United States v. Aybar-Ulloa , 913 F.3d 47 ( 2019 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 15-2377
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    JOHVANNY AYBAR-ULLOA,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Jay A. García-Gregory, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Lynch, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Heather Clark, with whom Clark Law Office was on brief, for
    appellant.
    Margaret Upshaw, with whom Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez,
    United States Attorney, Mariana E. Bauzá-Almonte, Assistant United
    States Attorney, Chief, Appellate Division, and John A. Mathews
    II, Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief, for appellee.
    January 9, 2019
    BARRON, Circuit Judge.         Johvanny Aybar-Ulloa ("Aybar")
    pleaded guilty in 2015 to two counts of drug trafficking in
    international   waters    while    aboard   a   "stateless"   vessel   in
    violation of the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act ("MDLEA"), 46
    U.S.C. §§ 70501-08.      He now challenges those convictions on the
    ground that Congress lacks the authority under Article I, Section
    8, Clause 10 of the United States Constitution to criminalize his
    conduct, given that he contends that the conduct for which he was
    convicted lacks any nexus to the United States.        Aybar separately
    challenges the sentence that he received for those convictions.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the convictions but vacate
    the sentence.
    I.
    At the change of plea hearing, the government described,
    and Aybar does not dispute, the following events as having occurred
    on August 9, 2013. HMS Lancaster, a foreign warship, was on patrol
    in the Caribbean Sea and launched a helicopter that spotted a small
    vessel dead in the water.    The vessel was located in international
    waters at the time and contained "numerous packages."
    HMS Lancaster launched a small boat in order to conduct
    a right-of-visit approach.        During this approach, Aybar and his
    co-defendant, who were aboard the vessel with the packages, claimed
    to be citizens of the Dominican Republic, although the vessel bore
    "no indicia of nationality."
    - 2 -
    Law    enforcement    personnel    aboard      the    small     boat
    conducting     the    approach    then   determined   that    the    vessel   was
    "without nationality," as Aybar conceded to the District Court was
    true, and boarded it.1           The men on board the vessel, including
    Aybar, were transferred to HMS Lancaster along with the packages
    that were taken from the vessel.
    A narcotics field test performed on board HMS Lancaster
    confirmed that the packages contained cocaine.                  At this point,
    Aybar was transferred to a United States Coast Guard vessel and
    transported to Puerto Rico, where he was held in custody by United
    States law enforcement.
    On August 13, 2013, a federal grand jury in the District
    of   Puerto    Rico    returned    an    indictment   against      Aybar.     The
    indictment charged him under the MDLEA with conspiring to possess
    with intent to distribute cocaine on board a vessel subject to the
    jurisdiction of the United States, in violation of 46 U.S.C.
    § 70506(b) (count one), and aiding and abetting possession with
    intent to distribute cocaine on board a vessel subject to the
    jurisdiction of the United States, in violation of 46 U.S.C.
    §§ 70502(c)(1)(A),       70503(a)(1),      70504(b)(1),   70506(a),     and    18
    1The government represented in a filing in the District Court
    that the law enforcement personnel were United States Coast Guard
    members who were embarked on HMS Lancaster.           However, the
    government did not mention this allegation while describing the
    factual basis for the convictions at the change of plea hearing.
    - 3 -
    U.S.C. § 2 (count two).       A forfeiture allegation, under 46 U.S.C.
    § 70507, was also made against Aybar.
    The MDLEA provides in part:              "While on board a covered
    vessel, an individual may not knowingly or intentionally . . .
    manufacture or distribute, or possess with intent to manufacture
    or   distribute,    a    controlled    substance       . . . ."     46    U.S.C.
    § 70503(a)(1).     A "covered vessel" includes "a vessel subject to
    the jurisdiction of the United States."                
    Id. § 70503(e)(1).
        A
    "vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States" is in
    turn defined to include "a vessel without nationality."                     
    Id. § 70502(c)(1)(A).
          And, as we mentioned, Aybar conceded below that
    he was on board a vessel "without nationality" at the time he was
    apprehended.
    On October 2, 2014, Aybar filed a motion to dismiss the
    indictment for lack of jurisdiction.                 He argued that Congress
    lacked the power to criminalize his conduct, given the lack of
    what Aybar claimed to be any constitutionally sufficient nexus
    between   his   charged    conduct     and    the    United   States,    because
    Congress's power under Article I of the Constitution "[t]o define
    and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and
    Offences against the Law of Nations," U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl.
    10, did not extend to his conduct in such circumstances.
    The government opposed Aybar's motion.                 The District
    Court denied Aybar's motion on December 22, 2014 and issued a nunc
    - 4 -
    pro tunc opinion and order on January 5, 2015.       The District Court
    acknowledged that the vessel was not a "vessel of the United
    States" within the meaning of the MDLEA, 46 U.S.C. § 70503(e)(1);
    that Aybar was not a citizen of the United States; and that the
    other members of the crew were not either. But, the District Court
    reasoned, because "international law allows the United States 'to
    treat stateless vessels as if they were its own,'" it followed
    that "persons navigating the high seas aboard a vessel without
    nationality have effectively waived their rights to object to the
    exercise of jurisdiction over them by the United States."           The
    District   Court    therefore   concluded   that   Aybar's   "as-applied
    constitutional challenge fails" because his vessel was stateless.
    Following a change of plea hearing, Aybar entered a
    guilty plea to all charges on March 11, 2015.         At that hearing,
    Aybar engaged in the following colloquy with the Magistrate Judge:
    The Magistrate:  Now, do you admit that in
    addition to the conspiracy you actually and
    the other co-defendants possessed with the
    intent to distribute these substances, this
    cocaine?
    Aybar:    Yes, Your Honor.
    The Magistrate: In the same circumstances on
    board this vessel without nationality and
    therefore subject to jurisdiction of the
    United States?
    Aybar: Yes, Your Honor.
    - 5 -
    The District Court accepted Aybar's guilty plea, and the
    case proceeded to sentencing.           A probation officer prepared a
    presentence report ("PSR") using the 2014 United States Sentencing
    Guidelines Manual.      The PSR assigned Aybar a base offense level of
    thirty-eight under the United States Sentencing Guidelines.                After
    receiving the PSR, Aybar filed an objection in which he argued
    that two levels should be subtracted from his offense level under
    § 3B1.2(b) of the Guidelines because he was a minor participant.
    At sentencing, the District Court declined to reduce his
    offense level as Aybar had argued and sentenced Aybar to 135 months
    in prison.      Aybar timely filed a notice appealing the judgment
    entered against him.
    II.
