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Criminal Liability Risks for Entities Engaged in Agricultural Displacement

International War Crimes, Federal Criminal Statutes, Ecocide, and the Immunity Question
Cody Lestelle · 2026-02-14 v1.0

Preliminary Draft — Open for Review

This paper is a preliminary draft and may contain inaccuracies. The open comment period and collaborative public drafting and review is active for Q1 2026.

All papers will receive updated drafts, including co-authors being added based on engagement and participation in our first cohort at skool.com/7abcs.

DISCLAIMER: This document is for research and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for legal counsel specific to your situation.

Companion Document: Civil Rights, Agricultural Displacement, and Peonage: A General Legal Research Document (v1.0, 2026-02-14)


TABLE OF CONTENTS

  1. Executive Summary: The Criminal Liability Landscape
  2. International Criminal Law: Starvation as a War Crime
  3. The Rome Statute and ICC Jurisdiction
  4. Geneva Conventions: Protection of Agricultural Infrastructure
  5. Ecocide: The Emerging Fifth International Crime
  6. US Federal Criminal Statutes: Forced Labor and Peonage
  7. US Federal Criminal Statutes: Civil Rights Violations
  8. US Federal Criminal Statutes: Fraud and Conspiracy
  9. RICO: Pattern of Racketeering Activity
  10. Federal Hate Crime Statutes
  11. State Criminal Statutes: Agricultural Destruction
  12. The Immunity Question: Why Qualified Immunity Does Not Apply
  13. Elements of the Crime: What Prosecutors Must Prove
  14. Precedents: Criminal Prosecutions of Government Officials
  15. Risk Assessment Matrix
  16. The Historical Record: Under-Prosecution as a Data Point
  17. International Precedents and Universal Jurisdiction
  18. Conclusion: The Tightening Legal Environment
  19. Master Statute Table
  20. Bibliography

1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The criminal liability landscape for agricultural displacement has shifted dramatically in recent years. What was once addressed exclusively through civil litigation now faces a convergence of international and domestic criminal frameworks that create real prosecution risk for displacing entities and their officials.

Key Developments

  • November 21, 2024: The ICC issued its first-ever arrest warrants for starvation as a war crime (Art. 8(2)(b)(xxv)), charging Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant with intentionally depriving civilians of objects indispensable to survival, including destruction of 80% of agricultural land in Gaza.

  • November 19, 2025: The Higher Regional Court of Koblenz, Germany opened the first trial in world history to indict starvation as a war crime under universal jurisdiction (the Yarmouk trial).

  • September 9, 2024: Fiji, Samoa, and Vanuatu formally proposed amending the Rome Statute to include ecocide as the fifth core international crime, with the Democratic Republic of Congo becoming the first African nation to support the amendment.

  • February 2024: Belgium became the first European nation to criminalize ecocide, with penalties up to 20 years imprisonment.

  • 2019-2025: The Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s “abuse of legal process” provision (18 U.S.C. §1589) has received growing scholarly attention as a tool against government entities that weaponize administrative mechanisms to displace agricultural operators.

The Central Thesis

Entities and officials that engage in agricultural displacement — through lease termination, program cancellation, crop destruction, or deprivation of food sources — face potential criminal liability under at least 15 distinct federal statutes, multiple state criminal codes, and emerging international criminal law. Qualified immunity does not shield government officials from criminal prosecution. The historical pattern of addressing agricultural displacement exclusively through civil settlements is not a legal barrier to prosecution — it is a reflection of prosecutorial discretion that can change at any time.


2. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW: STARVATION AS A WAR CRIME

Agricultural displacement as a war crime involves the deliberate destruction, seizure, or rendering useless of food sources, crops, livestock, and agricultural infrastructure that are essential for the survival of the civilian population. Under international humanitarian law (IHL), such acts constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity, categorized as starvation as a method of warfare and illegal forced displacement.

The prohibition against starvation as a method of warfare is now recognized as customary international law — binding on all parties regardless of treaty ratification:

  • ICRC Customary IHL Rule 53: “The use of starvation of the civilian population as a method of warfare is prohibited.”
  • ICRC Customary IHL Rule 54: “Attacking, destroying, removing or rendering useless objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population is prohibited.”

2.2 Objects Indispensable to Survival

International law explicitly defines the following as protected objects:

  • Foodstuffs
  • Agricultural areas for the production of foodstuffs
  • Crops
  • Livestock
  • Drinking water installations and supplies
  • Irrigation works

Any deliberate action to destroy, remove, or render useless these objects — for whatever motive — constitutes a violation. The prohibition applies “whatever the motive, whether in order to starve out civilians, to cause them to move away, or for any other motive.”

