UNITED STATES V. SCHOON
971 F.2d 193 (9th Cir. 1992)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Schoon (Ds), protesters, challenged their convictions for obstructing
Internal Revenue Service activities in its Tucson office and failing to comply with an order
of a federal police officer. Ds contended that the district court improperly denied them a
necessity defense.
FACTS: On December 4, 1989, 30 people, including appellants (Gregory Schoon (D), Raymond
Kennon, Jr.(D), and Patricia Manning (D)), gained admittance to an IRS office in Tuscon and
chanted 'keep America's tax dollars out of El Salvador.' They then proceeded to splash
simulated blood on the counters, walls, and carpeting, and obstructed the office's
operations. Federal officers ordered the parties to disperse and after several warnings, the
appellants were arrested. Their only defense was to assert the necessity defense, contending
that their acts were in protest of American involvement in El Salvador in order to avoid
further bloodshed in that country. They attempted to assert a necessity defense. The court
precluded the defense as a matter of law, relying on Ninth Circuit precedent. The district
court denied the necessity defense on the grounds that (1) the requisite immediacy was
lacking; (2) the actions taken would not abate the evil; and (3) other legal alternatives
existed. Because the threshold test for admissibility of a necessity defense is a
conjunctive one, a court may preclude invocation of the defense if 'proof is deficient with
regard to any of the four elements.' Ds were found guilty and appealed.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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