    In   prior   cases   in    our    circuit    that   have   presented
    constitutional challenges to MDLEA convictions not unlike the one
    that Aybar now makes to us, the defendant had either waived or
    forfeited the constitutional argument challenging the scope of
    Congress's power under Article I to criminalize conduct supposedly
    lacking a sufficient nexus to the United States. See, e.g., United
    States v. Diaz-Doncel, 
    811 F.3d 517
    (1st Cir. 2016) (waived);
    United   States   v.    Nueci-Peña,    
    711 F.3d 191
      (1st   Cir.   2013)
    - 6 -
    (forfeited).2        But that is not the case here.      Aybar timely raised
    below the challenge that he now makes on appeal.            And while Aybar
    did plead guilty to the offenses that underlie the convictions
    that he challenges on appeal, the government concedes that, in
    consequence of the Supreme Court's holding in Class v. United
    States, 
    138 S. Ct. 798
    (2018), Aybar's guilty plea does not bar
    him       from     challenging     Congress's   constitutional    power   to
    criminalize his conduct pursuant to its Article I powers.
    The government does separately argue that Aybar waived
    his right to bring this challenge because he conceded in the plea
    colloquy that the vessel he was on board was "without nationality"
    -- which is one of the MDLEA's definitions for a "vessel subject
    to    the     jurisdiction       of   the   United   States."    46   U.S.C.
    § 70502(c)(1)(A).        But, as we read the record, Aybar conceded only
    that his conduct fell within the MDLEA's scope and not that the
    MDLEA was a valid exercise of Congress's constitutional power under
    Article I insofar as it covered his conduct.
    2 We rejected a similar as-applied challenge to the
    constitutionality of the MDLEA under the Define and Punish Clause
    on plain error review in Nueci-Peña. 
    See 711 F.3d at 196-98
    . In
    doing so, we noted that of all the circuits to have addressed the
    argument that this Clause "does not authorize Congress to enact
    the MDLEA, which punishes conduct without a connection to the
    United States," at least one has squarely rejected that argument,
    and none has held otherwise. 
    Id. at 198
    (citing United States v.
    Estupinan, 
    453 F.3d 1336
    , 1338-39 (11th Cir. 2006)).
    - 7 -
    Thus, we review de novo the district court's rejection
    of   Aybar's    constitutional   challenge   to   Congress's    power   to
    criminalize the conduct for which he was convicted.            See United
    States v. Bravo, 
    489 F.3d 1
    , 6 (1st Cir. 2007).       Nevertheless, as
    we   will   explain,   the   particular   constitutional   challenge    to
    Congress's power that Aybar develops fails because, although we
    have not had occasion directly to address it before, related
    precedent from our circuit precludes us from accepting the premise
    concerning international law on which his constitutional challenge
    to congressional power rests.
    A.
    Aybar contends that Congress exceeded its authority
    under Article I in criminalizing his conduct under the MDLEA
    because Congress lacked the necessary power to criminalize such
    conduct under the Define and Punish Clause.          That Clause gives
    Congress the power "[t]o define and punish Piracies and Felonies
    committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of
    Nations."      U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 10.       In responding to
    Aybar's constitutional challenge, the government does not identify
    any other source of constitutional authority pursuant to which
    Congress may criminalize Aybar's conduct.          We thus focus here
    solely on the dispute between the parties regarding the scope of
    the power that the Define and Punish Clause affords Congress to
    criminalize Aybar's conduct.
    - 8 -
    Aybar's constitutional challenge relies heavily on Judge
    Torruella's dissent in United States v. Cardales-Luna, 
    632 F.3d 731
    (1st Cir. 2011).3             Aybar first contends, by quoting Judge
    Torruella's dissent, that "piracy" under international law is only
    "robbery when committed upon the sea" and thus does not encompass
    drug trafficking.           
    Id. at 745
    (Torruella, J., dissenting).               For
    that reason, he contends that Congress has no power to criminalize
    his conduct pursuant to the "Piracies" component of the Clause in
    question.
    Aybar further contends, again by quoting the following
    portion of Judge Torruella's Cardales-Luna dissent, that the "'Law
    of Nations' is generally understood to be the eighteenth and
    nineteenth-century term for 'customary international law'" and
    that       customary      international    law     does    not     recognize   drug
    trafficking as an offense against the law of nations.                  
    Id. at 745
    -
    47.    Thus, Aybar contends, the "law of nations" component of the
    Clause      at    issue    also   does   not     give   Congress    the   power    to
    criminalize the conduct for which he was convicted.
    3 The  defendant   in  Cardales-Luna    did  not   raise   a
    constitutional challenge to Congress's power under Article I to
    regulate conduct aboard stateless vessels on the high seas absent
    any nexus between that conduct and the United 
    States. 632 F.3d at 737
    .   Judge Torruella nevertheless addressed this issue in his
    dissent because he concluded that this constitutional challenge
    implicated the court's subject matter jurisdiction.       
    Id. The majority
    disagreed, however, and thus declined to address the issue
    sua sponte. 
    Id. - 9
    -
    Of     course,   Aybar   recognizes       that,    even   if    these
    arguments are right, he still must show that Congress could not
    criminalize his conduct pursuant to its power to define and punish
    "Felonies" committed on the high seas.                     He acknowledges, as
    precedent compels him to do, that this portion of the Clause gives
    Congress an independent source of power to define and punish
    conduct on the high seas, separate and apart from the power that
    Congress has under the other portions of the Clause that we have
    just discussed.          See United States v. Smith, 
    18 U.S. 153
    , 158-59
    (1820).
    In arguing that the portion of the Clause that empowers
    Congress to punish "Felonies" on the high seas does not permit
    Congress to criminalize his conduct, Aybar contends that Congress
    cannot define and punish his conduct as a "Felon[y]" within the
    meaning of Article I, Section 8, Clause 10, because there was no
    nexus between that conduct and the United States.4                And Aybar bases
    that       argument    entirely   on    an   assertion    about    the   way    that
    international law -- which he appears to treat as having been
    4Specifically, Aybar asserts the following:          He was
    "interdicted in a vessel in international waters"; "no offense
    occurred within the territorial jurisdiction of the United
    States"; his vessel neither departed from nor was bound for the
    United States; "there is no evidence that the cocaine aboard the
    vessel was intended for distribution" in the United States; he
    "did not commit any offense against a vessel of the United States";
    and he was "located by and taken in custody aboard" a foreign
    warship.
    - 10 -
    invariant in the relevant respect from the Founding to the present
    -- treats drug trafficking and a nation's power to prosecute it in
    circumstances like those involved here.
