vessels fit comfortably within the concept of a “stateless vessel” or “vessel
    without nationality” as recognized in international law, as comparison to a representative
    sampling of cases shows. See United States v. Rendon, 
    354 F.3d 1320
    , 1328 (11th Cir. 2003)
    (vessel stateless when it “flew no flag, contained no identification markings or registration
    documents, and Colombian officials were unable to confirm [a crewmember’s] assertion of
    Colombian registry”) (citations to predecessor statute omitted); Tinoco, 
    304 F.3d at 1115
     (vessel
    8
    As DOJ notes, at the motions hearing, it was ready to call as a witness Ms. Aidee Lopez
    Fernandez, a former Colombian prosecutor who worked on the case and debriefed some of the
    crew members; it was also prepared to present testimony regarding the seizure, the distances, and
    the wiretaps. Dkt. 89 at 16–17.
    22
    stateless where, inter alia, there were no “identifying marks on the vessel or any registration
    documents on board,” the crew members “never volunteered the name of the vessel and its
    registration number,” and Colombia, the claimed nation of registration, was unable to confirm or
    deny the vessel’s registry); United States v. Cuevas-Esquivel, 
    905 F.2d 510
    , 514 (1st Cir. 1990)
    (vessel stateless when “[n]o one identified himself as the master or person in charge,[ ] the vessel
    had no name, no flag, or other identifying characteristics” and “the crew denied knowing who
    the master was, the name of the vessel and its nationality”).
    The Court turns to the Defendants’ legal argument—that a vessel cannot be
    “stateless” unless it is in international waters. See Dkt. 91 at 3. This argument fails for several
    reasons. First, Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal overstate the contents of the
    only source on which they rely, an admiralty law treatise. That text states a proposition that is
    far less helpful than the one the Defendants cite it for: “Since stateless vessels are ‘international
    pariahs’ and have no right to navigate freely on the high seas, they may be subjected to the
    jurisdiction of any state.” Schoenbaum, supra, § 3-12 at 216. This statement says nothing about
    tying statelessness to seizure only on the high seas. Second, as discussed below, the Court finds
    that the go-fast boat seized by the Colombian Navy did travel through the high seas. The
    Defendants have offered nothing more than speculation that the vessel was equipped with
    registration documents or a flag while it was on the high seas, before reentering Colombian
    waters. To the contrary, the description of that vessel in the factual proffer was unequivocal and
    unconditional: “The go-fast boat did not fly a flag, was not registered in Colombia or any other
    nation, and contained no registration identification.” Valderrama Carvajal SOF ¶ 3. Third, the
    Court has located no authority—in MDLEA or otherwise—for the proposition that stateless
    vessels only become truly stateless when they cross into the high seas. The absence of such
    23
    authority is unsurprising; the sine qua non of statelessness is the vessel’s lack of nationality, not
    where the vessel happens to be. See Rosero, 
    42 F.3d at 171
     (“[T]he core of the concept of a
    vessel that is ‘without nationality’ or stateless is that the vessel lacks authorization to fly the flag
    of any recognized state.”).
    Accordingly, the Court concludes that the vessels used by the DTO were subject
    to the jurisdiction of the United States as vessels without nationality. See 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70502
    (c)(1)(A), (d)(1).
    2. Travel through the High Seas
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal contend that there is no
    evidence that the go-fast vessel actually traveled on the high seas at any point prior to being
    seized. DOJ responds that the circumstantial evidence overwhelmingly confirms that the vessel
    passed through the high seas at least once. For the reasons discussed below, the Court concludes
    that DOJ has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the vessel did pass through the high
    seas.
    According to Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal, they “at no time
    conceded . . . that the boat traveled through the high seas, nor from where the boat initially
    embarked, or its route of travel, [or] which waters it traversed . . . . [T]he government’s
    discovery, namely, statements of crew members, are inconsistent to each other, on various points
    of their travel including where exactly they departed . . . .” Dkt. 95 at 2–3. 9 The Defendants
    reason that “[t]he vessel may have traveled along the territorial waters of Panama and other
    nations before returning to Colombian waters [where] it was seized.” Dkt. 51 at 5. Their
    9
    Although the Defendants’ joint stipulations of facts concede that the DTO transported narcotics
    “on stateless go-fast vessels through international waters,” neither stipulation states that the go-
    fast vessel at issue here traveled through international waters.
    24
    argument, then, is that it is possible the go-fast vessel skirted the coasts of Colombia, Panama,
    Costa Rica, and Nicaragua, then traveled from island to island, never traveling outside of the
    territorial seas of those nations at any point prior to being interdicted. See Map A.
    DOJ responds that “it is a reasonable inference from the crew’s post-arrest
    statements that the vessel left a point somewhere on the northern coast of Colombia, then
    traveled through international waters, before being interdicted by the Colombian officials on
    Roncador’s reefs.” Dkt. 60 at 21. DOJ summarizes those statements as follows:
    One of the crew members, Domingo Borja Melendez, admitted
    that he was Captain of the go-fast vessel and that the crew picked
    up the cocaine-laden vessel at Puerto Estrella, which is located in
    La Guajira Department on the Northern Coast of Colombia. He
    further stated that they were instructed to deliver the drugs that
    were on that vessel to another that would be located in Honduran
    waters. Two other crew members, Elvis Ramos Gorgona and
    Miguel Antonio Benitez Ladeus, stated that they left from a place
    close to Coveñas, which is also on the Northern Coast of
    Colombia. Benitez Ladeus also stated that they were headed
    towards a key in San Andres when they detoured to Roncador after
    being spotted by a plane.
    Dkt. 47 at 6.
    Moreover, according to DOJ, “it would have been impossible for the go-fast
    vessel to depart the northern coast of Colombia, at the points the crew members described, and
    reach Roncador Island, without venturing into waters beyond the 12 nautical mile territorial limit
    of Colombia (or Nicaragua, Honduras, or Panama, for that matter).” Dkt. 89 at 17. DOJ also
    relies on the judicially authorized wiretaps, during which members of the DTO discussed
    coordinates in international waters at which the go-fast vessel was to meet another vessel to
    transfer the cocaine. Dkt. 60 at 18; see also Dkt. 89 at 12–13.
    Both the evidence proffered by DOJ and logic firmly support DOJ’s contention
    that the go-fast vessel traveled on the high seas. Nothing in the record supports the Defendants’
    25
    theory that the go-fast vessel intentionally scooped a longer, wide U-shaped path along the coasts
    and islands. To the contrary, all of the crew members testified that they left the north Colombian
    coast and headed towards a rendezvous point off Honduras. E.g., Statement of Carlos Andres
    Naranjo Jaramillo, Dkt. 60, Ex. B [Dkt. 60-2] at 3 (“We left in the early morning hours of Friday
    from beyond Coveñas headed toward the cays over here, of San Andres. We sailed all night
    until we were intercepted by the plane and they made us run aground.”); Statement of Domingo
    Borja Melendez, Dkt. 60, Ex. B [Dkt. 60-2] at 6–13 (go-fast vessel’s captain statement that he
    was instructed to deliver the cocaine to “a boat in Honduran territorial waters”). Taking a
    circuitous route would have been contrary to the goal of using the go-fast vessel: to transport
    narcotics as swiftly as possible while minimizing the risk of interdiction.
    Even if the go-fast vessel had taken a circuitous route in an attempt to avoid the
    high seas, there is a stark fact of geography the Defendants cannot overcome. According to Map
    A, the chart prepared by the ICJ, there is no land mass within 12 nautical miles of Roncador.
    The nearest island in the most logical U-pattern is Providencia Island, 75 nautical miles away;
    the Serrano Cays are approximately 45 nautical miles away from Roncador. The go-fast vessel
    must, therefore, have traveled outside the 12-mile territorial sea limit at some point. Even
    assuming travel in a perfectly plotted path, it was impossible for the go-fast vessel to have
    arrived on Roncador’s reefs without having traveled on the high seas. The Court thus proceeds
    to the other sections of its analysis having found that the go-fast vessel did travel on the high
    seas. 10
    10
    At the motions hearing, the Court commented that “this go-fast boat was probably on the high
    seas, I mean, almost certainly as a matter of logic but not unfortunately proof.” Oct. 11, 2012
    Hr’g Tr., Dkt. 89, Ex. 1 [Dkt. 89-1] at 116. That statement was not intended to be a finding of
    fact. As discussed in this Opinion, the Court concludes that DOJ has met its burden of showing
    by a preponderance of the evidence that the vessel traveled on the high seas.
    26
    D. Statutory Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    The Defendants also argue that the offenses with which they are charged fall
    outside the scope of MDLEA. Analysis of any statute that purports to apply extraterritorially—
    that is, to conduct outside the United States—begins with two preliminary inquiries: (1) did
    Congress intend the statute to apply extraterritorially?; and (2) the Charming Betsy canon: should
    the Court give the statute a limited interpretation to comport with international law? After
    addressing those matters, the Court turns to the specific arguments raised by Messrs. Munoz
    Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal: (1) DOJ has not alleged that they conspired while “on board”
    a vessel subject to United States jurisdiction; (2) there is no allegation that Defendants’ conduct
    had any nexus to the United States; and (3) prosecution in the United States fails ab initio
    because Colombia has not “consented.”
    As discussed in more detail below, the Court concludes that, as a matter of
    statutory construction, MDLEA prohibits the conduct charged here because the Defendants
    conspired with the crew to distribute a controlled substance on board a stateless vessel.
    1. Extraterritorial Application
    “It is beyond doubt that, as a general proposition, Congress has the authority to
    ‘enforce its laws beyond the territorial boundaries of the United States.’” United States v.
    Yousef, 
    327 F.3d 56
    , 86 (2d Cir. 2003) (quoting EEOC v. Arabian Am. Oil Co., 
    499 U.S. 244
    ,
    248 (1991)). “Although there is a presumption that Congress does not intend a statute to apply to
    conduct outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, that presumption can be
    overcome when Congress clearly expresses its intent to do so.” Yousef, 
    327 F.3d at
    86 (citing,
    inter alia, Foley Bros. v. Filardo, 
    336 U.S. 281
    , 285 (1949)); see also Morrison v. Nat’l
    Australia Bank Ltd., 
    130 S. Ct. 2869
    , 2877 (2010) (“It is a longstanding principle of American
    law that legislation of Congress, unless a contrary intent appears, is meant to apply only within
    27
    the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted));
    United States v. Yakou, 
    428 F.3d 241
    , 252 (D.C. Cir. 2005). If Congress’s intent is clear, and the
    statute is not otherwise beyond constitutional authority, then courts are bound to follow that
    intent so long as the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process is satisfied. See Yousef, 
    327 F.3d at 86
     (citation omitted); United States v. Pinto-Mejia, 
    720 F.2d 248
    , 259 (2d Cir. 1983).
    The presumption against extraterritoriality does not apply to criminal statutes that
    are “not logically dependent on their locality for the government’s jurisdiction.” See United
    States v. Bowman, 
    260 U.S. 94
    , 98–99 (1922) (giving as examples “enticing desertions from the
    naval service” and “[f]orging or altering ship’s papers”). In those cases, “to limit [the statute’s]
    locus to the strictly territorial jurisdiction would be greatly to curtail the scope and usefulness of
    the statute and leave open a large immunity for frauds as easily committed by citizens on the
    high seas and in foreign countries as at home,” and Congress can reasonably be assumed to have
    intended to criminalize conduct beyond United States borders. See id.; see also Yakou, 
    428 F.3d at 252
     (“[A]bsent an indication from Congress to the contrary, the crime of aiding and abetting
    ‘confer[s] extraterritorial jurisdiction to the same extent as the offense [ ] that underlie[s it].’
    (quoting United States v. Hill, 
    279 F.3d 731
    , 739 (9th Cir. 2002); alterations in Yakou)).
    No hesitation is required; Congress intended MDLEA to apply extraterritorially.
    The conduct alleged in this case, while at the outer limits of the statutory text, nonetheless falls
    within it: Congress criminalized “attempting or conspiring” to “knowingly or intentionally
    manufacture or distribute, or possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled
    substance on board.” 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70503
    (a)(1), 70506(b). There is no territorial limitation in
    the statutory text, and the offenses reached by it overcome the presumption against
    extraterritoriality because they “not logically dependent on their locality” for United States
    28
    jurisdiction. Bowman, 
    260 U.S. at
    98–99. Congress’s designs are made even more plain by the
    supporting sections of MDLEA, in which Congress “declare[d] that trafficking in controlled
    substances aboard vessels is a serious international problem” and specified that § 70503(a)
    “applies even though the act is committed outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United
    States.” 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70501
    , 70503(b). Courts have uniformly ruled that MDLEA applies to
    conduct outside the United States. E.g., United States v. Davis, 
    905 F.2d 245
    , 248 (9th Cir.
    1990) (“Congress explicitly stated that it intended the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act to
    apply extraterritorially.”).
    It bears emphasizing that the Court’s conclusion as to extraterritoriality extends to
    the conspiracy provision. As the plain text quoted above makes clear and as courts have
    recognized, MDLEA’s conspiracy prohibition reaches coextensively with the substantive
    offense. See Pinto-Mejia, 720 F.2d at 259 (“[T]here is evidence that Congress had as a primary
    goal the ability to reach stateless possessors of narcotics who could not be proved to have intent
    to distribute the narcotics in the United States.”); cf. Yousef, 
    327 F.3d at
    87–88 (“[I]f Congress
    intended United States courts to have jurisdiction over the substantive crime of placing bombs on
    board the aircraft at issue, it is reasonable to conclude that Congress also intended to vest in
    United States courts the requisite jurisdiction over an extraterritorial conspiracy to commit that
    crime.”).
    2. Charming Betsy
    Under the Charming Betsy canon, the Court is required to consider whether
    extraterritorial application of a Congressional statute accords with international law.
    The Supreme Court early cautioned that “an act of congress ought never to be
    construed to violate the law of nations, if any other possible construction remains . . . .” Murray
    v. The Charming Betsy, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 64, 117–18 (1804); accord Weinberger v. Rossi, 456
    