2.3 The Intent Standard

The elements of the crime require:

  1. Intent: The perpetrator must intend to starve civilians or destroy their livelihood, or must have knowledge that destruction of agricultural infrastructure will have this effect.
  2. Targeting Infrastructure: Destruction of agricultural land, water systems, greenhouses, farms, and food storage to make an area uninhabitable or unproductive.
  3. Starvation Tactics: Blocking food, water, and humanitarian aid, leading to displacement of populations from agricultural areas.
  4. Proportionality: Destruction of agricultural land is prohibited if it causes disproportionate harm to civilians compared to any legitimate purpose.

2.4 The Scholarly Debate on Intent

Tom Dannenbaum, in “Criminalizing Starvation in an Age of Mass Deprivation in War” (55 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 3, 2022), argues the starvation crime should focus on the act of deprivation rather than the outcome it produces. The crime attaches to conduct seeking to deprive — not requiring proof that starvation actually resulted. This interpretation significantly lowers the prosecution threshold.


3. THE ROME STATUTE AND ICC JURISDICTION

3.1 Article 8(2)(b)(xxv) — Starvation as a War Crime

The Rome Statute defines as a war crime:

“Intentionally using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare by depriving them of objects indispensable to their survival, including wilfully impeding relief supplies as provided for under the Geneva Conventions.”

3.2 Article 8 — Forced Displacement

The Rome Statute further criminalizes:

  • Forcible transfer of population (Art. 8(2)(a)(vii) and 8(2)(e)(viii))
  • Unlawful deportation or transfer triggered by the destruction of livelihoods
  • Both constitute war crimes in international and non-international armed conflicts

3.3 The 2019 Starvation Amendment

On December 6, 2019, the Assembly of States Parties unanimously adopted an amendment extending the war crime of starvation to non-international armed conflicts (Art. 8(2)(e)(xix)). Approximately 25 states have ratified the amendment as of late 2025. Switzerland and Global Rights Compliance lead the ratification campaign.

3.4 Historic First: ICC Arrest Warrants (November 2024)

On November 21, 2024, ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I issued arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant — the first-ever charges under Art. 8(2)(b)(xxv) in the ICC’s history.

The Chamber found reasonable grounds to believe the defendants:

  • Intentionally and knowingly deprived the civilian population of objects indispensable to survival (food, water, medicine, fuel, electricity)
  • Completely closed border crossing points for extended periods
  • Cut off water pipelines and hindered electricity supplies
  • Destroyed approximately 80% of agricultural and livestock land, rendering it unusable
  • Destroyed ports and fishing boats and banned fishing

All 125 ICC member states are obligated to arrest the defendants if they enter their territory. The charges include starvation as a war crime, crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and other inhumane acts.

Significance: This prosecution establishes that the destruction of agricultural land and food production infrastructure is individually criminally prosecutable at the highest levels of government.

3.5 The ICJ Genocide Case (South Africa v. Israel)

On January 26, 2024, the International Court of Justice issued provisional measures requiring Israel to prevent genocide and enable humanitarian assistance. On March 28, 2024, the ICJ ordered additional emergency measures specifically requiring Israel to ensure basic food supplies without delay. South Africa’s Memorial (filed October 28, 2024) presented evidence of destruction of food production infrastructure, razing of agricultural areas, and use of starvation as a weapon.


4. GENEVA CONVENTIONS: PROTECTION OF AGRICULTURAL INFRASTRUCTURE

4.1 Additional Protocol I, Article 54

Article 54(1): Starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is prohibited.

Article 54(2): “It is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove or render useless objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, such as foodstuffs, agricultural areas for the production of foodstuffs, crops, livestock, drinking water installations and supplies and irrigation works, for the specific purpose of denying them for their sustenance value to the civilian population or to the adverse Party, whatever the motive, whether in order to starve out civilians, to cause them to move away, or for any other motive.”

4.2 Additional Protocol II, Article 14

Extends protections to non-international armed conflicts: “Starvation of civilians as a method of combat is prohibited.”

4.3 The ENMOD Convention

The Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Techniques (1977) prohibits environmental modification techniques with “widespread, long-lasting or severe effects.” Though it has seen zero formal enforcement actions in its 47-year history, scholars at Cambridge describe it as a “sleeping giant” that could be revived. The Second Review Conference (1992) established that widespread military use of herbicides falls under ENMOD’s prohibition.

4.4 Customary International Law Status

The prohibition against destroying agricultural infrastructure has achieved customary international law status, meaning it is binding on all parties — including states that have not ratified the relevant treaties, and including non-state actors. US courts have historically recognized customary international law.