    We note that, in advancing this argument about the
    content   of     international    law,   Aybar   is    less   than    clear   in
    explaining the precise extent to which, in his view, international
    law   reflects    limits   on    national    power    that   the   Constitution
    incorporates in the portion of Article I that empowers Congress to
    define and punish "Felonies" committed on the high seas.               But, be
    that as it may, it is at least clear that Aybar's constitutional
    contention with respect to the scope of Congress's power under
    this part of Article I is necessarily premised on the underlying
    assertion that he makes about the content of international law as
    it relates to a nation's ability to criminalize conduct on the
    high seas where there is no more connection between that conduct
    and the United States than there is here.              And so we now turn to
    a consideration of that international-law-based premise for his
    constitutional argument concerning Congress's power, for, unless
    we accept that premise, his constitutional challenge must fail.5
    5 We note that the Supreme Court addressed Congress's
    constitutional power to define and punish piracies and felonies in
    a series of cases in the early nineteenth century.      See United
    States v. Furlong, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.) 184, 195-98 (1820); Smith,
    18 U.S. (5 Wheat.) at 158-60; United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. (3
    Wheat.) 610, 630 (1818); cf. United States v. Holmes, 18 U.S. (5
    Wheat.) 412 (1820); United States v. Klintock, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat.)
    - 11 -
    B.
    In asserting this premise, Aybar again relies heavily on
    the reasoning set forth in portions of Judge Torruella's dissent
    in Cardales-Luna.       Aybar begins by quoting Judge Torruella's
    conclusion     that,   "under    the       international   law       doctrine   of
    universal    jurisdiction   (UJ),      a    nation   may   prosecute      certain
    serious offenses even though they have no nexus to its territory
    or its nationals, and no impact on its territory or its citizens."
    
    Cardales-Luna, 632 F.3d at 740
    .             But, Aybar goes on to contend,
    once again by quoting Judge Torruella's dissent in Cardales-Luna,
    that "[o]ther than in the case of those limited crimes, there is
    no general authority to regulate purely foreign criminal conduct
    that does not have a demonstrable connection with the United
    States."     
    Id. at 741.
           Aybar then ties up his constitutional
    argument by asserting (yet again by quoting Judge Torruella's
    dissent in Cardales-Luna) that, because "[d]rug trafficking is not
    recognized     in   customary    international       law   as    a    universally
    cognizable offense," 
    id. at 745,
    the MDLEA may not afford universal
    jurisdiction for drug trafficking as a "Felon[y]" within the
    meaning of Article I, Section 8, Clause 10 of the Constitution in
    a case in which the defendant's conduct did not have any more nexus
    to the United States than was present here.
    144 (1820). But, Aybar makes no argument that these cases resolved
    his constitutional argument in his favor.
    - 12 -
    The problem for Aybar in advancing this argument is that,
    notwithstanding his contention that international law does not
    authorize the United States to prosecute conduct like his own due
    to what he claims to be the lack of any nexus between that conduct
    and   the      United   States,    we    set     forth   a   contrary   view     of
    international law in United States v. Victoria, 
    876 F.2d 1009
    (1st
    Cir. 1989) (Breyer, J.).           There, we considered a challenge to a
    conviction for possessing marijuana under a predecessor statute to
    the MDLEA based on conduct aboard a stateless vessel that was
    captured off the coast of Colombia.              
    Id. at 1009-10.
       And, in the
    course    of    rejecting   that    defendant's      challenge     to   his    drug
    conviction, we explained first that "international law . . . gives
    the United States . . . authority to treat stateless vessels as if
    they were its own."         
    Id. at 1010
    (second omission in original)
    (quoting United States v. Smith, 
    680 F.2d 255
    , 258 (1st Cir.
    1982)).     Then, on the basis of that understanding of international
    law's treatment of stateless vessels, we concluded: "Thus the
    United States, as a matter of international law, may prosecute
    drug offenders on stateless ships found on the high seas."                    Id.6
    6At oral argument, when asked why our holding in Victoria
    was not dispositive, Aybar's counsel responded that Victoria did
    not address the distinction between statelessness under the MDLEA
    and statelessness for the purposes of international law.     But,
    while Aybar's brief asserts in a footnote that the MDLEA's
    definition of statelessness is broader than international law's,
    he does not develop any argument for distinguishing Victoria on
    - 13 -
    To be sure, Victoria did not fully spell out why its
    conclusion that international law authorizes the United States to
    treat a stateless vessel as its own means that, as a matter of
    international law, the United States could prosecute a person on
    board such a vessel for a drug offense.        Victoria nevertheless
    made it clear that its ruling was definitive as to this point
    through its approving and extensive references to out-of-circuit
    precedents holding similarly and "explain[ing] in detail why this
    is so."   
    Id. at 1011
    (citing United States v. Alvarez-Mena, 
    765 F.2d 1259
    , 1265-66 (5th Cir. 1985); United States v. Pinto-Mejia,
    
    720 F.2d 248
    , 260-61 (2d Cir. 1983); United States v. Marino-
    Garcia, 
    679 F.2d 1373
    , 1382-83 (11th Cir. 1982); United States v.
    Rubies, 
    612 F.2d 397
    , 402-03 (9th Cir. 1979); United States v.
    Cortes, 
    588 F.2d 106
    , 110 (5th Cir. 1979)).7
    this basis.   See United States v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st
    Cir. 1990).
    7 For this reason, we do not find significant the fact, not
    mentioned by the defendant here, that there was some evidence in
    Victoria -- as there is not here -- that the vessel in that case
    was potentially bound for the United States. 
    See 876 F.2d at 1010
    .
    In fact, there is no indication in Victoria that the statute at
    issue made proof of such a tie between the defendant's conduct and
    the United States necessary to convict the defendant. Nor did we
    qualify our holding that "the United States, as a matter of
    international law, may prosecute drug offenders on stateless ships
    found on the high seas" in light of that evidence. 
    Id. We also
    note that Victoria, in asserting the United States' broad authority
    under international law to prosecute persons who are not citizens
    of the United States for drug trafficking on a stateless vessel in
    international waters, made no reference to our decision the year
    before in United States v. Robinson, 
    843 F.2d 1
    , 3-4 (1st Cir.
    - 14 -
    We   do   recognize   that   Victoria   did   not   consider   a
    constitutional challenge to Congress's power under Article I, such
    as Aybar now makes to us. In Victoria, the defendant argued merely
    that the statute there at issue did not reach his conduct in light
    of the Charming Betsy canon, see Murray v. The Schooner Charming
    Betsy, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 64, 118 (1804) (reasoning that "an act of
    Congress ought never to be construed to violate the law of nations
    if any other possible construction remains"), given that he claimed
    that "international law would not permit the United States to
    convict him for possessing marijuana . . . so far from the United
    States."   