    29 U.S. 25
    , 32 (1982) (applying Charming Betsy as a “maxim of statutory construction”).
    Nonetheless, the Charming Betsy canon guides interpretation of ambiguous statutes as a matter
    of international comity, not as a hard-and-fast rule. “[I]n fashioning the reach of our criminal
    law, ‘Congress is not bound by international law. If it chooses to do so, it may legislate with
    respect to conduct outside the United States, in excess of the limits posed by international law.’”
    Yousef, 
    327 F.3d at 86
     (quoting Pinto-Mejia, 720 F.2d at 259; other citations omitted). “If a
    statute makes plain Congress’s intent (instead of employing ambiguous or ‘general’ words), then
    Article III courts, which can overrule Congressional enactments only when such enactments
    conflict with the Constitution, must enforce the intent of Congress irrespective of whether the
    statute conforms to customary international law.” Id. at 93 (internal citation and quotation
    omitted). “[W]ithin the domestic legal realm, that inconsistent statute simply modifies or
    supersedes customary international law to the extent of the inconsistency.” United States v.
    Yunis, 
    924 F.2d 1086
    , 1091 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (quoting Comm. of U.S. Citizens Living in Nicar. v.
    Reagan, 
    859 F.2d 929
     (D.C. Cir. 1988)).
    As discussed above, Congress’s intent in passing MDLEA was plain: MDLEA is
    intended to apply extraterritorially, and on its face it reaches the conduct alleged in this case:
    conspiracy to use a stateless vessel to distribute narcotics. See 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70503
    (a)(1),
    70506(b); see also 
    id.
     § 70503(b) (§ 70503(a) applies “even though the act is committed outside
    the territorial jurisdiction of the United States”). The Court is thus bound to apply MDLEA as
    written regardless of whether application of MDLEA in this case is consistent with international
    law. See Yunis, 
    924 F.2d at 1091
    .
    Whether MDLEA is, in fact, contrary to international law is a difficult question.
    It suffices to say that DOJ has not demonstrated any clear authority under international law for
    30
    the proposition that a country may exercise jurisdiction over conspirators whose conduct took
    place wholly in a foreign country, with no demonstrated nexus to the country exercising
    jurisdiction, on the theory that the conspiracy involved use of a stateless vessel that traveled on
    the high seas. However, the Defendants have likewise not pointed to any clear authority to
    demonstrate that their prosecution contravenes international law.
    “[I]nternational law itself imposes limits on the extraterritorial jurisdiction that a
    domestic court may exercise. It generally recognizes five theories of jurisdiction, the objective
    territorial, national, passive, protective and universal.” Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, 
    726 F.2d 774
    , 781 n.7 (D.C. Cir. 1984). This Court summarized the five theories as follows:
    Territorial, wherein jurisdiction is based on the place where the
    offense is committed; National, wherein jurisdiction is based on
    the nationality of the offender; Protective, wherein jurisdiction is
    based on whether the national interest is injured; Universal,
    wherein jurisdiction is conferred in any forum that obtains physical
    custody of the perpetrator of certain offenses considered
    particularly heinous and harmful to humanity; and Passive
    personal, wherein jurisdiction is based on the nationality of the
    victim.
    United States v. Yunis, 
    681 F. Supp. 896
    , 899–900 (D.D.C. 1988), aff’d, 
    924 F.2d 1086
     (D.C.
    Cir. 1991).
    DOJ relies in this case on two theories: universal and protective. See Dkt. 60 at
    6–7 (citing, inter alia, Romero-Galue, 
    757 F.2d at
    1154–55). Congress invoked both theories in
    the text of MDLEA. See 
    46 U.S.C. § 70501
    (1) (“Congress finds and declares that trafficking in
    controlled substances aboard vessels is a serious international problem, is universally
    condemned, and presents a specific threat to the security and societal well-being of the United
    States . . . .”). Nonetheless, there are distinct weaknesses when applying either theory to the
    conduct at issue here. As to universal jurisdiction, “[n]o source of customary international law
    31
    has designated drug trafficking as being subject to universal jurisdiction. The academic
    community is in accord that drug trafficking is not considered a universal jurisdiction offense.
    . . . [And] several courts of appeals have held that drug trafficking is not a universal jurisdiction
    offense . . . .” Bellaizac-Hurtado, 700 F.3d at 1260–61 (Barkett, J., concurring). United States v.
    Salcedo-Ibarra, No. 8:07-CR-49-T-27TGW, 
    2009 WL 1953399
    , at *1 (M.D. Fla. July 6, 2009),
    cited by DOJ in support of its claim for universal jurisdiction, was implicitly overruled by
    Bellaizac-Hurtado and did not provide a rationale that would clearly survive Bellaizac-Hurtado.
    Salcedo-Ibarra stated only: “Just as trafficking in narcotics on the high seas is considered an
    offense against the ‘Law of Nations,’ including the United States, likewise, conspiring to traffic
    in narcotics on the high seas constitutes such an offense.” 
    Id.
     On the other hand, Bellaizac-
    Hurtado is not binding on this Court.
    Protective jurisdiction makes a better, if not perfect, fit. “The protective principle
    permits a nation to assert jurisdiction over a person whose conduct outside the nation’s territory
    threatens the nation’s security or could potentially interfere with the operation of its
    governmental functions.” Romero–Galue, 
    757 F.2d at 1154
    . “The protective principle does not
    require that there be proof of an actual or intended effect inside the United States. The conduct
    may be forbidden if it has a potentially adverse effect and is generally recognized as a crime by
    nations that have reasonably developed legal systems.” United States v. Gonzalez, 
    776 F.2d 931
    ,
    939 (11th Cir. 1985). It is beyond peradventure that illegal drugs are a problem in the United
    States, and, specifically, that cocaine imported to the United States from Colombia is a major
    part of that problem. See, e.g., United States v. Cabrera, 
    734 F. Supp. 2d 66
    , 72 (D.D.C. 2010)
    (finding as fact from trial testimony that “[t]he United States is the world’s largest cocaine
    consumer and approximately 90% of the cocaine consumed in the United States comes from
    32
    Colombia”). The protective principle may justify the United States’s criminalization of the
    conduct charged here; these Defendants are part of the lengthy supply chain by which cocaine
    enters the United States. But the Court has located no real authority for applying the protective
    principle to drug trafficking beyond Romero-Galue, in which the defendants were seized aboard
    the smuggling vessel by the United States Coast Guard. 
    757 F.2d at 1149
    . The Eleventh Circuit
    in that case stated: “Even absent a treaty or arrangement, the United States could, under the
    ‘protective principle’ of international law, prosecute foreign nationals on foreign vessels on the
    high seas for possession of narcotics.” 
    Id. at 1154
    . Romero-Galue offers no guidance as to
    conspiracy in a foreign country, stateless vessels, seizure by foreign authorities, or the absence of
    a direct nexus to the United States.
    Because the D.C. Circuit has not addressed whether MDLEA comports with
    international law under these facts and it is ultimately not necessary to do so, the Court declines
    to answer that question here. Whether this prosecution is consistent with the protective principle
    is ultimately not dispositive because there is no ambiguity in MDLEA, and the Court must
    enforce the statute as written by Congress unless there are other constitutional infirmities. See
    Yousef, 
    327 F.3d at 93
    . 11
    11
    The application of international law to this prosecution, involving conspirators who used
    stateless vessels, is separate from whether international law would permit the United States to
    exercise jurisdiction over a stateless vessel and, thus, its inhabitants. A separate set of rules
    governs those facts. “[I]nternational law generally prohibits any country from asserting
    jurisdiction over foreign vessels on the high seas” because “such vessels are normally considered
    within the exclusive jurisdiction of the country whose flag they fly.” United States v. Marino-
    Garcia, 
    679 F.2d 1373
    , 1380 (11th Cir. 1982) (citing, inter alia, The S.S. Lotus, (1927) P.C.I.J.
    ser. A, No. 10 at 25). It is clear that, as far as the high seas are concerned, “the objective,
    protective, and territorial principles ‘have no applicability’ . . . because such vessels are
    ‘international pariahs’ that have ‘no internationally recognized right to navigate freely on the
    high seas.’” United States v. Ibarguen-Mosquera, 
    634 F.3d 1370
    , 1379 (11th Cir. 2011) (quoting
    Marino-Garcia, 
    679 F.2d at 1382
    ). Thus, “international law places no restrictions upon a
    nation’s right to subject stateless vessels to its jurisdiction.” Marino-Garcia, 
    679 F.2d at 1382
    .
    33
    3. Whether MDLEA Requires Conspiring “On Board” a Vessel
    Defendants advance a novel statutory interpretation: MDLEA may criminalize
    conspiracy, but the law only applies when the conspirators conspire while “on board” a vessel
    subject to United States jurisdiction. The Court rejected this clever but cabined reading of the
    statute at the October 12, 2012, hearing, and does so again now.
    Messrs. Valderrama Carvajal and Munoz Miranda contend that “the indictment
    fails to charge conduct ‘on board a vessel of the United States or subject to the jurisdiction of the
    United States.’” Dkt. 53 at 2. Relying on the plain language of the statute, prior prosecutions,
    and the legislative history, they argue that DOJ’s “failure to specifically allege that any co-
    conspirator(s) were actually on board a vessel[ ] renders the indictment overbroad, vague, and
    insufficient to state a crime.” Dkt. 65 at 1–9. According to the Defendants, “[t]he penalty
    provision [
    46 U.S.C. § 70506
    ], consistent with the rest of the statute, simply says that those who
    abet or conspire to distribute or possess with the intent to distribute controlled substances on
    board a vessel, can be punished as principals. It has been read in practically every case[ ] to
    apply to crew.” Dkt. 85 at 2; see also Dkt. 65 at 3 (observing that “[w]ith very rare exceptions,”
    past cases have been brought “against persons on board vessels seized and investigated by U.S.
    law enforcement”). Moreover, “the legislative history of 46 U.S.C. [app.] § 1903 (and therefore
    Section 70503), indicates that it applies to conduct of persons on board vessels.” Dkt. 65 at 6;
    see also Dkt. 85 at 3 (noting that 
    46 U.S.C. § 70501
     states that “trafficking in controlled
    substances aboard vessels is a serious international problem” (emphasis added by Defendants)).
    Unsurprisingly, DOJ disagrees. “That Congress intended to apply the conspiracy
    provision of the MDLEA to a person who is not on the vessel, but otherwise conspires with those
    Whether that axiom of international law extends to stateless vessels in a foreign nation’s
    territorial waters is a question that neither courts nor commentators have resolved.
    34
    found on board a vessel deemed subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, or with others
    intending to use vessels deemed subject to the United States, is clear in the statute’s plain
    meaning and in the fundamental understanding of what constitutes a conspiracy.” Dkt. 88 at 6.
    DOJ argues:
    Were it intended, as the defendants claim, that the only individuals
    prosecutable under the MDLEA are those on board the vessel,
    there would have been no need for Congress to have enacted
    § 70506 because § 70503 sufficiently covers crew conduct. Thus,
    defendants’ reasoning virtually reads § 70506 out of the statute. In
    addition, a defense interpretation that defendants could only be
    charged with conspiracy once they were on the boat together
    would . . . be an absurd limitation and application of the statute.
    Dkt. 60 at 31; see also Dkt. 88 at 7 (proposing a scenario in which “an organizational associate
    stands on the dock alongside a cocaine-laden go-fast vessel and coordinates the transport with
    the captain who is in the boat” and arguing that “under the Defendants’ interpretation of the
    MDLEA, the dock-side associate could not be charged with an MDLEA conspiracy unless or
    until he steps onto the boat, whereas the captain could”). According to DOJ, “[w]hen combined
    with what defines a conspiracy, it is clear that what § 70506(b) prohibits is any person from
    conspiring, agreeing, or coming to a mutual understanding with one or more persons to fulfill the
    object of the conspiracy, in this case, to distribute drugs through the use of a vessel, as long as
    the vessel is deemed subject to the jurisdiction of the United States under § 70502(c)(1).” Dkt.
    88 at 7.
    A conspiracy under 
    46 U.S.C. § 70506
    (b) to engage in the conduct prohibited by
    