5. ECOCIDE: THE EMERGING FIFTH INTERNATIONAL CRIME

5.1 The Proposed Definition

An Independent Expert Panel (June 2021) defined ecocide as:

“Unlawful or wanton acts committed with knowledge that there is a substantial likelihood of severe and either widespread or long-term damage to the environment being caused by those acts.”

5.2 Rome Statute Amendment Proposal

On September 9, 2024, Fiji, Samoa, and Vanuatu formally submitted a joint proposal to the ICC to amend the Rome Statute to include ecocide as the fifth core international crime alongside genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression. The Democratic Republic of Congo became the first African nation to support the amendment.

5.3 Domestic Ecocide Laws

CountryYearPenalty
Belgium2024Up to 20 years imprisonment; €1.6M fines for corporations
France2021Up to 10 years imprisonment
Ukraine2024Charges served for Kakhovka Dam destruction
EU Directive2024Requires all EU member states to introduce ecocide-comparable offenses

5.4 Agricultural Destruction as Ecocide

The ecocide concept directly encompasses agricultural destruction through:

  • Destruction of farmland and topsoil
  • Contamination of agricultural water sources
  • Defoliation and herbicide use (the historical origin of the concept from Vietnam-era Agent Orange)
  • Dam destruction flooding agricultural land
  • Desertification caused by environmental manipulation

The Ukraine ecocide prosecution — charging Russian officials for the June 2023 destruction of the Kakhovka Dam, which flooded farmland and nature reserves — demonstrates that criminal prosecution for agricultural environmental destruction is already happening.


6. US FEDERAL CRIMINAL STATUTES: FORCED LABOR AND PEONAGE

6.1 The Trafficking Victims Protection Act (18 U.S.C. §§1589-1595)

The TVPA’s “abuse of legal process” provision is the most directly applicable federal criminal statute to government-facilitated agricultural displacement.

18 U.S.C. §1589 — Forced Labor

Prohibits obtaining labor or services through:

  • Threats of serious harm (including psychological harm)
  • Abuse or threatened abuse of law or legal process
  • Any scheme intended to cause belief of serious harm

Penalty: Up to 20 years imprisonment; $250,000 fine.

Critical Application: Government entities that use permit denials, lease terminations, regulatory enforcement, or program cancellation to coerce labor conditions or displace agricultural operators could be challenged under the “abuse of legal process” provision. Every administrative action taken to force compliance — every notice, every enforcement action, every regulatory threat — could constitute an element of the offense.

18 U.S.C. §1595 — Civil Remedy

Creates a private civil right of action for trafficking victims, allowing treble damages.

6.2 Peonage (18 U.S.C. §1581)

Prohibits holding a person in debt servitude through force, threat of force, or threat of legal coercion.

Penalty: Up to 20 years imprisonment.

Application: When agricultural operators are displaced from self-directed farming and forced into wage labor — particularly through mechanisms involving debt (loans, program repayment obligations, fines) — the displacement implicates peonage statutes. The Supreme Court established in Bailey v. Alabama (1911) that indirect mechanisms creating coerced labor conditions violate the 13th Amendment: “What the State may not do directly, it may not do indirectly.”

6.3 Additional Forced Labor Statutes

StatuteDescriptionPenalty
18 U.S.C. §1583Enticement into slaveryUp to 20 years
18 U.S.C. §1584Involuntary servitudeUp to 20 years
18 U.S.C. §1590Trafficking for forced laborUp to 20 years
18 U.S.C. §1592Document servitudeUp to 5 years
42 U.S.C. §1994Peonage Abolition Act (1867)Criminal penalties

7. US FEDERAL CRIMINAL STATUTES: CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATIONS

7.1 Conspiracy Against Rights (18 U.S.C. §241)

“If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person… in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States…”

Penalty: Up to 10 years imprisonment. If death results or if the conspiracy involves kidnapping, attempted kidnapping, aggravated sexual abuse, or attempted murder: life imprisonment or death.

Key Advantage: Section 241 does NOT require action under color of law. Private individuals, nonprofit board members, land trust officials, and private cooperators in displacement schemes can be charged. No overt act is required — the agreement itself is the crime.

7.2 Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law (18 U.S.C. §242)

“Whoever, under color of any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or custom, willfully subjects any person… to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured or protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States…”

Penalty: Up to 1 year imprisonment for basic violation. Up to 10 years if bodily injury results. Life imprisonment or death if death results or if the offense involves kidnapping, attempted kidnapping, aggravated sexual abuse, or attempt to kill.

Application to Agricultural Displacement: Conservation district board members, USDA field officers, county planning commissioners, and any government official who uses their position to deprive an agricultural operator of constitutional rights (equal protection, due process, First Amendment) acts “under color of law.” The willfulness requirement was established by Screws v. United States (1945): the defendant must act with specific intent to deprive of a specific constitutional right.