    Victoria, 876 F.2d at 1010
    .       But, even though our ruling
    in Victoria did not purport to address the constitutional question
    of congressional power that Aybar now raises, its reasoning is no
    less dispositive as to the assertion about international law that
    supplies the premise for the constitutional argument that Aybar
    does make.    Accordingly, because Aybar's constitutional challenge
    rests on an assertion about the content of international law that,
    as a panel, we are not free to accept in light of our prior
    precedent, we must reject his constitutional contention regarding
    1988), in which we observed in dicta that there was a "forceful"
    argument to be made that international law would not justify the
    United States' prosecution of drug offenders on a foreign-flagged
    ship found on the high seas where there was no clear proof that
    the ship was bound for the United States and where the United
    States acted without the flag state's consent.
    - 15 -
    the scope of Congress's power.    See United States v. Wurie, 
    867 F.3d 28
    , 34 (1st Cir. 2017) (explaining the law of the circuit
    rule).   And, on that basis, we affirm his convictions.8
    8 The dissent disputes the merits of Victoria's holding as to
    international law, as well as the necessity of Victoria having
    resolved the Charming Betsy issue on the basis of that
    understanding of international law. See Diss. Op. 30-33. But,
    under the law of the circuit doctrine, what matters is simply
    whether Victoria did rely on that proposition for its holding that
    the Charming Betsy canon did not require a narrower construction
    of the MDLEA, and it is clear that Victoria did.      In fact, in
    defending that view of international law, Victoria cited
    extensively    to    out-of-circuit    precedent   and    included
    parentheticals in which those circuits set forth that very
    proposition of international law. See 
    Victoria, 876 F.2d at 1011
    .
    We thus are not free to treat that aspect of the Victoria decision
    as mere dicta. We note, too, that other circuits, since Victoria,
    have continued to rule the same way. See, e.g., United States v.
    Campbell, 
    743 F.3d 802
    , 809-12 (11th Cir. 2014); United States v.
    Caicedo, 
    47 F.3d 370
    , 372-73 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v.
    Martinez-Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d 1052
    , 1056-57 (3d Cir. 1993).
    The dissent also observes that Smith, 
    680 F.2d 255
    , a decision
    that predates Victoria, indicates that Victoria's view of
    international law is mistaken. See Diss. Op. 31-32. The dissent
    further notes that Victoria relied on Smith. See 
    id. However, as
    the dissent itself points out, Victoria did not cite the full
    passage from Smith that the dissent contends is at odds with
    Victoria's assertion about international law. See 
    Victoria, 876 F.2d at 1010
    . And, the particular part of that passage from Smith
    that Victoria did cite does not support the dissent's view. Nor
    does the dissent contend that it does. See Diss. Op. 31-32. In
    any event, we do not read even the full passage from Smith to
    support the dissent's view of it.     See Diss. Op. 31.     In that
    passage, Smith concludes that "[the United States] has the
    authority to treat stateless vessels as if they were its 
    own," 680 F.2d at 258
    , and then follows that conclusion by emphasizing the
    circumstances of the case in front of it, stating that the United
    States "has [that] authority . . ., particularly when engaged in
    conduct affecting United States vessels and having an effect within
    the jurisdiction of the United States," 
    id. (emphasis added).
    Read
    as a whole, therefore, the passage from Smith on which the dissent
    places much weight suggests that evidence of a nexus between the
    - 16 -
    There    is,   in    addition   to   Victoria,   another   of    our
    precedents     that    is    at    odds   with    Aybar's     contention     that
    international law of its own force requires there to be more of a
    nexus between a person charged with drug trafficking and the nation
    that wishes to criminally prosecute it than is present here.                 That
    precedent is United States v. Cardales, 
    168 F.3d 548
    (1st Cir.
    1999), which concerned the application of the MDLEA to drug
    smugglers on the high seas (there, on a foreign-flagged ship).
    
    Id. at 551-52.
    In Cardales, the defendants argued that the Due Process
    Clause, rather than the Define and Punish Clause, "requires the
    government to prove a nexus between their criminal conduct and the
    United States in a prosecution for violating the 
    MDLEA," 168 F.3d at 552
    , which is an argument that we rejected there, 
    id. at 553,
    and that Aybar does not press here.9              Moreover, Cardales, unlike
    Aybar's case, involved a foreign-flagged vessel, 
    id. at 552,
    and
    we noted that the flag nation had consented to the assertion of
    conduct at issue and the United States is not necessary in order
    for the United States to exercise the authority that Smith
    recognizes.
    9 We note that Aybar's brief mentions that the warship that
    intercepted the stateless vessel on which he was aboard was a
    foreign one. That was not the case in either Victoria or Cardales
    (a point Aybar does not himself point out), but Aybar makes no
    argument as to why this difference should matter with respect to
    whether the exercise of United States jurisdiction over his conduct
    aboard the stateless vessel was consistent with international law.
    See 
    Zannino, 895 F.2d at 17
    .
    - 17 -
    jurisdiction by the United States, 
    id., which we
    identified as key
    to our holding rejecting Cardales's due process challenge on ground
    of a lack of any nexus.
    But, apart from that aspect of our ruling, we also stated
    in Cardales that the application of the MDLEA in that case was
    consistent with the "protective principle" of international law,
    which permits a nation "to assert jurisdiction over a person whose
    conduct outside the nation's territory threatens the nation's
    security."    
    Id. at 553
    (quoting 
    Robinson, 843 F.2d at 3
    ).        And, in
    so concluding, Cardales relied on a congressional finding in the
    MDLEA that "trafficking in controlled substances aboard vessels is
    a serious international problem and is universally condemned[,
    and] . . . presents a specific threat to the security . . . of the
    United   States."     
    Id. (alteration and
      omissions   in   original)
    (quoting 46 U.S.C. app. § 1902).          Cardales then explained that
    "application of the MDLEA to the defendants is consistent with the
    protective principle of international law because Congress has
    determined that all drug trafficking aboard vessels threatens our
    nation's security."     
    Id. (emphasis added).
    There is no indication in this aspect of Cardales's
    reasoning that its broad assertion regarding the United States'
    entitlement to assert protective jurisdiction, under international
    law, was limited only to cases in which the flag nation has
    consented to the United States' assertion of jurisdiction over a
    - 18 -
    vessel and those on board it.       See 
    id. at 553.
           Thus, the language
    on this point in Cardales is, like the language referenced in
    Victoria    concerning    international     law    that   we    have   described
    above,     directly     contrary   to      Aybar's      sole     constitutional
    contention, given the assertion about international law on which
    his contention rests.
    Moreover,     Aybar    makes      no   argument       as    to   why,
    notwithstanding our conclusion to the contrary in Cardales, his
    conduct    does   not   fall   within   the    United     States'      protective
    jurisdiction.     He instead contends only that his crime of drug
    trafficking is outside the United States' universal jurisdiction.
