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1 1 (December 2, 2022)

handle is hein.crs/govejot0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Congressional_______
R' fesearch Servi e
If You Do the Space Crime, You May Do the
Space Time
December 2, 2022
In recent years, a number of high-profile commercial space flights-some of which included celebrity
passengers-garnered widespread media attention. Moving forward, one company aims to provide
hundreds of passenger space flights per year. Another venture promises a civilian lunar orbital mission
in 2023. One CEO has suggested the possibility of a crewed mission to Mars in 2029. Regardless of the
outcome of any of these specific plans, space tourism companies are pursuing travel that is more frequent,
ambitious, and perhaps longer in duration. In short, more humans may be spending more time in space,
increasing the potential for crime to occur during a mission or voyage. The issue is not entirely
speculative-a range of violent behavior and sexual misconduct has reportedly occurred during simulated
space missions. Should a criminal act occur during an actual trip to space, is there federal jurisdiction to
prosecute it?
In light of Congress's continuing work on various matters pertaining to space, including commercial
space flight, this sidebar explores the situations in which federal jurisdiction over crimes committed in
space might exist. The sidebar focuses on crimes committed by private individuals in space and concludes
with a brief discussion of congressional considerations. This sidebar does not examine the various
additional laws that may be uniquely relevant to military or official personnel in space and does not cover
other regulatory frameworks that may be relevant to space commerce. Information on some of these
topics may be found in CRS In Focus IF 11940, Commercial Human Spaceflight, by Daniel Morgan; and
CRS Report R45416, Commercial Space: Federal Regulation, Oversight, and Utilization, by Daniel
Morgan.
Special Maritime and Territorial Jurisdiction
One way the federal government may have jurisdiction over crimes committed in space is if the conduct
occurs in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States (SMTJ) and violates the
substantive elements of a federal statute applicable in SMTJ. As one federal appellate court has
explained, SMTJ generally includes areas where American citizens and property need protection, yet no
other government effectively safeguards those interests. One quintessential example is the high seas,
which are included in the definition of SMTJ in 18 U.S.C. @ 7, along with certain international
waterways, federal lands, islands containing bird guano, and domestic aircrafts in flight.
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
LSB10869

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