    46 U.S.C. § 70503
    (a)(1)—that is, a conspiracy to use a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the
    United States to distribute narcotics—must naturally include activities other than those that occur
    directly on board the vessel. The statute cannot be read any other way. The qualification
    Defendants ask the Court to impose simply has no support in the text of MDLEA, which the
    35
    Court finds to be unambiguous. See 
    46 U.S.C. § 70506
    (b) (“A person attempting or conspiring
    to violate section 70503 of this title is subject to the same penalties as provided for violating
    section 70503.”).
    The Court is aware of at least two other cases in which conspirators not on board
    a vessel were convicted of violating MDLEA. One court directly rejected the argument
    advanced by Defendants here. Salcedo-Ibarra, 
    2009 WL 1953399
    , at *1 (“Just as one who
    possesses cocaine with the intent to distribute while ‘on board’ a vessel subject to the jurisdiction
    of the United States violates the MDLEA, one who conspires with those ‘on board’ the vessel
    likewise violates the MDLEA.”), implicitly overruled on other grounds by Bellaizac-Hurtado,
    
    700 F.3d 1245
    . Another court primarily addressed due process, but that court’s conclusion relied
    on the premise that MDLEA applies to conspirators not on board the vessel. See United States v.
    Medjuck, 
    937 F. Supp. 1368
    , 1369–70, 1375 (N.D. Cal. 1996). In Medjuck, the charged
    MDLEA conspiracy involved members of many nationalities based in a number of countries.
    The two defendants whose due process interests were discussed in the opinion were not seized
    on board the vessel; one of them was “an American living in Singapore [who] was responsible
    for shore-based communications with the transport vessel,” and the other was “a Canadian[ ]
    who . . . purchased the hashish” and was “responsible for bringing it to shore and transporting it
    inland when it reached North America.” 
    937 F. Supp. at 1382
    . Medjuck thus supports the
    Court’s ruling here.
    The Defendants’ reading of the statute is also contrary to Congress’s intent to
    expand drug interdiction efforts through MDLEA. As DOJ argues, “[f]or Congress, it was the
    traffickers’ use of vessels to transport drugs—i.e., the maritime modus operandi—that was the
    scourge Congress intended to fight. Thus, any individual’s efforts to traffic drugs via . . . a
    36
    vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States . . . brings them under the purview of the
    MDLEA’s conspiracy provision.” Dkt. 88 at 8. Other courts have recognized the breadth of the
    MDLEA. See Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d at 531
     (observing that the MDLEA was passed “to
    strengthen the United States’ drug laws . . . specifically by removing geographical barriers [that]
    had impeded efforts to combat the drug trade”). Furthermore, although Defendants’ argument as
    to MDLEA is novel, it is a loophole that defendants have unsuccessfully attempted to exploit
    regarding similar statutes for almost 200 years. See United States v. Holmes, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.)
    412, 417 (1820) (interpreting a statute punishing “offences committed on the high seas” and
    rejecting proposed limited reading because “no reason is perceived why a more restricted
    meaning should be given to the expressions of the law, than they literally import.”).
    The Court concludes that the conduct alleged in this case falls within the scope of
    MDLEA’s statutory jurisdiction notwithstanding that the Defendants did not conspire while
    physically aboard a vessel.
    4. Whether MDLEA Requires a Nexus to the United States
    Messrs. Valderrama Carvajal and Munoz Miranda contend that their prosecution
    is invalid because there is no allegation that their conduct had any nexus to the United States.
    See Dkt. 53 at 3 (“By failing to allege a presence or even a nexus with a vessel under United
    States jurisdiction, the indictment fails to state a crime and must be dismissed.”). Noting the
    absence of any nexus requirement in MDLEA, DOJ argues that courts have repeatedly rejected
    similar arguments. E.g., Dkt. 60 at 35.
    There is no nexus requirement in MDLEA’s text and courts have never imposed
    one as a matter of statutory jurisdiction. 12 Contrary to Defendants’ contention, “on its face, the
    12
    Nexus to the United States can sometimes be relevant in the context of due process. That
    matter is addressed separately below.
    37
    statute does not require that there be a nexus between stateless vessels and the United States but
    instead extends this country’s jurisdiction to all such vessels.” United States v. Marino-Garcia,
    
    679 F.2d 1373
    , 1379 (11th Cir. 1982); see also United States v. Caicedo, 
    47 F.3d 370
    , 371 (9th
    Cir. 1995) (“On its face,” MDLEA “extends the United States’ jurisdiction over stateless vessels
    on the high seas without enumerating any further requirements, and particularly without
    requiring that there be a nexus between a defendant’s conduct aboard a stateless vessel and the
    United States.” (citations omitted)). Indeed, all the courts to consider whether nexus is a
    statutory concern have answered the question in the negative. 13 See United States v. Martinez-
    Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d 1052
    , 1055 (3d Cir. 1993) (“Clearly the 26-foot boat was a ‘vessel without
    nationality’ because Colombia disclaimed its registry in the second [Statement of No Objection].
    Accordingly, there is no doubt that the district court had jurisdiction even if there was not a
    nexus between Martinez’s activities and the United States.”); Medjuck, 
    937 F. Supp. at 1380
    (surveying legislative history and holding that “Congress did not intend to require United States
    destination”).
    The Court thus concludes that MDLEA does not require a nexus to the United
    States as a statutory matter.
    5. Whether Colombia’s Consent Was Required
    The final argument concerning statutory subject matter jurisdiction raised by
    Defendants is that their prosecution is invalid because the stateless vessel seized off Roncador
    was apprehended in Colombian territorial waters by Colombians and Colombia did not “consent”
    13
    A small number of cases contain statements to the contrary. See, e.g., Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d at 532
     (“The case before us, then, is the exact type of case the MDLEA was designed to
    address: one in which the defendant is caught on the high seas, with drugs intended for illegal
    distribution once he reaches U.S. territory.”). Because other courts directly addressing the point
    have not found that MDLEA incorporates a nexus requirement, the Court disregards such
    passing observations as dicta.
    38
    to jurisdiction as required by 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(E). They make this argument in the face
    of official paperwork showing that Colombia extradited them both to the United States to face
    these specific charges. The Court rejects this argument and finds that Colombia has consented to
    this prosecution.
    The Defendants’ argument is that, because MDLEA provides a vessel subject to
    United States jurisdiction includes “a vessel in the territorial waters of a foreign nation if the
    nation consents to the enforcement of United States law by the United States,” 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(E), Congress intended that the United States could only exercise jurisdiction over
    stateless vessels when they are found on the high seas. Dkt. 61 at 6–7. Because “[c]onsent is
    required for any vessel found within the territories of a foreign nation, . . . ‘vessel without
    nationality’ [as used in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(A)] is qualified.” Dkt. 61 at 7 n.6. Put another
    way, Defendants’ theory is that 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(E)’s reference to the United States’
    jurisdiction over “a vessel in the territorial waters of a foreign nation if the nation consents to the
    enforcement of United States law by the United States” trumps the reference to jurisdiction over
    a “vessel without nationality” in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(A), so that a stateless vessel in another
    nation’s territorial waters is not subject to United States jurisdiction unless the other nation
    consents. Dkt. 95 at 4.
    In support of this interpretation, Messrs. Valderrama Carvajal and Munoz
    Miranda make reference to 
    46 U.S.C. § 70508
    , which provides: “An individual may not operate
    by any means or embark in any submersible vessel or semi-submersible vessel that is without
    nationality and that is navigating or has navigated into, through, or from waters beyond the outer
    limit of the territorial sea of a single country or a lateral limit of that country’s territorial sea with
    an adjacent country, with the intent to evade detection.” According to Defendants, the
    39
    submersible vessel section is drafted so that the United States can exercise jurisdiction as long as
    “at any time, during the route of travel, the vessel had traversed through the high seas, regardless
    of where it was ultimately stopped.” This is evidence that “Congress clearly recognized that in
    some circumstances the route of travel was to be considered and not just where the vessel was
    seized.” Dkt. 95 at 6–7.
    DOJ makes several points in response, but the core of its argument is that “vessel
    without nationality” in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(A) and “vessel in the territorial waters of a
    foreign nation if the nation consents” in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(E) are alternative and equally
    valid grants of jurisdiction to the United States; each stands on its own. DOJ argues:
    MDLEA’s express exercise of jurisdiction over vessels found in
    another country’s territorial waters is not confined to vessels for
    which a nation consents to the enforcement of U.S. law. That is,
    under the MDLEA statute, a “vessel subject to the jurisdiction of
    the United States” includes both “a vessel in the territorial waters
    of a foreign nation if the nation consents to the enforcement of
    United States law by the United States” and “a vessel without
    nationality.”
    Dkt. 60 at 9 (citing 
    46 U.S.C. §§ 70502
    (c)(1)(A), (E)). Thus, “MDLEA’s provision of U.S.
    jurisdiction over ‘a vessel in the territorial waters of a foreign nation if the nation consents to the
    enforcement of United States law by the United States,’ see § 70502(c)(1)(E), is a separate basis
    of jurisdiction, not dependent upon or placing any restriction upon the assertion of jurisdiction
    over a ‘vessel without nationality.’” Dkt. 60 at 10 (citing Matos-Luchi, 
    627 F.3d at 4
    ).
    Under DOJ’s reading, because the two grants of jurisdiction are independent, “the
    ‘stateless’ nature of a vessel alone is intended to be all that is required to enable the exercise of
    U.S. jurisdiction under § 70502(d).” Dkt. 60 at 11. “[N]othing in the plain text of § 70502(d),
    defining a ‘vessel without nationality,’ links the jurisdictional status to a vessel’s presence on the
    high seas or, alternatively, expressly disqualifies a vessel found in the territorial waters of a
    40
    foreign nation. Instead, a vessel is deemed to be ‘stateless’ because of its own lack of assertion
    of nationality, see §§ 70502(d)(1)(A), (B), and (C), not because of where it is located at any
    particular moment, including at the time of interdiction, either within or outside the territorial
    waters of another country.” Dkt. 60 at 10 (quoting Marino-Garcia, 
    679 F.2d at 1383
    , for the
    proposition that “Jurisdiction exists solely as a consequence of the vessel’s status as stateless.”).
    Messrs. Valderrama Carvajal and Munoz Miranda’s argument construing 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1) is one no court has yet confronted directly, most likely due to the fact that
    litigated MDLEA prosecutions of stateless vessels have arisen almost exclusively from seizures
    on the high seas, not in territorial waters. 14 Despite its novelty, however, this question is not
    difficult to resolve. The statute is clear: there is no territorial qualification on the United States’s
    jurisdiction over a “vessel without nationality,” and the grants of jurisdiction in 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1) are equal, discrete alternatives, with each being sufficient on its own to give the
    United States authority to exercise its jurisdiction over such vessels. § 70502(c)(1) states that
    “the term ‘vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States’ includes . . .” before listing six
    different situations. Reading the statute in the cramped way advocated by the Defendants would
    be contrary to the expansive and non-exhaustive character inherent in the use of the word
    “includes,” see Hassan v. Mercy American River Hospital, 
    74 P.3d 726
    , 730 (Cal. 2003) (“[T]he
    word ‘including’ in a statute is ordinarily a term of enlargement rather than limitation.” (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted)), and it would undercut the broad prosecutorial authority
    that Congress authorized in MDLEA. In addition, the status of “without nationality” depends on
    the characteristics of the vessel, not where that vessel is located at any given moment. Vessels
    14
    As discussed in the constitutionality analysis below, the Court has located two cases that
    appear to have involved stateless vessels seized in territorial waters. Neither reached this
    question.
    41
    are stateless because they “lack[ ] authorization to fly the flag of any recognized state.” Rosero,
    