    He thus develops no argument for reconsidering our statement in
    Cardales concluding that the scope of protective jurisdiction
    encompasses conduct of the kind present here.                  See 
    Zannino, 895 F.2d at 17
    .
    III.
    Aybar next argues that the District Court erroneously
    denied him a minor participant reduction under § 3B1.2(b) of the
    Sentencing Guidelines based on five factors that he contends show
    that he was a minor participant.            That guideline provides that
    "[i]f the defendant was a minor participant in any criminal
    activity, decrease by 2 levels." U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual
    § 3B1.2(b) (2014).
    - 19 -
    Application Note 3(C) of the November 2015 edition of
    the Sentencing Guidelines sets forth the five factors on which
    Aybar   relies   in   challenging   his   sentence.    U.S.   Sentencing
    Guidelines Manual § 3B1.2, cmt. n.3(C) (2015).            But, as the
    government points out, he was sentenced according to the November
    2014 edition of the Guidelines in effect at the time of his October
    21, 2015 sentencing, and the application note to the minor-role
    guideline in that edition did not include those specific factors.
    Nevertheless, Aybar did file a letter under Rule 28(j)
    calling our attention to our ruling in the companion case to this
    one, United States v. Sarmiento-Palacios, 
    885 F.3d 1
    , 6 (1st Cir.
    2018), which we decided after all briefing was complete in this
    case.    See Fed. R. App. P. 28(j).       Sarmiento held that Amendment
    794 to the Sentencing Guidelines, which added the five factors to
    the application note, clarifies the Commission's original intent
    regarding § 3B1.2 and therefore that it does apply retroactively.
    
    Id. And, in
    Sarmiento we therefore vacated the sentence and
    remanded for resentencing, so that the District Court could have
    an opportunity to apply the new factors.        
    Id. The government
    argues that vacating the sentence and
    remanding for resentencing is not appropriate here, because, even
    under the factors set out in Amendment 794, Aybar would still have
    been denied the minor-role reduction.        But the same argument was
    - 20 -
    unsuccessful in Sarmiento, and we reject it for the same reasons
    that we did there:
    we   think   it   prudent    to   leave   that
    determination in the hands of the able
    district court judge. Accordingly, a remand
    is justified to allow the sentencing court the
    opportunity to consider the "Commission's
    current policy position[,] . . . [which] may
    have some influence on the judge's ultimate
    discretionary choice of sentence."
    
    Id. (alterations and
    omission in original) (quoting United States
    v. Ahrendt, 
    560 F.3d 69
    , 79 (1st Cir. 2009)).
    IV.
    We therefore affirm the convictions.      But we vacate the
    District Court's sentence and remand for resentencing under the
    Commission's clarified guidance, as reflected in Amendment 794.
    - Separate Opinion Follows -
    - 21 -
    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge, joining in part and dissenting
    in part. I join the majority with respect to Aybar's sentencing
    appeal in light of our recent decision in 
    Sarmiento-Palacios, 885 F.3d at 6
    .     I respectfully dissent, however, from the majority's
    conclusion    that    our   precedent   requires     us    to   affirm   Aybar's
    conviction.    As the majority notes, none of this Court's precedent
    directly considered a constitutional challenge to Congress's power
    to criminalize conduct pursuant to Article I, section 8, clause
    10.   Therefore,       that     precedent   should   not   bind   this   panel.
    Moreover, the related but non-binding precedent upon which the
    majority relies diverges from international and constitutional law
    principles governing Congress' powers to criminalize the conduct
    in Aybar's case.       These principles, as explained below, lead to
    the conclusion that the application of the MDLEA to Aybar was
    unconstitutional.
    The     majority     correctly    identifies       that     Aybar's
    conviction hinges on the provision of the Define and Punish clause
    which gives Congress the authority to define and punish "Felonies"
    on the high seas.       See 
    Smith, 18 U.S. at 159
    ; U.S. Const. art. I,
    § 8, cl. 10.       But as explained below, the majority's reliance and
    application of this court's precedent to the issues in Aybar's
    case is inapt.
    The majority opinion relies to a great degree upon the
    rationale in 
    Cardales, 168 F.3d at 553
    .          See Maj. Op. 17-19.       But,
    - 22 -
    as the majority in this case concedes, the facts and issues before
    the court in Cardales were quite different than those in the
    present case.     The holding in Cardales relied only on the flag
    nation's consent in concluding that no nexus was required under
    the Due Process 
    Clause. 168 F.3d at 553
    ("[D]ue process does not
    require the government to prove a nexus between a defendant's
    criminal conduct and the United States in a prosecution under the
    MDLEA when the flag nation has consented to the application of
    United States law to the defendants. . . .   We therefore hold that
    when individuals engage in drug trafficking aboard a vessel, due
    process is satisfied when the foreign nation in which the vessel
    is registered authorizes the application of United States law to
    the persons on board the vessel."(emphasis added)).10   That holding
    is inapplicable to the case at hand, in which there is no such
    consent, and the majority's reliance on it is therefore erroneous.
    The Cardales defendants did not raise a challenge to Congress's
    constitutional authority to enact the MDLEA as applied to them,
    and, by arguing that due process required proof of a nexus between
    their conduct and the United States, see 
    id. at 552-53,
    inherently
    accepted that the enacting authority had the constitutional power
    to create the law under which those due process rights arise.   Not
    so in our case.
    10 Consent, after all, is the cornerstone of international
    law.    See generally The Paquete Habana, 
    175 U.S. 677
    (1900).
    - 23 -
    Notably, the Cardales court discussed international law
    principles in dicta for the sole purpose of explaining why that
    court's application of the MDLEA to the facts in that case did not
    violate the precepts of due process. In its superfluous discussion
    of international law's protective principle, the Cardales court
    looked to a presumptuous Congressional statement that "trafficking
    in controlled substances aboard vessels is a serious international
    problem and . . . presents a specific threat to the security . . .
    of the United States."       
    Id. (second alteration
    in original)
    (quoting 46 U.S.C. app. § 1902).        The Cardales court leaned on
    this Congressional statement for support that "application of the
    MDLEA is consistent with the protective principle of international
    law."   
    Id. (citing United
    States v. Martinez-Hidalgo, 
    993 F.2d 1052
    , 1056 (3d Cir. 1993)).     The majority here leans almost as
    heavily on this statement.   But, the accompanying parenthetical in
    Cardales, in expressing that the application of the MDLEA to drug
    trafficking on the high seas is not "fundamentally unfair," 
    id. (quoting Martinez-Hidalgo,
    993 F.2d at 1056), makes clear that the
    Cardales court's dicta regarding international law was used only
    to support its due process analysis.      While the logic of Cardales
    may be persuasive to some, that case's conclusion is not binding
    to the as-applied constitutional challenge that Aybar raises here.
