Samuel L. Bray, University of Chicago Law School, and Aditya Bamzai, University of Virginia School of Law, have posted Prosecuting Contempt:
Under Supreme Court precedent and the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, federal courts may appoint prosecutors for criminal contempt. In this way, and many others, contempt prosecutions depart from the ordinary, adversarial model associated with criminal cases. Because such prosecutions and appointments arguably involve judges seizing the executive power of prosecuting crime, they are controversial, and their lawfulness has been disputed. This Article explores the lawfulness of judicial appointment of prosecutors for criminal contempt. It surveys the historical development of the idea that judges have an “inherent power” of contempt, as well as the historical origins of “criminal contempt” as a distinctive category. It concludes that the power to punish contempts, whether civil or criminal, was historically understood as a judicial power. That conclusion has implications for a variety of questions, including the lawfulness of attorneys appointed to prosecute contempt, whether governmental or non-governmental attorneys. Such attorneys do not exercise executive power, but rather assist the court in the exercise of its inherently judicial power of punishing contempt. The judicial appointment of prosecutors for criminal contempt, which now happens in federal court pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 42, is therefore lawful.
--Dan Ernst








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