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141 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1849 (1992-1993)
Blackmail: An Economic Analysis of the Law

handle is hein.journals/pnlr141 and id is 1869 raw text is: BLACKMAIL: AN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF THE LAWt
DOUGLAS H. GINSBURGtt
PAUL SHECHTMANttt
In fiction and in real life, blackmail is a particularly odious
crime. Despite the fear and loathing with which its practitioners are
regarded, however, blackmail remains an ill-defined and enigmatic
concept. The legal literature especially suffers from an inability to
define blackmail in a way that meaningfully distinguishes it from
threats of unquestioned legality made in the course of economic
bargaining. All agree that a key employee may lawfully threaten to
quit unless his wages are raised, and that if his threat comes at a
time when his employer is particularly vulnerable, he may have
engaged in sharp practices but not criminal conduct. Many threats,
such as those of a customer to take his custom elsewhere if a price
is not lowered, or to enter production for his own use if suppliers
are not more obliging, are actually relied upon in a competitive
exchange economy to discipline the market. But despite our
general ability to agree on the lawfulness of particular threats,
drafting a general law that separates blackmail from bargaining has
proved an elusive task.
Related to this problem of definition is an apparent paradox
embedded in the law of blackmail. Consider this paradigmatic
blackmail transaction: B has taken a photograph of A, a temperance
advocate, drinking whiskey; he approaches A with an offer to sell
him the photographic negative, threatening disclosure to the
newspapers if A fails to pay. Again, all would agree: B is guilty of
blackmail. The point to notice, however, is that B has threatened to
do only what he had an undoubted right to do, namely to facilitate
t This paper was written in 1979 when the authors were respectively professor
and student at the Harvard Law School. We did not publish the paper at that
time but presented it at a University of Chicago Law School workshop on law and
economics (which yielded many helpful comments, for which we are grateful) and
circulated it among interested scholars. Professor James Lindgren discussed the
paper at some length in his own publications. Accordingly, when Professor
Lindgren asked us to participate in this Symposium, we decided that rather than
revise the original paper we would publish it for the first time and add a postscript
in order to respond to his comments on the analysis.
tt Circuit Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit; Distinguished Professor of Law, George Mason University.
ttt Counsel to the District Attorney, New York County; Adjunct Professor of
Law, Columbia University Law School.

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