7.3 The Color-of-Law Standard

United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299 (1941): Action “under color of law” includes misuse of power possessed by virtue of state law. A conservation district board member who votes to terminate a lease in retaliation for protected speech, or a USDA official who delays processing to cause crop loss, acts under color of law.


8. US FEDERAL CRIMINAL STATUTES: FRAUD AND CONSPIRACY

8.1 Federal Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. §371)

Two prongs make §371 exceptionally versatile for agricultural displacement cases:

Offense Clause: Conspiracy to commit any federal offense — pairs with §241, §242, §1341, §1343, or any underlying crime.

Defraud Clause: Conspiracy to defraud the United States or any federal agency — covers schemes to impair, obstruct, or defeat the lawful function of any government department through deceit, craft, or trickery. This prong does NOT require an underlying criminal offense.

Penalty: Up to 5 years imprisonment and $250,000 fine.

Application: The “defraud clause” captures the coordinated nature of multi-actor agricultural displacement involving conservation district boards, USDA field offices, county planning commissions, and private partners. Each participant need only know of and agree to the general purpose — not the full scope of the conspiracy.

8.2 Mail Fraud (18 U.S.C. §1341) and Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. §1343)

Elements: (1) Scheme to defraud; (2) Use of mail/wire communications; (3) Material deception.

Penalty: Up to 20 years imprisonment; up to 30 years if involving a financial institution.

Critical Feature: Every email, letter, phone call, or electronic communication in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme constitutes a separate count. A multi-year pattern of communications related to agricultural displacement could generate hundreds of individual counts.

8.3 Honest Services Fraud (18 U.S.C. §1346)

Defines “scheme to defraud” to include deprivation of the “intangible right of honest services.” Public officials owe citizens their honest services. Criminalizes schemes involving bribery or kickbacks.

Application: Government officials who accept compensation, favors, or political benefits in exchange for agricultural displacement decisions commit honest services fraud.


9. RICO: PATTERN OF RACKETEERING ACTIVITY

9.1 The Statute (18 U.S.C. §§1961-1968)

RICO requires a pattern of racketeering activity (at least two predicate acts within 10 years) conducted through an enterprise affecting interstate commerce.

RICO Predicate Acts relevant to agricultural displacement:

  • Mail fraud (§1341)
  • Wire fraud (§1343)
  • Extortion (§1951)
  • Obstruction of justice (§1503)
  • Bribery (§201)

Penalty: Up to 20 years imprisonment per count; life imprisonment if the predicate involves a crime carrying life. Forfeiture of all proceeds and interests.

9.2 Civil RICO

Allows private plaintiffs to recover treble damages (three times actual damages) plus attorney’s fees.

9.3 Limitation: Government Entities

United States v. Thompson (6th Cir., 1982): Government entities themselves are not appropriate RICO “enterprises.” However, RICO can reach:

  • Associated-in-fact enterprises combining government and private actors
  • Individual government officials acting in their personal capacity
  • Private entities cooperating with government displacement

10. FEDERAL HATE CRIME STATUTES

10.1 Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act (18 U.S.C. §249)

Criminalizes willfully causing bodily injury (or attempting to do so) through use of fire, firearm, dangerous weapon, or explosive device, because of the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability of any person.

Penalty: Up to 10 years imprisonment; life imprisonment if death results, kidnapping occurs, or aggravated sexual abuse occurs.

10.2 Application to Agricultural Targeting

If agricultural operations are destroyed or targeted because of the operator’s race, national origin, or other protected characteristic:

  • Bodily injury + racial motivation = federal hate crime prosecution
  • The Tennessee Ford Plant case (2023): NAACP Legal Defense Fund raised serious concerns about Tennessee DOT’s use of eminent domain to seize farmland from Black farmers, offering as little as $8,165 for land worth approximately $200,000

10.3 42 U.S.C. §3631 — Fair Housing Act Criminal Provisions

Prohibits use of force or threat of force to interfere with housing rights because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Applicable to agricultural homesteads.