    42 F.3d at 171
    . Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal have not pointed to any
    authority for the proposition that a stateless vessel changes its character when it enters a given
    country’s territorial waters. Indeed, such a result would perpetuate the jurisdictional loopholes
    MDLEA was intended to prevent. A “vessel without nationality” on the high seas fleeing United
    States law enforcement could arguably thwart interdiction efforts by slipping into a foreign
    nation’s territorial waters, forcing the United States to pause to seek that country’s consent. If a
    foreign nation took such a position, it would raise an issue of foreign policy for the Executive,
    not a question of jurisdiction here.
    The Court concludes that the language of 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1) “has a plain
    and unambiguous meaning.” See United States v. Villanueva-Sotelo, 
    515 F.3d 1234
    , 1237 (D.C.
    Cir. 2008) (quoting Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 
    519 U.S. 337
    , 340 (1997)). A vessel is subject to
    United States jurisdiction if it is stateless, whether it is located within or without a foreign
    nation’s territorial waters, and consent of a foreign nation is not required as a precondition of
    court jurisdiction.
    In the alternative, the Court finds that DOJ has met its burden of showing that
    Colombia has consented to enforcement of United States law in this case. Assuming that 
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(1)(E) applies, the go-fast vessel seized off Roncador, in Colombia’s territorial
    waters, became a “vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States” through Colombia’s
    consent when Colombia extradited Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal to the
    United States to face these specific charges. See Extradition Orders. MDLEA provides that
    “[c]onsent or waiver of objection by a foreign nation to the enforcement of United States law by
    the United States . . . may be obtained by radio, telephone, or similar oral or electronic means;
    42
    and is proved conclusively by certification of the Secretary of State or the Secretary’s designee.”
    
    46 U.S.C. § 70502
    (c)(2). While the first part of this provision is likely most applicable in
    exigent circumstances, such as where the United States Coast Guard has pursued a foreign-
    flagged vessel believed to be trafficking narcotics and needs consent immediately, there is no
    reason why Defendants’ extradition is insufficient. Under the international law “rule of
    specialty,” the United States as the requesting party is bound to try the Defendants only for those
    offenses as to which Colombia agreed to extradite. See Berenguer v. Vance, 
    473 F. Supp. 1195
    ,
    1197 (D.D.C. 1979) (describing the rule as having “long been recognized” in the United States
    and citing, inter alia, United States v. Rauscher, 
    119 U.S. 407
    , 415–30 (1886)). Defendants have
    made no challenge to the validity of their extraditions, and the record demonstrates that
    Colombia was fully apprised of the charges and circumstances before it agreed to extradite.
    6. Conclusion
    For the reasons discussed above, the Court rejects each of the challenges that the
    Defendants make to statutory subject matter jurisdiction. Conspiracy to use a stateless vessel to
    distribute cocaine is conduct prohibited by the statute, even when the Defendants charged were
    not aboard the vessel at the time of seizure and even when the seizure took place in a foreign
    nation’s waters. That, however, is not the end of the matter.
    E. Constitutionality of MDLEA as Applied
    This case stands at the far reaches of Congress’s constitutional power to
    criminalize extraterritorial conduct. While a number of courts have upheld MDLEA against
    constitutional challenges, very few have addressed stateless vessels seized in foreign territorial
    waters, very few have addressed the liability of conspirators who never set foot on a “vessel
    subject to the jurisdiction of the United States,” and none, to this Court’s knowledge, has
    considered whether the combination of those facts would exceed the constitutional reach of the
    43
    United States. Resolving this question is complicated because there are four provisions in the
    Constitution that arguably give Congress the power to enact and enforce MDLEA, but courts
    often combine analysis of those grants of authority in a given case. For the reasons set forth
    below, this Court ultimately concludes that Congress had the power to criminalize the conduct
    charged here under its power to “define and punish . . . Felonies committed on the high Seas.”
    U.S. Const. Art. I § 8, cl. 10.
    Two separate clauses, comprising a total of four grants of authority, may grant
    Congress the power to criminalize the conduct alleged in this case: (1) Article I § 8, clause 10,
    and (2) the power to implement and enforce treaties. Article I § 8, clause 10 provides: “The
    Congress shall have Power . . . To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the
    high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations . . . .” This provision contains three separate
    grants of power. See United States v. Shi, 
    525 F.3d 709
    , 721 (9th Cir. 2008) (citing United States
    v. Smith, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.) 153, 158–61 (1820)). Courts have not consistently analyzed the
    three phrases separately and have not been uniform in the common names used to refer either to
    the entire clause or to the three phrases therein. This Court will refer to the entire clause as
    Clause 10 and to the three powers as, respectively, the Piracies Clause, the Felonies on the High
    Seas Clause, and the Law of Nations Clause. Because Congress has the authority to criminalize
    the conduct charged here through the Felonies on the High Seas Clause, the Court addresses in
    depth only that power. However, because the parties’ arguments have implicated all four
    provisions, the Court briefly discusses the Treaty Power, the Piracies Clause, and the Law of
    Nations Clause before discussing the Felonies on the High Seas Clause.
    1. Legal Standard—Constitutionality
    Because “‘[t]he powers of the legislature are defined and limited,’” “[e]very law
    enacted by Congress must be based on one or more of its powers enumerated in the
    44
    Constitution.” United States v. Morrison, 
    529 U.S. 598
    , 607 (2000) (quoting Marbury v.
    Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 176 (1803)). Statutes are presumed to be constitutional and
    “[t]he burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to negative every conceivable
    basis which might support it.” Heller v. Doe, 
    509 U.S. 312
    , 320 (1993) (quoting Lehnhausen v.
    Lake Shore Auto Parts Co., 
    412 U.S. 356
    , 364 (1973)). “[E]very reasonable construction must
    be resorted to, in order to save a statute from unconstitutionality.” Nat’l Fed’n Indep. Bus. v.
    Sebelius (The Healthcare Cases), 
    132 S. Ct. 2566
    , 2594 (2012) (internal citation and quotation
    marks omitted).
    Congress’s powers are not limited to the mere text of each constitutional grant of
    authority; it also has the authority to “make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
    carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in
    the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” U.S. Const. Art.
    I § 8, cl. 18. “[T]he Necessary and Proper Clause makes clear that the Constitution’s grants of
    specific federal legislative authority are accompanied by broad power to enact laws that are
    ‘convenient, or useful’ or ‘conducive’ to the authority’s ‘beneficial exercise.’” United States v.
    Comstock, 
    130 S. Ct. 1949
    , 1956 (2010) (quoting McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.)
    316, 413, 418 (1819)). “[I]n determining whether the Necessary and Proper Clause grants
    Congress the legislative authority to enact a particular federal statute, we look to see whether the
    statute constitutes a means that is rationally related to the implementation of a constitutionally
    enumerated power.” 
    Id.
     at 1956–57 (citing Sabri v. United States, 
    541 U.S. 600
    , 605 (2004)).
    2. The Treaty Power
    The United States has argued in its petition for rehearing en banc in Bellaizac-
    Hurtado in the Eleventh Circuit that Congress had the power to criminalize MDLEA offenses
    charged in that case under the Treaty Power. In this Court, DOJ acknowledges that the
    45
    government’s position in Bellaizac-Hurtado is novel; it was not argued before the district court
    or the original Eleventh Circuit panel, and it is not a theory that, to this Court’s knowledge, any
    court has considered as a possible grant of authority for a MDLEA prosecution. Since
    Defendants rely so heavily on Bellaizac-Hurtado, this Court directed the parties to brief whether
    the Treaty Power authorizes Congress to criminalize the conduct charged in this case.
    “Congress’s authority under the Necessary and Proper Clause extends beyond
    those powers specifically enumerated in Article I, section 8” when it “enact[s] laws necessary to
    effectuate the treaty power, enumerated in Article II of the Constitution.” United States v. Lue,
    
