The Department of Justice sent out a memo last week with this arresting detail: Prosecutors around the country should consider coronavirus as a "biological agent," and therefore charge certain acts related to COVID-19 as federal crimes of terrorism.
As a former U.S. prosecutor, I have no quarrel with the department's being able to "make a federal crime" of the worst conduct that we may see with the virus. Among other things, it gives the country a hook to bring federal resources to bear on cases that for whatever reason may be difficult for states to bring.
But the general idea of viewing the coronavirus as a "biological agent" akin to anthrax or botulism, and its "possession" or transmission as a crime of terrorism, is as novel as the virus and it carries its own exponential dangers.
Until now, the core concept of a biological agent in terrorism law is an engineered or synthesized toxin, like anthrax. Shifting that definition to a naturally occurring virus we all can catch and carry, and one we so far know so little about, is not just inapt, it's overkill. We should confine terrorism crimes to offenses involving violence and intimidation against a large body of civilians in pursuit of political aims.
There are legitimate applications of the DOJ's definition. The paradigm for federal jurisdiction would be cases we've recently heard about that the FBI is investigating: neo-Nazi and white supremacists encouraging members who become infected to spread the disease to police officers and to Jews, whom they view, in the time-honored irrational fashion of anti-Semites, as responsible for the virus.
Life in prison — the sentence for federal crimes of terrorism — seems like fitting punishment for such heinous conduct. But for many other potential coronavirus crimes or civil offenses, what could follow from the "biological agent" rubric is just not right.
There already have been reported instances of people threatening others with the virus. A New Jersey man breathed on someone and then said he had the virus. A woman in a supermarket in Pennsylvania coughed on fresh produce and announced: "I have coronavirus and you are all going to get sick." She next tried to shoplift a 12-pack of Coors Light. State authorities charged her with two felony counts of terrorist threats and, perhaps with the DOJ in mind, one count of threats to use a "biological agent."
Antisocial, sad-sack criminal conduct? Yes. But domestic terrorism akin to building a bomb and trying to set it off in Times Square?