11. STATE CRIMINAL STATUTES: AGRICULTURAL DESTRUCTION

11.1 Crop Destruction Statutes by State

StateStatuteOffensePenalty
Pennsylvania18 Pa.C.S. §3309Agricultural Crop DestructionFelony of the second degree
Pennsylvania18 Pa.C.S. §3310Agricultural Vandalism (>$5,000)Felony of the third degree
North CarolinaN.C.G.S. §14-141Destroying crops (>$2,000)Class I felony
North CarolinaN.C.G.S. §14-128Injury to trees, crops, lands (>$1,000)Class I felony
FloridaFla. Stat. §604.60Agricultural damageTreble damages (3x value)
FloridaFla. Stat. §806.13Criminal mischief (>$1,000)Felony of the third degree
Illinois720 ILCS 5/21-1Criminal damage (>$100,000)Class 2 felony
AlabamaFarm Animal & Crop Protection ActAgricultural facility destructionFelony
OregonORS 91.230Tenant emblements violationCivil + criminal penalties
WashingtonRCW 9A.48Malicious mischief (>$5,000)Class B felony

11.2 Washington State Specifics

Under Washington law, the displacing entity may face:

  • RCW 9A.48.070: Malicious mischief in the first degree — knowingly and maliciously causing damage >$5,000 to another’s property. Class B felony: up to 10 years imprisonment.
  • RCW 9A.48.080: Malicious mischief in the second degree — damage >$750. Class C felony: up to 5 years imprisonment.
  • RCW 9.61.160: Threats to damage property — making threats to damage crops or agricultural infrastructure. Gross misdemeanor.

12. THE IMMUNITY QUESTION: WHY QUALIFIED IMMUNITY DOES NOT APPLY

12.1 The Critical Distinction

Qualified immunity is a defense available ONLY in civil litigation under 42 U.S.C. §1983. It does NOT protect government officials from criminal prosecution under any federal or state statute.

This is not a contested legal question. It is settled law.

12.2 Immunity Types and Their Limits

Immunity TypeApplies to Civil Suits?Applies to Criminal Prosecution?
Qualified ImmunityYesNO
Absolute ImmunityYes (judges, prosecutors, legislators in official acts)Generally NO for criminal acts
Supremacy Clause ImmunityPartial (federal officers)Only if acting reasonably within duties
Westfall ActYes (federal employees, common law torts only)NO

12.3 Key Principles

  1. No immunity for criminal acts outside scope of duties: When officials act unlawfully, commit unauthorized acts, or act unreasonably, they are NOT shielded by any immunity.

  2. Federal officers and state prosecution: Under the Supremacy Clause, federal officials may be shielded from state prosecution only when acting reasonably within federal duties. Unlawful or unreasonable acts remove the shield.

  3. Absolute immunity exceptions: Even absolute immunity does not protect prosecutors acting as investigators or performing administrative functions.

  4. The Screws standard: Screws v. United States (1945) established that §242 requires specific intent to deprive of a specific constitutional right — but this willfulness standard is a jury question, not an immunity defense.


13. ELEMENTS OF THE CRIME: WHAT PROSECUTORS MUST PROVE

13.1 For Color-of-Law Violations (§242)

  1. The defendant was acting under color of law (government official, board member, or person exercising government-delegated authority)
  2. The defendant willfully deprived a person of a right protected by the Constitution or federal law
  3. The defendant acted with specific intent to deprive the victim of that right

13.2 For Conspiracy Against Rights (§241)

  1. Two or more persons agreed to injure, oppress, or intimidate a person
  2. The agreement targeted a right secured by the Constitution or federal law
  3. Each conspirator knowingly and willfully participated
  1. The defendant obtained labor or services through abuse or threatened abuse of law or legal process
  2. The abuse was intended to cause the victim to believe they would suffer serious harm
  3. The victim was coerced into providing labor or forgoing economic activity

13.4 For Mail/Wire Fraud (§1341/§1343)

  1. The defendant devised or intended to devise a scheme to defraud
  2. The scheme involved a material misrepresentation or concealment
  3. The defendant used mail or wire communications to execute the scheme
  4. The defendant acted with intent to defraud

13.5 For RICO (§§1961-1968)

  1. An enterprise existed (associated-in-fact group of individuals)
  2. The enterprise was engaged in, or its activities affected, interstate commerce
  3. The defendant was associated with the enterprise
  4. The defendant conducted or participated in the enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity (at least 2 predicate acts within 10 years)

14. PRECEDENTS: CRIMINAL PROSECUTIONS OF GOVERNMENT AND AGRICULTURAL OFFICIALS

14.1 Conservation Easement Tax Fraud

United States v. Fisher et al. (N.D. Ga., 2023-2024): Jack Fisher and Robert Sinnott generated more than $1.3 billion in fraudulent syndicated conservation easement tax deductions. Fisher sentenced to 25 years, Sinnott to 23 years. Eight additional defendants pleaded guilty.

14.2 Land Trust Fraud

United States v. Gauger (W.D. Wis., 2011): Former executive director of West Wisconsin Land Trust submitted false statements to obtain federal funds for conservation easements. USDA Office of Inspector General investigation.