    134 F.3d 79
    , 82 (2d Cir. 1998) (citing, inter alia, Missouri v. Holland, 
    252 U.S. 416
    , 432
    (1920)). The United States has ratified the 1988 United Nations Convention Against Illicit
    Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, Dec. 19, 1988, 1582 U.N.T.S. 95 (“1988
    Convention”) and has “negotiated approximately 41 bilateral agreements, all geared towards
    enhancing the effectiveness of the suppression of illicit drug trafficking by sea through the
    bilateral cooperation encouraged by the 1988 Convention.” Dkt. 97 at 6. The United States has
    entered into such an agreement with Colombia (and Panama). See 
    id.
     (citing Agreement
    Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Republic
    of Colombia to Suppress Illicit Traffic By Sea, U.S.-Colom., Feb. 20, 1997, T.I.A.S. No. 12835).
    Therefore, the Treaty Power may be a grant of power on which the United States can rely in
    some MDLEA prosecutions.
    DOJ has notified the Court, in its response to the Court’s Minute Order directing
    the parties to address the Treaty Power, that it does not rely on the Treaty Power to assert
    MDLEA jurisdiction over Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal. See Dkt. 97 at 3–
    8. DOJ explains: (1) “because the vessel traveled the high seas[,] . . . extending United States
    46
    jurisdiction . . . is clearly constitutional under the Felonies on the High Seas Clause of Article I,
    § 8, cl. 10,” and (2) “the U.S.-Colombia Agreement governs the boarding and search of
    Colombian-flagged vessels by law enforcement officials of the United States, and does not
    address either country’s jurisdiction over a stateless vessel, such as the one at issue in this case.”
    Id. at 3, 7 (citing U.S.-Colombia Agmt. ¶ 6). Thus, according to DOJ, Bellaizac-Hurtado is
    inapposite because there is no allegation that its vessel traversed the high seas and because “the
    Government relied on consent from Panama to establish jurisdiction under § 70502(c)(1)(E).”
    Id. at 3–4. Because “the [U.S.-Colombia] Agreement does not limit the United States’ ability to
    pursue MDLEA jurisdiction over a stateless vessel which travels on the high seas,” DOJ does not
    need to, and does not, rely on the Treaty Power in this case. Id. at 8. Because the United States
    does not rely on the Treaty Power in this case, the Court will not analyze that issue further, and
    turns next to Clause 10. 15
    3. Article I, Section 8, Clause 10: The Power . . . To define and punish
    Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences
    against the Law of Nations . . . .
    In addressing whether the exercise of Congress’s authority is proper under Clause
    10, the Court begins by reviewing a handful of sources that are on point but not dispositive for
    two different reasons. Some courts uphold MDLEA without specifying which grant of power in
    Clause 10 is the subject of analysis, while other courts do not delineate their discussions of
    15
    Although DOJ does not address the point in any of its filings, the 1988 Convention authorizes
    countries to criminalize “participation in, association or conspiracy to commit, attempts to
    commit and aiding, abetting, facilitating and counselling the commission” of “distribution . . . of
    any narcotic drug or any psychotropic substance . . . .” Art. 3.1(a)(i), (c)(iv). That is the
    substantive offense charged here. But DOJ’s assertion of jurisdiction goes beyond the scope
    authorized by the 1988 Convention, which has a nexus requirement: it permits a country to assert
    jurisdiction when such an offense is “committed outside its territory with a view to the
    commission, within its territory, of an offence [under Art. 3.1(c)(iv)].” Art. 4.1(b)(iii). DOJ has
    conceded that it cannot show any direct connection to the United States.
    47
    Congress’s authority to criminalize conduct from their discussions of due process concerns. The
    Court then addresses each of the three grants contained in Clause 10, addressing the specific
    facts of this case.
    i. Cases Upholding MDLEA as Generally Constitutional
    Perhaps the most-cited case upholding MDLEA as constitutional is United States
    v. Martinez-Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d 1052
    , 1056 (3d Cir. 1993). The Martinez-Hidalgo court wrote:
    [W]e point out that the framers of the Constitution themselves
    provided that Congress had the power ‘[t]o define and punish
    Piracies and Felonies committed on the high seas, and Offenses
    against the Law of Nations.’ U.S. Const. Art. I § 8, cl. 10.
    Inasmuch as the trafficking of narcotics is condemned universally
    by law-abiding nations, we see no reason to conclude that it is
    ‘fundamentally unfair’ for Congress to provide for the punishment
    of persons apprehended with narcotics on the high seas.
    Id. However, this passage from Martinez-Hidalgo is from that court’s discussion of whether
    prosecution under MDLEA comported with the Fifth Amendment’s due process guarantee—the
    “fundamentally unfair” test is one of several employed in a due process analysis. The distinction
    is not often made, as courts cite Martinez-Hidalgo for the broader proposition that “Congress had
    authority to enact [MDLEA], pursuant to its constitutional power to ‘define and punish Piracies
    and Felonies committed on the high seas, and Offenses against the Law of Nations.’” See, e.g.,
    Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d at
    531–32.
    The Eleventh Circuit has had occasion to issue a different line of cases upholding
    MDLEA as a general matter. In a per curiam opinion that analyzed constitutionality and due
    process together, the Eleventh Circuit held that “the district court did not err by failing to hold
    sua sponte that Congress exceeded its authority under the Piracies and Felonies Clause in
    enacting the MDLEA.” United States v. Estupinan, 
    453 F.3d 1336
    , 1338 (11th Cir. 2006) (citing
    Rendon, 354 F.3d at 1325 n.2; United States v. Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d 819
    , 824–25 (9th Cir.
    48
    2003); and Ledesma-Cuesta, 
    347 F.3d at
    531–32). In a non-precedential opinion issued later in
    2006, the Eleventh Circuit held: “While we have not addressed the precise question raised here
    and while there is little case law interpreting the scope of the High Seas Clause, other circuits
    have upheld the constitutionality of the MDLEA . . . .” United States v. Garcia, 182 F. App’x
    873, 876 (11th Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (citing Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d at
    824 & Martinez-
    Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d at 1056
    ). The Garcia court stated that it was upholding the MDLEA in that
    case “[b]ecause the High Seas Clause granted Congress the power to define and punish offenses
    committed on the high seas.” 182 F. App’x at 877 (also stating that the MDLEA could be
    enacted pursuant to the protective principle of international law). In a case involving a different
    statute in 2011, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the continuing validity of Estupinan, observing
    that Estupinan stood for the proposition that Congress did not exceed “its constitutional authority
    under the High Seas Clause in passing a statute [the MDLEA] that punishes conduct without a
    nexus to the United States.” United States v. Saac, 
    632 F.3d 1203
    , 1210 (11th Cir. 2011); see
    also 
    id.
     (“[B]ecause the MDLEA criminalizes conduct that is condemned universally, the
    statute’s extraterritorial reach [is] permissible.”).
    In one of the only decisions to address conspirators who were not alleged to have
    been aboard the vessel, a district court applied Eleventh Circuit precedent to conclude that “[j]ust
    as the extraterritorial reach of the MDLEA is constitutional as to those on board the vessel, its
    reach is likewise constitutional as to an individual like Defendant, who allegedly conspired with
    those on board the vessel.” United States v. Salcedo-Ibarra, No. 8:07-CR-49-T-27TGW, 
    2009 WL 1953399
    , at *1 (M.D. Fla. July 6, 2009). The Salcedo-Ibarra court reasoned:
    The MDLEA is a constitutional exercise of extraterritorial
    jurisdiction pursuant to the Define and Punish Clause, under the
    “protective principle” of international law. Tinoco, 
    304 F.3d at 1110
    . Likewise, as applied to foreign nationals such as Defendant,
    49
    the MDLEA is constitutional. United States v. Estrada-Obregon,
    270 F. App’x 978, 979 (11th Cir. 2008). International drug
    trafficking, as proscribed by the MDLEA, is universally
    condemned as an offense against the “Law of Nations” and
    presents a specific threat to the security and societal well-being of
    the United States. United States v. Estupinan–Estupinan, 244 F.
    App’x 308 (11th Cir. 2007). Just as trafficking in narcotics on the
    high seas is considered an offense against the “Law of Nations,”
    including the United States, likewise, conspiring to traffic in
    narcotics on the high seas constitutes such an offense.
    ...
    Here, extraterritorial application of the conspiracy provisions of
    the MDLEA to Defendant, who was not found on board a vessel
    subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, but allegedly
    conspired with those on board, is justified on the objective
    territorial principle. . . . As discussed, the substantive act
    proscribed by the MDLEA, the possession of narcotics while on
    board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, has a
    sufficiently deleterious effect within the United States to justify
    this country in prohibiting that conduct.
    
    Id.
     at *1–4.
    While Salcedo-Ibarra’s reasoning arguably applies in this case—at least to the
    extent that Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal were not on board the vessel,
    leaving aside its seizure in territorial waters—the continuing validity of that court’s holding is
    questionable after the Eleventh Circuit’s opinion in Bellaizac-Hurtado, the case upon which
    Defendants rely, which concluded that MDLEA is not constitutional under the Law of Nations
    clause.
    One final general source on the applicability of Clause 10 is a law review article
    relied on heavily by Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal. Professor Eugene
    Kontorovich of the Northwestern University School of Law argues that all three parts of Clause
    10 are limited to “crimes that international law has established as universally cognizable” and the
    MDLEA is unconstitutional because there is “no support in international custom for treating
    50
    [drug smuggling] as a [universal jurisdiction] crime.” Eugene Kontorovich, “Beyond the Article
    I Horizon: Congress’s Enumerated Powers and Universal Jurisdiction Over Drug Crimes,” 
    93 Minn. L. Rev. 1191
    , 1194–96 (April 2009). Professor Kontorovich’s analysis was cited and
    adopted wholesale by Judge Torruella of the First Circuit in a dissenting opinion in an MDLEA
    case, United States v. Cardales-Luna, 
    632 F.3d 731
     (1st Cir. 2011). Judge Torruella argued that
    the MDLEA’s application to “a Colombian national . . . apprehended in international waters
    . . . aboard a Bolivian-registered vessel . . . en route from Colombia to the Dominican Republic”
    was an “ultra vires extension of [Congress’s] Article I legislative powers to foreign territory, as
    applied to persons and/or activities that have no nexus with the United States.” Cardales-Luna,
    