    I pause for a moment to note that the Congressional
    statement relied upon by the Cardales court does not make an
    - 24 -
    application of the MDLEA to entirely foreign nationals and foreign
    conduct, with no nexus to the United States, consistent with the
    "protective     principle"     of   international     law.        The    protective
    principle     of    international    law   requires       a   showing        that   the
    regulated conduct has some nexus or effect on the prosecuting
    nation; the protective principle cannot be invoked simply through
    a   blanket    assertion   that     some   disfavored         conduct    creates     a
    "specific threat to the security" of that nation.                
    Id. (quoting 46
    U.S.C. app. § 1902). As I discussed in my dissent in United States
    v. Angulo-Hernández, some sort of actual cognizable threat to the
    nation is required under international law for an assertion of the
    protective principle.      
    576 F.3d 59
    , 61 (1st Cir. 2009) (Torruella,
    J., dissenting).
    A broad grant of power to the executive branch to
    prosecute any and all vessels carrying illegal substances that are
    not in the United States' waters, are not headed for or departing
    from the United States, are not flying the United States' flag,
    and   are     not   carrying    United     States    nationals,         is    plainly
    inconsistent with international law.                
    Id. (citing Restatement
    (Third) of U.S. Foreign Relations Law § 402 cmt. f).                     Allowing a
    nation to make such a broad assertion under the guise of the
    protective principle with no substantial showing of a nexus to
    that nation would render the protective principle coterminous with
    the doctrine of universal jurisdiction.             
    Id. And, while
    there may
    - 25 -
    be   a        global   consensus   about   the   negative   effects   of   drug
    trafficking, it is not a universal crime -- despite vigorous
    attempts by the United States at international law forums to make
    it one11 -- and cannot be prosecuted under the "universality
    principle" of international law.
    Having established that our precedent does not compel us
    to reject Aybar's as-applied constitutional challenge, I next
    address the constitutional limitations of Congress' ability to
    regulate        Felonies   on   the   high   seas   under   the   mandates   of
    constitutional and international law.               I am emphatically of the
    view that doing so requires us to hold that Congress' power under
    this clause is necessarily limited to instances where there is a
    nexus between the conduct underlying the felony and the United
    States.          See 
    Cardales-Luna, 632 F.3d at 739
    (Torruella, J.,
    dissenting); 
    Angulo-Hernández, 576 F.3d at 62
    (Torruella, J.,
    dissenting); cf. United States v. James-Robinson, 
    515 F. Supp. 1340
    , 1346 (S.D. Fla. 1981) (holding that the court did not have
    subject matter jurisdiction because the defendant's conduct had no
    "effect whatsoever" on the U.S.); United States v. Angola, 
    514 F. 11
            See United States v. Bellaizac-Hurtado 
    700 F.3d 1245
    , 1256
    (11th Cir. 2012) ("The negotiators of the Rome Statute repeatedly
    referred to drug crimes as 'treaty crimes' only . . . [a]nd several
    delegates expressed the opinion that drug crimes had no place in
    a statute dealing with international crimes and should be addressed
    at the national level." (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted)); see also 
    Cardales-Luna, 632 F.3d at 745
    (Torruella, J.,
    dissenting).
    - 26 -
    Supp. 933, 936 (S.D. Fla. 1981) (asserting that jurisdiction was
    valid under the protective principle because the ship was close
    enough to the U.S. to assume a "real, not an imaginary, potential
    for harm" to U.S. narcotics laws).           Because Congress cannot grant
    the government the authority to prosecute conduct beyond that which
    the Define and Punish clause allows Congress to regulate, see
    United States v. Furlong, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat) 184, 196-97 (1820),
    and the Define and Punish clause does not give Congress the ability
    to regulate Felonies on the high seas having no nexus to the United
    States, Congress cannot create laws -- such as the MDLEA --
    granting the government the authority to prosecute conduct by
    foreign individuals on the high seas that has no nexus to the
    United States.    See Eugene Kontorovich, Beyond the Article I
    Horizon: Congress's Enumerated Powers and Universal Jurisdiction
    over Drug Crimes, 
    93 Minn. L
    . Rev. 1191, 1212 (2009).                   "[S]uch
    general   jurisdiction    over     high   seas   offenses    had   never   been
    suggested . . . [nor] intended," and if the Constitution did not
    explicitly   forbid     Congress    from     legislating    against     foreign
    conduct, it was "only because it was too silly for the Framers to
    have   contemplated."      
    Id. (citing Hon.
      John    Marshall,   Speech
    Delivered in the House of Representatives, in 4 The Papers of John
    Marshall, 92-93, 96, 102 (Charles T. Cullen & Leslie Tobias eds.,
    1984)); cf. 
    Furlong, 18 U.S. at 196-97
    .             Just as Congress cannot
    create criminal laws regulating the conduct of foreign nationals
    - 27 -
    in foreign countries with no effect on the United States, see
    United States v. Nippon Paper Industries Co., Ltd., 
    109 F.3d 1
    , 4-
    9 (1st Cir. 1997); Restatement (Third) of U.S. Foreign Relations
    Law    § 402(1)(c),          Congress    cannot   create   laws     regulating    the
    conduct of foreign nationals on foreign vessels over which the
    United   States        has    no   jurisdiction      because   those   vessels    are
    navigating on international waters, and there is no indication
    that they have either left from the United States or are headed
    thereto.
    Early Supreme Court cases support the requirement of
    such a nexus.      When first faced with the opportunity to determine
    the scope of Congress's ability to legislate extraterritorially,
    the Supreme Court held that, aside from universal jurisdiction
    crimes     (that       is,     certain     serious     offenses     recognized        by
    international law that all nations may prosecute even without a
    nexus or impact to that nation's territory or citizens), there
    must be a nexus between the United States and the regulated
    conduct.    See United States v. Klintock, 18 U.S. (5 Wheat) 144,
    151-52 (1820).          This principle has been continually upheld, see
    United States v. Pizzarusso, 
    388 F.2d 8
    , 10 (2d Cir. 1968) ("Acts
    done   outside     a    jurisdiction,       but   intended     to   produce   .   .   .
    detrimental effects within it, justify a state in punishing the
    cause of the harm." (emphasis added) (quoting Strassheim v. Daily,
    
    221 U.S. 280
    , 285 (1911) (Holmes, J.))); see also United States v.
    - 28 -
    Columba-Colella, 
    604 F.2d 356
    , 358 (5th Cir. 1979) ("When an
    allegedly criminal act is performed by an alien on foreign soil[,]
    courts in the United States have long held that if jurisdiction is
    to be extended over that act, it must be supported by either the
    Protective or Objective territorial theory."), including in cases
    involving early interpretations of anti-drug trafficking laws
    similar to the MDLEA in situations involving stateless vessels.