14.3 USDA Official Corruption

CaseChargesOutcome
USDA Program Director (D.D.C., 2025)$400,000 kickback schemeGuilty plea
USDA Employee (S.D.N.Y., 2024-2025)$66 million SNAP fraud/briberyCharged
USDA Employee (S.D. Tex., 2023)Public corruption, briberyIndicted
NRCS Officials (1999-2003)Illegally inflated conservation paymentsInspector General audit

14.4 Government Overreach Against Farmers

United States v. Maude (D.S.D., 2024-2025): Small cattle ranchers indicted for alleged theft of 25 acres near Buffalo Gap National Grasslands. Faced up to 10 years. Trump Administration dropped all charges April 28, 2025, describing the prosecution as “government regulation by prosecution” and “lawfare.” USDA Secretary Rollins hosted the Maude family in Washington, condemning the prosecution.

Significance: This case demonstrates both the vulnerability of agricultural operators to criminal prosecution by government and the growing political recognition that such prosecutions can constitute abuse of power.

14.5 Agricultural Trafficking Prosecutions

Over 15 years, nine major federal investigations freed over 1,200 farmworkers from captivity. Key cases:

CaseYearDefendantsWorkersSentences
United States v. Flores1997S.D. Fla.Armed guard labor campConvicted
United States v. Ramos2002M.D. Fla.700+ workersConvicted
United States v. Navarrete2008M.D. Fla.Multiple12 years each
Operation Blooming Onion2021S.D. Ga.24 indicted$200M+ operation
United States v. Moreno2021M.D. Fla.RICO conspiracy118 months

15. RISK ASSESSMENT MATRIX

15.1 Criminal Exposure by Actor Type

ActorApplicable Federal StatutesApplicable State StatutesImmunity?
Conservation District Board Members§241, §242, §371, §1341/§1343, §1346, §1589Malicious mischief, crop destructionNO qualified immunity for criminal
USDA Field Officers§242, §371, §1341/§1343, §1346Crop destruction, official misconductSupremacy Clause (only if reasonable/within duties)
County Planning Commissioners§241, §242, §371Official misconductNO qualified immunity for criminal
Land Trust Officials§241, §371, §1341/§1343Crop destruction, fraudNO (private actors)
Private Cooperators§241, §371, §1341/§1343, RICOCrop destruction, conspiracyNO (private actors)

15.2 Penalty Exposure Summary

ConductMaximum Federal PenaltyMaximum State Penalty
Conspiracy to deprive civil rights (§241)10 years (life/death if death results)Varies
Color-of-law deprivation (§242)10 years (life/death if death results)Varies
Forced labor via legal process abuse (§1589)20 yearsN/A
Mail/wire fraud per count (§1341/§1343)20 years per countN/A
RICO (§§1961-1968)20 years per count + forfeitureN/A
Federal conspiracy (§371)5 yearsN/A
Hate crime (§249)10 years (life if death results)Varies
Agricultural crop destructionN/AFelony (varies by state)

15.3 Aggravating Factors

The following factors increase criminal liability risk:

  • Racial targeting: Disparate impact on minority agricultural operators
  • Pattern of conduct: Multiple similar actions over time (RICO predicate)
  • Retaliation motive: Actions following protected speech (First Amendment violations)
  • Youth program destruction: Heightened public interest in prosecution
  • Mid-season timing: Destruction during growing season demonstrates intent
  • Prior endorsement: Government endorsement followed by destruction shows premeditation
  • Multiple actors: Coordination triggers conspiracy charges
  • Electronic communications: Every email in furtherance = separate fraud count

16. THE HISTORICAL RECORD: UNDER-PROSECUTION AS A DATA POINT

16.1 The Civil Rights Settlement Pattern

The largest agricultural displacement cases in US history were all resolved civilly, not criminally:

CaseSettlementCriminal Charges Filed?
Pigford v. Glickman (Black farmers)~$2.2 billionNO
Keepseagle v. Vilsack (Native American farmers)$760 millionNO
Garcia v. Vilsack (Hispanic farmers)$1.33 billionNO
Love v. Vilsack (Women farmers)Included aboveNO

Despite documenting decades of systematic discrimination that destroyed over 13 million acres of Black farmland and displaced 98% of Black farmers, no USDA official was ever criminally charged. This is not because the conduct was not criminal — it is because of prosecutorial discretion.