    632 F.3d at 739
    . The majority in Cardales-Luna held that the defendant’s constitutional
    challenge had not been preserved in the district court or on appeal and declined to reach the
    issue. 
    Id.
     at 737–38.
    While Professor Kontorovich’s scholarly analysis reflects extensive research, it
    ultimately simply reflects an “opinion of what the law ought to be, not what it is,” M’ilvaine v.
    Coxe’s Lessee, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 280, 306 (1805), and the Court declines to adopt his analysis
    here. The Court addresses each of the three phrases in Clause 10 separately to determine which
    phrase, if any, supports the exercise of court jurisdiction in this case. Because DOJ does not rely
    on the Piracy Clause or the Law of Nations Clause in this case, the Court only briefly addresses
    those two clauses before turning to the Felonies on the High Seas Clause.
    ii. Piracy
    The best argument for applying the Piracy Clause to this case is that the stateless
    vessels the DTO used to transport narcotics could be considered pirates under international law
    51
    due to their nationless status. For example, in United States v. Holmes, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.) 412,
    417 (1820), the Supreme Court held:
    [I]f the offence be committed in a vessel, not at the time belonging
    to subjects of a foreign State, but in possession of persons
    acknowledging obedience to no government or flag, and acting in
    defiance of all law, it is embraced by the act of the 30th of April,
    1790. It follows, therefore, that murder or robbery committed on
    the high seas, may be an offence cognizable by the Courts of the
    United States, although it was committed on board of a vessel not
    belonging to citizens of the United States, as if she had no national
    character, but was possessed and held by pirates, or persons not
    lawfully sailing under the flag of any foreign nation.
    (Emphasis added). See also United States v. Klintock, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.) 144, 152 (1820).
    However, the problems with this argument are numerous and complex. The first
    obstacle is that the cases supporting the broadest reading of the Piracy Clause, one under which
    Congress has the power to criminalize effectively any offense committed aboard a stateless
    vessel, all come from 1820 at the latest. It is difficult to say whether those cases truly support a
    broad reading of the Piracy Clause or whether they merely were interpreting the text of section 8
    of an outdated statute, the Act of April 30, 1790. See United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. (3
    Wheat.) 610, 630 (1818) (“The constitution having conferred on congress the power of defining
    and punishing piracy, there can be no doubt of the right of the legislature to enaet [sic] laws
    punishing pirates, although they may be foreigners, and may have committed no particular
    offence against the United States.”).
    The second major problem with relying on the Piracy Clause to support
    jurisdiction over this prosecution is the difficulty of establishing that drug trafficking fits within
    the plain meaning of “piracy” as understood both in society at large and in the courts. See, e.g.,
    Shi, 
    525 F.3d at 721
     (“‘Piracy’ traditionally has been defined as ‘robbery, or forcible
    depredations upon the sea.’ Smith, 18 U.S. at 161. ‘Depredation’ is ‘the act of plundering,
    52
    robbing, or pillaging.’ All three acts require the use of force. . . . Because [offenses defined in 
    18 U.S.C. § 2280
    ] involve interference with property on the open sea through the use of force, they
    are within Congress’s power to define and to punish crimes of piracy.” (some internal citations
    omitted)).
    Thirdly, the Piracy Clause is a bad fit because establishing the jurisdiction of a
    United States federal court over a stateless vessel as a “pirate” would only establish the federal
    government’s ability to criminalize the offense committed by the stateless vessel’s crew. It
    would require a separate inferential step to hold Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama
    Carvajal responsible for “piracy” when they did not step aboard the vessel. Courts have
    struggled with the question of whether conspiracy to commit piracy is even an actionable
    offense. See, e.g., United States v. Ali (Ali I), __ F. Supp. 2d __, Cr. No. 11-106, 
    2012 WL 2870263
    , at *10–11 (D.D.C. July 13, 2012) (applying Charming Betsy and dismissing
    conspiracy to commit piracy count), vacated in part on other grounds on reconsideration, Ali II,
    __ F. Supp. 2d __, 
    2012 WL 302476
     (D.D.C. July 25, 2012), appeal docketed, No. 12-3056
    (D.C. Cir. filed July 27, 2012).
    For these reasons, the Court concludes that the Piracy Clause may not grant
    Congress the authority to criminalize the conduct charged here.
    iii. Law of Nations
    The Court next turns to the Law of Nations Clause, which grants Congress the
    power to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Nations.” U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8,
    cl. 10. The Law of Nations Clause is the focus of many of Defendants’ arguments, especially in
    the context of their motion for reconsideration, because the Eleventh Circuit recently held that a
    MDLEA prosecution exceeded Congress’s ability to criminalize conduct under the Law of
    53
    Nations clause. See Bellaizac-Hurtado, 700 F.3d at 1247 (“[W]e conclude that drug trafficking
    is not an ‘Offence[ ] against the Law of Nations’ . . . .”). The Defendants argue that Bellaizac-
    Hurtado should be persuasive because it is a “sound decision” with “in depth analysis” that
    “goes directly to the heart of the motion to dismiss” in this case. Dkt. 84 at 3. They adopt “all
    reasoning presented in the Hurtado Opinion as to why the Offences Clause is limited by
    customary international law and why drug trafficking is not an offense against the law of
    nations.” Dkt. 84 at 5.
    DOJ responds that the Court should not address Defendants’ arguments under the
    Law of Nations Clause “because the Government has demonstrated a basis other than the Law of
    Nations Clause to render the MDLEA’s application to the Defendants constitutional under
    Article I.” Dkt. 89 at 8; see also Dkt. 89 at 26 n.6 (arguing that the Court should not address the
    Law of Nations clause because “the statute as applied to these Defendants is . . . constitutional
    under the Felonies on the High Seas Clause of Article I § 8 cl. 10”).
    Both parties have valid points. Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal
    are correct to rely on Bellaizac-Hurtado as a factually similar case, to the extent that it involved a
    seizure by a foreign country’s authorities in that country’s territory. The background of that case
    is as follows:
    During a routine patrol of Panamanian waters in 2010, the United
    States Coast Guard observed a wooden fishing vessel operating
    without lights and without a flag. The Coast Guard informed the
    Panamanian National Aero–Naval Service of the vessel. The
    Panamanian Navy pursued the vessel until its occupants abandoned
    the vessel and fled into a jungle. . . . The Panamanian National
    Frontier Service . . . arrested [the defendants] in various locations
    on the beach and in the jungle.
    700 F.3d at 1247–48.
    54
    But DOJ is correct also. The Bellaizac-Hurtado court’s opinion is limited to the
    Law of Nations clause. See 700 F.3d at 1247 (“This appeal presents a novel issue about the
    scope of congressional power to proscribe conduct abroad: whether the [MDLEA] exceeds the
    power of Congress to ‘define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Nations,’ U.S. Const.
    Art. I § 8, cl. 10, as applied to . . . drug-trafficking activities . . . in the territorial waters of
    Panama.”). The Eleventh Circuit made that point several times, emphasizing:
    The first two grants of power are not implicated here: piracy is, by
    definition, robbery on the high seas, United States v. Furlong, 18
    U.S. (5 Wheat.) 184, 198 (120), and the Felonies Clause is
    textually limited to conduct on the high seas, see U.S. Const., Art. I
    § 8, cl. 10. The United States relies instead on the third grant—the
    Offences Clause—as the source of congressional power to
    proscribe the defendants’ drug trafficking in the territorial waters
    of Panama.
    700 F.3d at 1248–49; see also id. at 1258 (observing that the government had not argued “any
    alternative ground upon which the Act could be sustained as constitutional”). Because Bellaizac-
    Hurtado is limited to the Law of Nations Clause and because the Court concludes that Congress
    had the authority to criminalize the Defendants’ conduct under the Felonies on the High Seas
    Clause, the Court does not address the Law of Nations Clause in depth.
    iv. Felonies on the High Seas
    The Court now turns to Congress’s power to “define and punish . . . Felonies on
    the high Seas.” U.S. Const. Art. I § 8, cl. 10. Courts have upheld MDLEA prosecutions under
    this clause before, although every case of which the Court is aware involves facts slightly distinct
    from those presented here. Those factual distinctions can be broken into two separate questions
    that the Court must answer: (1) Does jurisdiction under the Felonies on the High Seas Clause
    turn on exclusively on where the vessel was apprehended, making it significant that the vessel
    was seized in foreign territorial waters despite having traveled on the high seas?; (2) Does it
    55
    matter that these defendants were not on the vessel at any time, including at the time of seizure?
    The Court briefly reviews the cases upholding prosecutions under the Felonies on the High Seas
    Clause before answering those two questions.
    Some MDLEA cases have limited their analysis to the Felonies on the High Seas
    Clause. The lead case is United States v. Davis, 
    905 F.2d 245
    , 247 (9th Cir. 1990), in which the
    Ninth Circuit addressed interdiction of a vessel by the United States Coast Guard “35 miles
    southwest of Point Reyes, California,” and seizure “100 miles west of the California coast.” The
    Davis court held:
    The Constitution gives Congress the power to “define and punish
    piracies and felonies on the high seas . . . .” U.S. Const. Art. I § 8,
    cl. 10. The high seas lie seaward of the territorial sea, defined as
    the three mile belt of sea measured from the low water mark.
    United States v. Rubies, 
    612 F.2d 397
    , 402 n.2 (9th Cir. 1979). We
    therefore find that the Constitution authorized Congress to give
    extraterritorial effect to the Act. 16
    