    See e.g., United States v. Smith, 
    680 F.2d 255
    , 257-258 (1st Cir.
    1982); 
    James-Robinson, 515 F. Supp. at 1346-1347
    ; Angola, 514 F.
    Supp. at 935.
    Here, Aybar was interdicted on a vessel in international
    waters, far from the United States.     His vessel did not depart
    from the United States nor was there any evidence that it was bound
    for the United States.     No concrete evidence suggests that the
    drugs aboard this specific vessel were intended for distribution
    in the United States.    Aybar did not commit any offense against a
    vessel or citizen of the United States, or within the United
    States' territory.   Save for the fact that he was intercepted by
    officers of the United States Coast Guard, who in fact were aboard
    a foreign vessel, there is absolutely nothing connecting Aybar to
    the United States.      The United States nexus was artificially
    provided by the actions of the United States, a unique condition
    unheard of in the criminal law -- in which it is the government
    that provides one of the elements of the crime that is charged.
    - 29 -
    Given this lack of nexus, the Felonies provision of the Define and
    Punish clause does not give Congress the authority to create laws
    criminalizing Aybar's conduct.
    Because Cardales did not address the issues presented in
    this case, and constitutional and international law do not support
    the conclusion that the majority reaches, this Court need not and
    should not adopt the rationale in Cardales to reject Aybar's
    constitutional challenge.     See United States v. Irizarry-Colón,
    
    848 F.3d 61
    , 69 (1st Cir. 2017) (declaring that the district court
    was "led astray" by a prior panel's statement concerning an issue
    not before that prior panel); see also Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S.
    (6 Wheat) 264, 399 (1821) ("It is a maxim not to be disregarded,
    that general expressions, in every opinion, are to be taken in
    connection with the case in which those expressions are used.           If
    they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not to
    control the judgment in a subsequent suit when the very point is
    presented for decision."). The logical force of the Cardales dicta
    is insufficient to govern this Court's decision when the opposite
    conclusion is consistent with constitutional and international law
    principles.
    Nor does Aybar's admission that he was aboard a vessel
    without nationality provide a nexus to give the United States
    prescriptive   jurisdiction   to    prosecute   his   conduct   under   its
    domestic laws.    The majority points to Victoria, in which this
    - 30 -
    Court broadly stated that "as United States courts have interpreted
    international   law,   that   law    gives   the   'United   States   .   .   .
    authority to treat stateless vessels as if they were its 
    own." 876 F.2d at 1010
    (quoting 
    Smith, 680 F.2d at 248
    ).            See Maj. Op.
    14.   But, for the following reasons, this court should not rely
    too heavily on that statement.
    First, in Victoria, there was evidence of a nexus between
    the conduct on the stateless vessel and the United 
    States. 876 F.2d at 1010
    (noting that "the Coast Guard found . . . navigational
    charts indicating a course for the . . . southern tip of Florida").
    Therefore, the Victoria court did not need to consider whether the
    United States could in fact treat stateless vessels as its own
    when there was no nexus between the conduct at issue and the United
    States, for the charts provided evidence of a U.S. nexus.             Second,
    the full quotation from Smith, only part of which the Victoria
    court cited,12 itself actually supports the existence of a nexus
    requirement.    See 
    Smith, 680 F.2d at 258
    (stating that the United
    States "has authority to treat stateless vessels as if they were
    its own, particularly when engaged in conduct affecting United
    12
    
    Victoria, 876 F.2d at 1010
    ("[A]s United States courts have
    interpreted international law, that law gives the 'United States
    . . . authority to treat stateless vessels as if they were its
    own.'" (second alteration in the original) (quoting 
    Smith, 680 F.2d at 258
    )).
    - 31 -
    States vessels and having an effect within the jurisdiction of the
    United States" (emphasis added)).
    Third,    like   in     Cardales,    the   defendant    in   Victoria
    appealed his conviction on grounds not at issue here. The Victoria
    defendant partly based his argument on the Charming Betsy canon,
    in with the Supreme Court stated that "an act of Congress ought
    never to be construed to violate the law of nations if any other
    possible construction remains."             Murray v. The Schooner Charming
    Betsy,   6   U.S.     (2   Cranch)    64,   118    (1804).    As    the   majority
    recognizes, the defendant in Victoria asserted that Congress did
    not intend for the MDLEA to apply extraterritoriality, implicit in
    which is acceptance of Congress' authority to enact such a law.
    
    See 876 F.2d at 1010
    . Unlike the Victoria defendant, Aybar asserts
    that Congress did not have the authority under the Define and
    Punish clause to apply the MDLEA to regulate extraterritorial
    conduct having no nexus to the United States.                  Furthermore, the
    statement from Victoria, if read to foreclose any nexus requirement
    other than a defendant's presence aboard a stateless vessel, would
    run afoul of international law (and therefore the Charming Betsy
    cannon), which is clear that it allows countries to prescribe law
    extraterritorially only when there is some connection between the
    conduct and that country.          See Restatement (Third) of U.S. Foreign
    Relations    Law    § 402.      Therefore,        the   majority   in   this   case
    - 32 -
    overstates the extent to which Victoria forecloses the argument
    that Aybar presents.
    Before moving forward, I must fall on my own sword and
    recognize that I, like the Victoria court and the majority here,
    have made too broad an assertion.               See 
    Sarmiento-Palacios, 885 F.3d at 7
    (Torruella, J., concurring) ("And while the United States
    (like all nations) does have universal jurisdiction over stateless
    vessels   .    .   .   .");    
    Cardales-Luna, 632 F.3d at 747
      ("These
    principles regarding [universal] jurisdiction have been relaxed to
    include . . . stateless vessels.").            But, "it is never too late to
    'surrende[r] former views to a better considered position.'" South
    Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., 
    138 S. Ct. 2080
    , 2100 (2018) (Thomas, J.,
    concurring) (quoting McGrath v. Kristensen, 
    340 U.S. 162
    , 178
    (1950) (Jackson, J., concurring)).             And, upon further reflection,
    I now realize that international law's allowance of any nation to
    prevent   the      operation    of   stateless    vessels     does    not   confer
    jurisdiction on that nation to prosecute the individuals aboard
    those vessels under that nation's domestic criminal codes.
