4.6 • 6.4K Ratings
🗓️ 5 April 2022
⏱️ 27 minutes
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0:29.9 | Hey, this is Trey. Thank you for joining us for two days with Trey. You know, crime's been |
0:53.3 | in the news a lot lately. Most of that crime is prosecuted in state court. But there is |
0:58.5 | a role for the federal government to play. And I want us to stop right there for a second, |
1:03.4 | but not much longer than a second, but software a second. Have you ever wondered why the |
1:08.6 | federal government investigates and prosecutes crime? What gives the federal government the |
1:14.4 | authority to do so? Because if we're going to say that most crime is state and local, |
1:23.9 | I think it's important for us to understand why that is. And if a smaller percentage |
1:29.1 | of crime is federal, but yet there is this public perception that federal must mean more |
1:34.5 | important or more significant, we got to evaluate whether or not any of those preconceived |
1:42.3 | notions are actually accurate. So we're not going to spend a ton of time on this, but |
1:48.0 | I think it is helpful to know there are some crimes, a handful, maybe, they're mentioned |
1:54.5 | in the US Constitution. These are crimes like I'm going based on memory now, but treason |
2:00.3 | and piracy and maybe counter-fitting. And I think there's a fourth, but you'll have to |
2:05.6 | check by me and make sure. So there are crimes mentioned in the Constitution. And there's |
2:13.9 | a basis for prosecuting crime at the federal level that therefore goes all the way back to the |
2:19.9 | beginning. And then there are what I call status cases. You may have another word for it, but |
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