    Id. at 248
    .
    The Ninth Circuit reaffirmed Davis in United States v. Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d 819
    , 834 (9th Cir. 2003), in which it cited Davis and held: “As an exercise of congressional
    power pursuant to Article I, Section 8, Clause 10, this court clearly has held that the MDLEA is
    constitutional.” Addressing an argument “that drug-trafficking is not among the felonies and
    piracies on the high seas that Congress is empowered to define under Article I, Section 8, Clause
    10,” the Moreno-Morillo court held that the Ninth Circuit had previously “held otherwise.” 
    334 F.3d at 824
    . (“In United States v. Aikins, 
    946 F.2d 608
     (9th Cir. 1990), this court found that the
    MDLEA ‘expressly prohibits the possession of drugs on certain vessels with intent to distribute’
    and, citing Davis, further found that such a prohibition was within Congress ‘power to define and
    16
    As set forth above, this Court concludes that the “territorial seas” begin at twelve miles, not
    three.
    56
    punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas.’ 
    Id. at 613
    .” (one set of internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    Outside the MDLEA context, the Ninth Circuit has upheld other statutes on the
    basis of the Felonies on the High Seas Clause. For example, in United States v. Shi, it held that
    “[18 U.S.C. ]§ 2280[, prohibiting acts of violence endangering maritime navigation,] is an
    exercise of Congress’s constitutional authority to define and punish ‘Felonies on the high Seas’
    because it proscribes felony offenses and expressly applies to international waters.” 
    525 F.3d at 721
    .
    a. Does jurisdiction turn on where the vessel was
    apprehended?
    The first question is whether the Felonies on the High Seas Clause only applies to
    vessels seized on the high seas. That, of course, was not the case here; the vessel was seized in
    Colombia’s territorial waters. Defendants assert “that the location of where the vessel was
    seized is of utmost concern for this Court in ruling on their motion.” Dkt. 95 at 2. Messrs.
    Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal contend that “for a district court to have adjudicatory
    authority over a charge that a defendant conspired to violate [
    46 U.S.C. § 70503
    (a)], the
    Government must preliminarily show that the conspiracy’s vessel was, when apprehended,
    ‘subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.’” Dkt. 91 at 3 (quoting United States v. De La
    Garza, 
    516 F.3d 1266
    , 1272 (11th Cir. 2008)). According to the Defendants, “where the boat
    was seized and by whom” is the only inquiry that matters; “there is no need to establish the route
    of travel and whether the vessel in question traversed the high seas.” Dkt. 95 at 3. Policy
    considerations and principles of international law favor their interpretation, Defendants argue,
    because “[i]t was the stateless vessel navigating upon the high seas that was beyond any
    nation[’]s drug laws. As [stateless vessels] belong to no nation, thus no nation could enforce its
    57
    drug laws upon them, and they were beyond the territorial waters of a nation, thus again placing
    them beyond the reach of a nation[’]s law.” Id. at 5. In Defendants’ view, once a vessel, even a
    stateless vessel, is in a nation’s territorial waters, it is for that nation alone to enforce its laws. Id.
    Where the vessel is ultimately seized does not matter, DOJ argues, because “a
    vessel without nationality which first traverses the high seas, before being stopped within
    another country’s territorial waters, is an international pariah rightfully subject to the jurisdiction
    of the United States under the MDLEA and the High Seas Clause of Article I.” Dkt. 89 at 23.
    DOJ asserts that its interpretation is most consistent with the “plain language of . . . the High
    Seas Clause[,] which permits Congress ‘[t]o define and punish . . . Felonies committed on the
    high Seas.” Id. at 24 (emphasis added by government). According to DOJ, a contrary
    constitutional interpretation would “lead to the absurd result of drug traffickers virtually
    operating with impunity from prosecution for drug smuggling on the high seas, as long as the
    crew and its vessel could successfully make a run for the territorial waters of a foreign country
    before being stopped by maritime enforcement authorities.” Id.; see also Dkt. 97 at 8–11
    (“Simply put, the enforcement of the MDLEA on the high seas must not depend on whether a
    foreign country can, or does in fact, prosecute the vessel’s crew because the crew and its vessel
    ultimately made it to a foreign country’s territorial seas where they were interdicted.”).
    This issue is one that courts have recognized at least twice before but have not
    resolved. In one such case, involving a vessel seized very near the Bahamas, the Eleventh
    Circuit reasoned that the vessel was stateless and seized in international waters. United States v.
    McPhee, 
    336 F.3d 1269
    , 1272 (11th Cir. 2003). Accordingly, the McPhee court did “not answer
    the more difficult questions of whether the Bahamian Government consented to the enforcement
    of American law by the United States in the territorial waters of the Bahamas, or whether the
    58
    United States had jurisdiction to seize a stateless vessel without consent, within Bahamian
    territorial waters.” 
    Id. at 1273
    . Another case, from the Third Circuit, involved a vessel captured
    “a short distance south of Saba Island, which is part of the Netherlands Antilles and is located
    east of St. Croix.” Rosero, 
    42 F.3d at
    167–68. Without significant analysis, the Rosero court
    held: “While the [vessel] may not have been on ‘the high seas’ when it was stopped near Saba,
    there was ample evidence, including the statement of the crew members that the ship had
    departed from Barranquilla, Colombia, to show that a violation of 18 [sic] U.S.C. App. § 1903(a)
    had occurred on ‘the high seas.’” 
    42 F.3d at
    169 n.1.
    The Court concludes that forcing MDLEA jurisdiction to turn on a vessel’s
    location at the time of seizure is inconsistent with the plain text of the Felonies on the High Seas
    Clause and would elevate form over substance. The Felonies on the High Seas Clause contains
    no jurisdictional limitation and imposes no requirement as to where a vessel or criminal
    defendant be seized to be subjected to United States jurisdiction. The clause is simple; it permits
    Congress to criminalize and exert its authority over “felony offenses” in “international waters.”
    Shi, 
    525 F.3d at 721
    . At a bare minimum, the conduct in this case came within the scope of the
    Felonies on the High Seas Clause when the stateless vessel employed by the conspiring members
    of the DTO, carrying cocaine, left the northern coast of Colombia and entered the high seas. 17
    Ultimately, the place of seizure is irrelevant to the Court’s jurisdiction once the Defendants were
    brought to this country inasmuch as the Court finds that the vessel in question traveled on the
    high seas.
    17
    The Court expresses no opinion as to whether prosecution would be a valid exercise of power
    under the Felonies on the High Seas Clause if the vessel had never left Colombian territorial
    waters in the first place, which, apparently, is an issue before the Eleventh Circuit on the petition
    for rehearing in Bellaizac-Hurtado (concerning Panama).
    59
    The legislative history of MDLEA and the logic articulated by the United States
    in its petition for rehearing en banc in Bellaizac-Hurtado support this conclusion. The
    legislative history of MDLEA reflects Congress’s awareness of the ever-evolving nature of
    international drug trafficking, including traffickers’ exploitation of quirks of international law.
    See S. Rep. No. 96-855 at 2785–86. Those concerns remain present; “[i]n the last few years,”
    enforcement “at the margins of Congress’s larger regulatory scheme” has become “even more
    critical, because ‘traffickers have shifted from high seas routes to multistaging tactics along the
    Central American littorals [i.e., shorelines], attempting to evade international interdiction
    efforts.’” Pet. Rehr’g, United States v. Bellaizac-Hurtado, No. 11-14049-HH (11th Cir. filed
    Jan. 11, 2013), at 13–14 (quoting Dep’t Def. Auth. for Approps. for Fiscal Year 2010: Hrgs.
    Before S. Comm. Armed Servs., 111th Cong. 10 (2009) (statement of Adm. James G. Stavridis);
    other citations omitted). Although the government seeks a broader grant of authority in
    Bellaizac-Hurtado because there is no evidence that the vessel at issue there left territorial
    waters, its citation to Gonzales v. Raich, 
    545 U.S. 1
     (2005), is illustrative. In Raich, the Supreme
    Court accepted that some purely intrastate activity could be regulated as part of Congress’s
    efforts to regulate interstate trafficking in marijuana pursuant to its Commerce Clause power. 
    Id. at 17
     (“Our case law firmly establishes Congress’ power to regulate purely local activities that
    are part of an economic ‘class of activities’ that have a substantial effect on interstate
    commerce.”) By analogy, MDLEA’s application here is valid under the Felonies on the High
    Seas Clause because it “reflects Congress’s reasonable determination that its regulation of drug-
    trafficking activity on the high seas would be undermined,” Pet. Rehr’g 12–13, if the United
    States could not prosecute a felony on the high seas merely because the seizure and/or some part
    of the offense took place on foreign territorial seas.
    60
    The Court concludes that Congress’s authority to criminalize conduct under the
    Felonies on the High Seas Clause of Article I § 8 of the Constitution does not depend on where a
    vessel is seized, although it may be tempered by foreign relations executed by the Executive.
    b. Does the Felonies on the High Seas Clause Extend to
    Conspiracy?
    The final question is whether the conspiracy with which Defendants are
    charged—conspiracy to distribute narcotics on board a stateless vessel—is a “felony on the high
    Seas” within the meaning of the Felonies on the High Seas Clause. Put another way, can
    Congress criminalize the Defendants’ conduct even though they never were on the high seas
    themselves?
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal argue insistently that they
    “have been unable to locate any prosecutions of individuals under 
    46 U.S.C. § 70503
    , who were
    not actually on board, or very recently on board (i.e. fleeing) a vessel. Typically, the charge,
    including conspiracy to commit the charge, is brought against the captain and crew of vessels on
    the high seas, or with consent of the flag nation[, a]lmost always where American authorities
    have participated in the seizure of the vessel.” Dkt. 53 at 3; see also Dkt. 51 at 2 n.1 (“[I]n all
    the cases cited by the government, the defendants charged with [violating 
    46 U.S.C. § 70503
    ]
    were always the crew members on board the vessel, not individuals on land[ ] who never even
    observed the vessel. The defendants never saw the vessel nor knew anything about the seized
    vessel. They had no control or knowledge of how the crew handled the vessel and its
    nationality.”). According to the Defendants, “[t]he government cannot assert jurisdiction over an
    entirely extraterritorial conspiracy[ ] where none of the alleged conspirators are United States
    citizens or residents, none of the overt acts occurred in the United States, and there was no nexus
    61
    between the conduct alleged and the United States.” Dkt. 91 at 2 (citing United States v.
    MacAllister, 
    160 F.3d 1304
     (11th Cir. 1998)).
    DOJ relies on the “well-established legal principle that ‘the basic character of a
    conspiracy [is one of] a continuing crime involving conduct over a period of time and, very
    often, in more than one place.’” Dkt. 97 at 12 (quoting United States v. Baltimore & O.R.R., 
    538 F. Supp. 200
    , 204 (D.D.C. 1982)). DOJ contends that the “Court should not restrict the
    Government’s ability to establish subject matter jurisdiction for a continuing crime such as
    conspiracy” because to do so would “not only be inapposite to the basic [tenets] of conspiracy
    law and the statutory language itself, but to other U.S. law which grants venue to offenses
    ‘begun’ or ‘committed’ on the high seas.” Dkt. 97 at 12–14 (citing, inter alia, 
    18 U.S.C. § 3238
    (catch-all venue statute)).
    It must be recognized that the Defendants have a point. Most MDLEA cases
    involve defendants who were on board a vessel in international waters at the time of seizure by
    the United States Coast Guard. E.g., Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d at 822
     (MDLEA prosecution of
    “Colombian nationals who were on board a vessel in international waters approximately 200
    miles southwest of Acapulco, Mexico”). But DOJ’s prior prosecutorial practices do not make
    constitutional law; the question the Court must answer is whether the Constitution permits
    criminalization of the offenses charged in this case. The Court concludes that it does. Notably,
    conspiracy was recognized as an offense in England well prior to the drafting of the United
    States Constitution. See, e.g., State v. Buchanan, 
    5 H. & J. 317
    , 334–36 (Md. 1821) (discussing
    common law history of conspiracy back to time of King Edward I and observing: “Who doubts,
    or was it ever questioned, that a conspiracy to commit any felony is an indictable offence; as to
    rob or murder, to commit a rape, burglary or arson, &c. or a misdemeanor, as to cheat by false
    62
    public tokens, &c?”). Thus, although MDLEA may be an innovation of the late 20th century,
    conspiracy as part of criminal law existed at the time the Constitution was written.
    Most importantly, it is well established in conspiracy law that “the overt act of
    one partner in crime is attributable to all.” Pinkerton v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 640
    , 647 (1946).
    “As long as a substantive offense was done in furtherance of the conspiracy, and was reasonably
    foreseeable as a ‘necessary or natural consequence of the unlawful agreement,’ then a
    conspirator will be held vicariously liable for the offense committed by his or her co-
    conspirators.” United States v. Washington, 
    106 F.3d 983
    , 1012 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (quoting
    Pinkerton, 
    328 U.S. at
    647–48). For the reasons set forth above, the Court has concluded that
    these conditions are met here. Defendants’ co-conspirators committed a substantive offense,
    possession of narcotics on board a stateless vessel on the high seas, which indisputably would be
    both within this Court’s jurisdiction and the ambit of the Felonies on the High Seas Clause.
    Defendants have not argued that this offense was not a foreseeable consequence of the
    conspiracy; to the contrary, moving cocaine from Colombia to a rendezvous point off Honduras
    through a stateless vessel on the high seas was an integral part of the charged conspiracy.
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal are chargeable with the conduct of their co-
    conspirators aboard the stateless vessel, and the Court concludes that their conduct in Colombia
    is within Congress’s authority to define as a felony on the high seas. 18
    This conclusion is buttressed by the reasoning of one of the few cases to present
    similar facts, United States v. Medjuck, which involved MDLEA charges against various
    members of a multinational conspiracy. In that case, the district court reasoned that the acts of
    18
    The case cited by Defendants, United States v. MacAllister, is not on point. In that case, the
    court found jurisdiction based on the objective territorial principle because the defendant, a
    Canadian, was a member of a conspiracy in which conspirators “committed acts in furtherance of
    the conspiracy within the territorial boundaries of the United States.” 160 F.3d at 1307.
    63
    Medjuck’s agents in the United States, such as securing a vessel and paying its crew, could be
    imputed to Medjuck. 
    937 F. Supp. at 1389
     (“When one agrees to be a member of a conspiracy,
    one agrees to all acts that have been or will be committed by that conspiracy, and, by virtue of
    that agreement, is responsible for such acts regardless of one’s role in the commission.” (quoting
    United States v. Inafuku, 
    938 F.2d 972
    , 974 (9th Cir. 1991)). This Court agrees.
    v. Conclusion
    This prosecution is a valid exercise of Congress’s authority to “define and punish
    . . . Felonies on the high Seas.” U.S. Const. Art. I § 8, cl. 10. Because application of MDLEA to
    these circumstances is not beyond Congress’s powers under the Constitution, the Court turns to
    Defendants’ final argument—that the prosecution violates due process.
    F. Due Process
    The final question is whether the prosecution of Messrs. Munoz Miranda and
    Valderrama Carvajal violates their due process rights under the Fifth Amendment. The relevant
    legal standard is an issue currently on appeal to the D.C. Circuit.
    Courts have analyzed due process challenges to extraterritorial application of U.S.
    criminal statutes under different standards, even within the limited body of MDLEA case law.
    First are the MDLEA cases. The D.C. Circuit has not ruled on this issue, but several circuits
    “treat[] defendants apprehended aboard stateless vessels differently from those apprehended
    aboard foreign-flag ships for the purposes of this ‘nexus’ analysis. With respect to those
    apprehended aboard foreign-flag vessels, there must be some nexus to the United States before
    jurisdiction can be established; there is no such requirement for defendants aboard stateless
    vessels.” Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d at 828
     (citations omitted); see also Caicedo, 
    47 F.3d at
    371–72 (observing that cases with “defendants apprehended on foreign flagged vessels” get
    “radically different treatment” from cases involving stateless vessels). In the circuits drawing
    64
    such a distinction, the United States must show a “sufficient nexus between the defendant and
    the United States,” Davis, 905 F.2d at 248–49, to proceed with respect to a foreign-flagged
    vessels. See also Caicedo, 
    47 F.3d at 372
     (“As a matter of comity and fairness, such an intrusion
    should not be undertaken absent proof that there is a connection between the criminal conduct
    and the United States sufficient to justify the United States’ pursuit of its interests.”). But, when
    the prosecution involves a stateless vessel, “a showing of statelessness effectively moots the
    nexus requirement because those aboard stateless vessels effectively have waived their right to
    object to the exercise of jurisdiction over them by United States courts.” Moreno-Morillo, 
    334 F.3d at 828
    ; see also Pinto-Mejia, 720 F.2d at 260–61 (“[A] stateless vessel, which does not sail
    under the flag of one state to whose jurisdiction it has submitted, may not claim the protection of
    international law and does not have the right to travel the high seas with impunity. . . . [W]e find
    no authority in international law for requiring any nexus where the ship otherwise would be
    subject to the jurisdiction of no state.”).
    Other circuits eschew the stateless/flagged vessel distinction, stating that the
    United States can criminalize conduct on a foreign-flag vessel even without any nexus to the
    United States. See Martinez-Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d at
    1056 & n.6 (3d Cir.) (rejecting Davis and
    holding that no nexus requirement should be imposed regardless of the flag-status of the vessel
    because there is “nothing fundamentally unfair in applying section 1903 exactly as Congress
    intended—extraterritorially without regard for a nexus between a defendant’s conduct and the
    United States.”).
    Courts differ as to the test to apply outside of the context of MDLEA. For
    example, the Second Circuit in Yousef, addressing conspiracy to bomb aircraft, applied the nexus
    test from the Ninth Circuit’s Davis opinion addressing foreign-flagged vessels. See Yousef, 327
    65
    F.3d at 111–12 (quoting Davis, 
    905 F.2d at
    248–49, and holding that “given the substantial
    intended effect of their attack on the United States and its citizens, it cannot be argued seriously
    that the defendants’ conduct was so unrelated to American interests as to render their prosecution
    in the United States arbitrary or fundamentally unfair.”). Recently, the Fourth Circuit held that
    due process was not violated in the prosecution of a South African national who assaulted a
    British national while at Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan because:
    Fair warning does not require that the defendants understand that
    they could be subject to criminal prosecution in the United States
    so long as they would reasonably understand that their conduct was
    criminal and would subject them to prosecution somewhere. The
    defendants were not ensnared by a trap laid for the unwary.
    United States v. Brehm, 
    691 F.3d 547
    , 554 (4th Cir. 2012) (quoting United States v. Al Kassar,
    