    It is widely accepted that international law confers the
    right of any nation to approach and "visit" a vessel if it is
    suspected that the vessel is stateless.                    See United Nations
    Convention on the Law of the Sea [hereinafter "UNCLOS"] art. 110,
    Dec.   10,    1982,    1833    U.N.T.S.   397.      But,    international      law
    distinguishes       between    a   nation's    authority    to    prescribe    law
    - 33 -
    extraterritorially as to the conduct of foreign persons and its
    authority to interfere with the navigation of a vessel encountered
    on the high seas.       Although stateless vessels enjoy no diplomatic
    protections and thus are subject to being stopped and boarded by
    any other nation's vessels, it does not follow that this "right to
    visit" confers jurisdiction on the boarding vessel's nation to
    prosecute the occupants of the stateless vessel -- who continue to
    enjoy diplomatic protection from their nation -- under the visiting
    nation's substantive criminal laws without some nexus between
    their conduct and the boarding nation.               See James-Robinson, 515 F.
    Supp. at 1343 n.5 (explaining that the issue before the court was
    not whether the United States had jurisdiction over a stateless
    ship, but whether it had jurisdiction "over the foreign citizen
    crewmembers of such a stateless ship"); see also Ted L. McDorman,
    Stateless Fishing Vessels, Int'l Law, and the U.N. High Seas
    Fisheries   Conference,       25   J.    Mar.    L   &   Com.   531,   540   (1994)
    (discussing the views of D. O'Connell, 2 The Int'l Law of the Sea
    75 (Oxford University Press, Inc., 1984) and H. Meyers, The
    Nationality of Ships 318-321 (Martinus Nijhoff, 1967) (noting that
    individuals aboard stateless vessels "retain their nationality"
    and   may   thus   be    prosecuted        by    their    home    country    under
    international law); see, e.g., Robin R. Churchill & Alan V. Lowe,
    The   Law   of   the    Sea   172       (1988)   (arguing       that   a   vessel's
    "'statelessness' will not, of itself, entitle each and every State
    - 34 -
    to assert jurisdiction over [its occupants], for there is not in
    every        case    any   recognized     basis,   such    as   nationality    or
    territoriality, upon which jurisdiction can be asserted over them
    while they are on the high seas . . . .                  [T]here is a need for
    some jurisdictional nexus in order that a State may extend its
    laws to those on board a stateless ship and enforce the laws
    against them").
    A review of customary international law reveals that
    in all instances for which a state may interfere with the right of
    passage of another vessel, aside from the universal jurisdiction
    crimes of piracy and slave trading, international law requires
    some independent nexus between the visiting state and the suspected
    basis for the interference.          See UNCLOS at art. 110.       For example,
    customary international law allows a State to board a foreign
    vessel on the high seas if the State has reason to believe that
    the foreign vessel is engaged in unauthorized broadcasting.13                 
    Id. at art.
         110(c).      But   that    State    may   only   prosecute   those
    individuals engaged in that unauthorized broadcasting if that
    State has an independent basis for asserting jurisdiction over
    those individuals or that conduct.                  See 
    id. at art.
    109(3),
    13
    UNCLOS defines "unauthorized broadcasting" as "the
    transmission of sound radio or television broadcasts from a ship
    or installation on the high seas intended for reception by the
    general public contrary to international regulations, but
    excluding the transmission of distress calls."    UNCLOS at art.
    109(2).
    - 35 -
    110(1)(c).     Similarly, while any nation may board and prevent
    navigation of a suspected stateless vessel under international
    law, that nation must have a nexus to the vessel's occupants or to
    those occupant's conduct to assert jurisdiction to prosecute those
    aboard the stateless vessel for a violation of its domestic laws
    -- such as drug trafficking under the MDLEA.           The application of
    that nation's domestic laws to a stateless vessel's occupants
    without a nexus unilaterally extends that nation's sovereignty
    over the high seas, in violation of customary international law.
    See UNCLOS at art. 89.
    Moreover, allowing all nations to prosecute crewmembers
    aboard stateless vessels under that nation's own domestic laws
    simply because of their presence aboard that stateless vessel would
    convert the operation of a stateless vessel into a universal
    jurisdiction crime.       "There are two premises underlying universal
    jurisdiction.    The first involves the gravity of the crime. . . .
    The   second   involves    the   locus   delicti   (place   of   the   act)."
    
    Bellaizac-Hurtado, 700 F.3d at 1260
    (Barkett, J., concurring)
    (quoting Michael P. Scharf, Application of Treaty-Based Universal
    Jurisdiction to Nationals of Non-Party States, 35 New Eng. L. Rev.
    363, 368-69 (2001)).       But, piloting a stateless vessel is not of
    the same heinous nature as those universal jurisdiction crimes
    (piracy, slavery and genocide) and has not been recognized as a
    universal crime under international law.             See UNCLOS; Allyson
    - 36 -
    Bennett,    That   Sinking    Feeling:    Stateless    Ships,   Universal
    Jurisdiction, and the Drug Trafficking Vessel Interdiction Act, 37
    Yale J. Int'l L. 433, 448-50 (2012) (explaining that universal
    crimes are those agreed upon by the international community to be
    "so heinous . . . that they offend the interest of all humanity,"
    such as genocide, and noting that statelessness is not listed as
    a universal jurisdiction crime under UNCLOS).           In fact, I have
    been unable to find any federal statute or regulation making
    piloting a stateless vessel a crime under the laws of the United
    States.    Because being aboard a stateless vessel does not meet the
    substantive component (the gravity of the crime) of universal
    jurisdiction, and is not a universal crime, it follows that nations
    cannot apply their domestic laws to an individual simply by the
    fact that they are aboard a vessel without nationality.
    Just as Congress cannot pass legislation "attempting to
    apply the criminal laws of the United States, with the Bolivian
    government's consent, to the conduct of Colombian nationals in
    Bolivia,"    
    Cardales-Luna, 632 F.3d at 741
       (Torruella,   J.,
    dissenting), it cannot punish foreign nationals aboard foreign
    vessels.    See, e.g., 
    Furlong, 18 U.S. at 197-98
    ; 
    Klintock, 18 U.S. at 151
    .    And, for the reasons explained in this dissent, the same
    must be true even if those foreign nationals were aboard stateless
    vessels.    If any state can assert its own laws based purely on a
    vessel's statelessness, then it follows that a United States
    - 37 -
    citizen aboard a stateless vessel can be prosecuted under any
    foreign country's domestic laws even if the regulation of such
    conduct would be considered absurd in the United States.    Common
    sense dictates that this is not and cannot be the case.
    There is no denying that most circuits, including our
    own, have upheld the application of the MDLEA to the crews of
    stateless vessels.    However, this Court has not yet directly
    addressed the exact constitutional challenge Aybar has raised, and
    we need not be constrained by related but non-binding precedent.
    And because the Felonies provision of the Define and Punish clause
    requires that there be a nexus between the conduct and the United
    States to pass constitutional muster, and no such nexus has been
    shown here, Aybar's conviction must be overturned.         For the
    foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    - 38 -