16.2 Why This Pattern May Change

  1. International precedent: The ICC’s November 2024 starvation warrants and Germany’s Yarmouk trial establish that agricultural destruction is individually criminally prosecutable.
  2. Political climate: The Maude family case demonstrates growing political will to scrutinize government prosecution of farmers — the reverse (prosecuting government officials for displacing farmers) may follow.
  3. Legislative expansion: The TVPA’s “abuse of legal process” provision, hate crime statutes, and ecocide laws are expanding the criminal toolkit.
  4. Public awareness: Global attention to food sovereignty, food apartheid (Karen Washington’s framework), and agricultural justice creates prosecution pressure.
  5. Scholarly momentum: The Oxford textbook Accountability for Mass Starvation (2023), the Vanderbilt, Chicago, and West Point law review articles, and the Lancet’s 2025 article on starvation as warfare all create academic infrastructure for prosecution.

17. INTERNATIONAL PRECEDENTS AND UNIVERSAL JURISDICTION

17.1 The Yarmouk Starvation Trial (Germany, 2025)

Case: Federal Public Prosecutor v. Jihad A. et al. Court: Higher Regional Court of Koblenz, Germany Trial Opened: November 19, 2025 Scheduled: Through June 25, 2026 (40+ hearing days)

The first trial in world history to indict starvation as a war crime. Five defendants charged under universal jurisdiction for their involvement in the siege of Yarmouk (Damascus, 2012-2014), where approximately 18,000 civilians were trapped and 200 died of starvation and typhus.

One defendant faces charges under Section 11(1)(5) VStGB (German Code of Crimes Against International Law) for using starvation as a prohibited method of warfare.

The European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) and Syrian survivors filed the criminal complaints that led to the investigation.

17.2 Universal Jurisdiction Framework

Over 15 states conduct universal jurisdiction investigations: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Senegal, Spain, Switzerland, UK, and the US. France has issued international arrest warrants for Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad for war crimes.

17.3 The US War Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. §2441)

Makes certain war crimes federal criminal offenses. Penalties include imprisonment for life, and if death results, the death penalty. No prosecution under this statute has been brought for starvation or agricultural destruction. Prosecution requires written certification of the Attorney General.

17.4 Human Rights Watch Documentation

HRW has documented agricultural destruction as war crimes in multiple conflict zones:

ConflictAgricultural Destruction DocumentedYear
Gaza80% of agricultural/livestock land destroyed2023-2025
YemenFarms, fishing boats, water systems attacked2017-2024
Sudan/DarfurFarmland burned, grain stores destroyed2004-2025
UkraineGrain facilities shelled; $40 billion agricultural damage2022-2025

The criminal liability landscape for agricultural displacement is tightening rapidly from multiple directions simultaneously:

Internationally:

  • The ICC’s first-ever starvation war crime charges (November 2024)
  • The world’s first starvation war crime trial under universal jurisdiction (November 2025)
  • Ecocide moving toward Rome Statute inclusion (September 2024 proposal)
  • Belgium, France, and the EU criminalizing environmental destruction

Domestically:

  • The TVPA’s “abuse of legal process” provision (§1589) creating criminal liability for government entities that weaponize administrative mechanisms
  • Color-of-law statutes (§242) carrying penalties up to life imprisonment
  • Conspiracy statutes (§241, §371) capturing coordinated displacement schemes
  • Mail and wire fraud generating separate counts for every communication
  • State felony statutes for crop destruction

Doctrinally:

  • Qualified immunity does not shield government officials from criminal prosecution
  • The scholarly consensus is shifting toward individual criminal accountability for agricultural destruction
  • The first dedicated textbook on starvation accountability has been published (Oxford University Press, 2023)
  • The Lancet has published on starvation as a weapon (2025)

The message for displacing entities is clear: The era of agricultural displacement without criminal consequence may be ending. What was historically addressed through civil settlements — Pigford’s $2.2 billion, Keepseagle’s $760 million — established the factual record of systematic agricultural destruction. That record now exists alongside criminal statutes that have always prohibited the underlying conduct. The only missing element has been prosecutorial will — and both international and domestic trends suggest that element is arriving.

Every lease termination, every program cancellation, every crop destruction, every administrative action taken in furtherance of agricultural displacement creates potential criminal evidence. Every email, every letter, every phone call, every board vote is a potential exhibit. Every official who participates is a potential defendant. And qualified immunity — the shield that protects government officials in civil suits — offers no protection in criminal proceedings.