    660 F.3d 108
    , 119 (2d Cir. 2011)), cert. denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 808
     (Dec. 10, 2012).
    Finally, and perhaps most importantly, a case involving the due process test for
    extraterritorial application of a federal criminal statute is currently pending before the D.C.
    Circuit. United States v. Ali, No. 12-3056 (D.C. Cir. filed July 27, 2012). The district court in
    Ali I acknowledged the split in authority and stated that the question it faced in a prosecution for
    piracy and hostage taking was whether extraterritorial application was “arbitrarily or
    fundamentally unfair” because the defendant “had no reasonable expectation of being tried” in
    the United States. Ali I, 
    2012 WL 2870263
    , at *17. The district court then added: “The better
    articulation may be that whatever the Due Process Clause requires, it is satisfied where the
    United States applies its laws extraterritorially pursuant to the universality principle.” 
    Id. at *18
    .
    The court found its standard met because “the hostage taking charges allege[d] the same high-
    seas conduct for which [the defendant was] lawfully subject to prosecution for piracy” and
    because of the United States had notified the world community that it intended to prosecute
    66
    hostage taking in its courts even absent a nexus to the United States by ratifying the International
    Convention Against the Taking of Hostages. 
    Id. at *18
    .
    The Ali court reversed itself in part twelve days later when the government
    admitted “it had scant evidence to show that Ali aided and abetted the pirates while he was on
    the high seas,” a fact that had figured prominently in the Court’s conclusion that Ali’s due
    process rights were not infringed by prosecution in the United States. Ali II, 
    2012 WL 3024763
    ,
    at *2. Thereafter, the Ali court concluded that prosecuting him for hostage taking would not “be
    consistent with his Fifth Amendment due process rights,” under any of the various due process
    tests. 
    Id.
     at *4–5. The government filed an interlocutory appeal as to both of the Ali court’s
    rulings, and the D.C. Circuit held oral argument on November 19, 2012. Because the due
    process issue was briefed, the D.C. Circuit’s ruling may elucidate the approach district courts in
    this circuit should follow.
    Given the conflicting guidance of the cases discussed above, the Court concludes
    that its best course is to employ the common denominator: whether application of MDLEA to
    Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal is arbitrary or fundamentally unfair. See Ali I,
    
    2012 WL 2870263
    , at *17 (“[T]his difference is less real than apparent. . . . [T]he ultimate
    question is whether application of the statute to the defendant [is] arbitrary or fundamentally
    unfair.” (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Their prosecution violates due process, Defendants argue, because “there is no
    allegation that the drugs seized by the Colombian Navy in this case were destined for the United
    States, or that the case bears any relationship at all to the United States. All acts took place
    overseas and the vessel in question was seized in the territorial waters of Colombia. The
    defendants, Colombian national[s,] were arrested in Colombia for the offenses in this case.” Dkt.
    67
    51 at 1. According to Defendants, “[p]ersons who live in Colombia and do not export drugs to
    the United States[ ] have no reason to expect to be haled before a United States District Court.”
    Dkt. 91 at 5. Because the stateless vessel is the connection to the United States’s jurisdiction, the
    Defendants note that DOJ has conceded that the Defendants “were not on the boat at the time of
    the seizure” and that there is no evidence “that the defendants had at any time seen the boat,
    approached the boat, loaded the boat, etc.” Dkt. 95 at 2. Moreover, because “[t]his case was
    investigated by Colombian authorities, using Colombian law to justify telephone wiretaps” and
    “[t]he drugs were seized by Colombian authorities and tested by procedures that are not
    acceptable in the United States,” the Defendants also argue that United States authorities have
    been handed a case that may have been investigated and prepared in a foreign justice system with
    different procedural and substantive protections for Defendants. 19 Dkt. 53 at 4–5.
    DOJ responds that “the defendants can hardly argue that they were not aware of
    the possibility of being hauled into [a] U.S. court, or any other country’s court, by virtue of their
    use of [a] stateless vessel to smuggle drugs in the international or territorial waters that breach
    the span between the northern coast of Colombia and the islands of Roncador and San Andres, or
    Honduras for that matter. Their use of a vessel carrying no flag, documentation, markings, large
    amounts of fuel, etcetera, reinforce[s] their knowledge of engaging in conduct as prohibited by
    the international community, not just Colombia.” Dkt. 60 at 24–25. Furthermore, “the
    Colombian government’s granting of the extradition is analogous to a foreign nation granting the
    U.S. jurisdiction over a foreign flagged vessel, such that when the consent is given, it ‘eliminates
    any concern that the application of United States law may be arbitrary or fundamentally unfair.’”
    Dkt. 60 at 38 (citing, inter alia, United States v. Cardales, 
    168 F.3d 548
    , 553 (1st Cir. 1999)).
    19
    Defendants’ guilty pleas, conceding involvement in drug trafficking, undermine this assertion.
    68
    The Court concludes that this prosecution is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally
    unfair and there is no due process violation. Although the Defendants were not aboard the
    stateless vessel when it was seized, their use of it represents an “attempt to avoid the law of all
    nations,” and they have “forfeited [the] protections of international law and can be charged with
    the knowledge that [they] ha[ve] done so.” Caicedo, 
    47 F.3d at
    372–73. Indeed, in recent years
    “traffickers have shifted from high seas routes to multistaging tactics along the Central American
    littorals [i.e., shorelines], attempting to evade international interdiction efforts.” Bellaizac-
    Hurtado Pet. Rehr’g at 13–14 (quoting Dep’t Def. Auth. for Approps. for Fiscal Year 2010:
    Hrgs. Before S. Comm. Armed Servs., 111th Cong. 10 (2009) (statement of Adm. James G.
    Stavridis). These defendants were on notice that, by using a stateless vessel to transport
    narcotics across the high seas, they were opening themselves to the possibility of prosecution.
    As part of a sophisticated drug trafficking organization that was responsible for transporting
    large amounts of cocaine and as evidenced by their attempts to avoid detection and interdiction,
    there can be no doubt that Defendants knew their actions were illegal and subject to prosecution.
    Moreover, Colombia’s extradition demonstrates approval of the United States’s criminal
    proceedings against Defendants. Such extradition is neither new nor unknown to Colombian
    drug traffickers.
    Thus, the Court finds that Defendants—large-scale Colombian drug-traffickers—
    cannot have been surprised by United States prosecution. Therefore, there is no due process
    violation.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that it has statutory subject matter
    jurisdiction over the offenses charged in this case, that MDLEA as applied here is a valid
    exercise of Congress’s authority to criminalize conduct under the Felonies on the High Seas
    69
    Clause, and that there is no due process violation. The Court thus reaffirms its denial of the
    motions to dismiss filed by Messrs. Munoz Miranda and Valderrama Carvajal. A memorializing
    Order accompanies this Opinion.
    DATE: February 20, 2013
    /s/
    ROSEMARY M. COLLYER
    United States District Judge
    70
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Criminal No. 2010-0106

Citation Numbers: 924 F. Supp. 2d 219

Judges: Judge Rosemary M. Collyer

Filed Date: 2/20/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023

Authorities (55)

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United States v. Matos-Luchi , 627 F.3d 1 ( 2010 )

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United States v. Julio-Cardales , 168 F.3d 548 ( 1999 )

United States v. McPhee , 336 F.3d 1269 ( 2003 )

United States v. Manuel Estupinan , 453 F.3d 1336 ( 2006 )

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In Re: Air Crash Off Long Island, New York, on July 17, 1996 , 209 F.3d 200 ( 2000 )

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united-states-v-esteban-marino-garcia-and-omar-chaverra-hernan , 679 F.2d 1373 ( 1982 )

United States v. Diodayan Ledesma-Cuesta , 347 F.3d 527 ( 2003 )

United States v. Nicomedes Martinez-Hidalgo , 993 F.2d 1052 ( 1993 )

United States v. Al Kassar , 660 F.3d 108 ( 2011 )

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united-states-v-luis-alphonso-henriquez-jose-colon-ortiz-segundo , 731 F.2d 131 ( 1984 )

united-states-v-marco-antonio-copete-rosero-in-no-93-7600-united-states , 42 F.3d 166 ( 1994 )

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