19. MASTER STATUTE TABLE

StatuteDescriptionMax PenaltyImmunity?
Rome Statute Art. 8(2)(b)(xxv)Starvation as war crimeLife imprisonment (ICC)No
Geneva AP I, Art. 54Protection of agricultural objectsCustomary lawNo
18 U.S.C. §2441US War Crimes ActLife / deathNo
18 U.S.C. §1589Forced Labor (abuse of legal process)20 yearsNo
18 U.S.C. §1581Peonage20 yearsNo
18 U.S.C. §241Conspiracy Against Rights10 years / life / deathNo
18 U.S.C. §242Deprivation Under Color of Law10 years / life / deathNo
18 U.S.C. §371Federal Conspiracy5 yearsNo
18 U.S.C. §1341Mail Fraud20 years per countNo
18 U.S.C. §1343Wire Fraud20 years per countNo
18 U.S.C. §1346Honest Services Fraud20-30 yearsNo
18 U.S.C. §§1961-68RICO20 years + forfeitureNo
18 U.S.C. §249Hate Crimes (Shepard-Byrd)10 years / lifeNo
50 U.S.C. §4501Defense Production Act1 year + $10,000No
State statutesAgricultural destruction/vandalismFelony (varies)No

20. BIBLIOGRAPHY

International Law

  • Conley, Bridget, Alex de Waal, Catriona Murdoch, and Wayne Jordash QC, eds. Accountability for Mass Starvation: Testing the Limits of the Law. Oxford University Press, 2023.
  • Dannenbaum, Tom. “Criminalizing Starvation in an Age of Mass Deprivation in War: Intent, Method, Form, and Consequence.” 55 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 3 (2022).
  • D’Alessandra, Federica, and Matthew Gillett. “The War Crime of Starvation in Non-International Armed Conflict.” Blavatnik School of Government Working Paper BSG-WP-2019-031 (2019).
  • “Siege Starvation: A War Crime of Societal Torture.” Chicago Journal of International Law (2023-2024).
  • “Starvation as a weapon of war in Gaza: violation of international law.” The Lancet (2025).
  • CSIS. “Starvation Crimes and International Law: A New Era” (2024).
  • GIJN. Reporter’s Guide to Investigating War Crimes: Starvation (2024).
  • Fakhri, Michael. Report A/79/171: “Starvation and the right to food, with an emphasis on the Palestinian people’s food sovereignty” (2024).
  • ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I. Arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, November 21, 2024.
  • ICJ. Provisional Measures Order, South Africa v. Israel, January 26, 2024; Additional Measures, March 28, 2024.
  • ECCHR. Criminal complaints in the Yarmouk starvation case, Koblenz, Germany (2025).
  • Human Rights Watch. “Israel: Starvation Used as Weapon of War in Gaza” (December 18, 2023).
  • Human Rights Watch. “Extermination and Acts of Genocide” (December 19, 2024).
  • Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Articles 8(2)(b)(xxv), 8(2)(e)(xix) (2019 Amendment).
  • Geneva Convention Additional Protocol I. Article 54 (1977).
  • Geneva Convention Additional Protocol II. Article 14 (1977).
  • ICRC. Customary IHL Rules 53 and 54.
  • ENMOD Convention (1977).
  • Kampala Convention (2009).
  • Independent Expert Panel. Proposed definition of ecocide (June 2021).

US Federal Law

  • 18 U.S.C. §241 — Conspiracy Against Rights
  • 18 U.S.C. §242 — Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law
  • 18 U.S.C. §249 — Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act
  • 18 U.S.C. §371 — Federal Conspiracy
  • 18 U.S.C. §1341 — Mail Fraud
  • 18 U.S.C. §1343 — Wire Fraud
  • 18 U.S.C. §1346 — Honest Services Fraud
  • 18 U.S.C. §1581 — Peonage
  • 18 U.S.C. §1589 — Forced Labor (TVPA)
  • 18 U.S.C. §§1961-1968 — RICO
  • 18 U.S.C. §2441 — War Crimes Act
  • 42 U.S.C. §1994 — Peonage Abolition Act

Cases

  • Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.S. 219 (1911)
  • Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91 (1945)
  • United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299 (1941)
  • United States v. Thompson, 685 F.2d 993 (6th Cir. 1982)
  • United States v. Fisher et al. (N.D. Ga., 2023-2024)
  • United States v. Maude (D.S.D., 2024-2025)
  • Federal Public Prosecutor v. Jihad A. et al. (Koblenz, Germany, 2025)

Key Organizations and Resources

  • Global Rights Compliance — Starvation accountability and Rome Statute ratification campaign
  • Starvation Accountability Project — starvationaccountability.org
  • Stop Ecocide International — stopecocide.earth
  • European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) — ecchr.eu
  • Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) — ciw-online.org
  • NAACP Legal Defense Fund — naacpldf.org

This document was compiled on February 14, 2026 from comprehensive legal research including ICC decisions, federal statutes, international treaty instruments, legal scholarship, Human Rights Watch reports, and DOJ prosecution records. It is intended for general research purposes and does not constitute legal advice.


Document Version History:

  • v1.0 (2026-02-14): Initial compilation from 2 parallel research streams covering international war crimes frameworks and domestic criminal liability statutes.