Delligatti v. United States
Case Overview
Delligatti v. United States held that solicitation to commit first-degree murder qualifies as a 'crime of violence' under the elements clause of 18 U.S.C. Section 924(c)(3)(A), which covers offenses that have as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against another person. The Court held that an inchoate offense can satisfy the elements clause so long as the completed crime it targets necessarily involves such physical force, and that murder by its nature meets this test.
The Facts
Joseph Delligatti, an organized crime figure, ordered and arranged the killing of a rival. He was convicted under RICO and a related Section 924(c) firearm charge predicated on his solicitation of murder as the underlying crime of violence. Delligatti argued that solicitation, as an inchoate offense, does not itself require the use of physical force and therefore cannot qualify as a crime of violence under the elements clause.
The Application
Delligatti, an organized crime figure, challenged his Section 924(c) firearm conviction by arguing that solicitation—an inchoate offense that does not itself use physical force—cannot qualify as a crime of violence. The Court rejected this argument by holding that the elements clause looks to whether the target crime (first-degree murder) necessarily involves physical force, not whether the inchoate offense itself does. Because Delligatti's solicitation was directed at a murder, which by definition involves deadly force against a person, the solicitation satisfied the statutory requirement. The Court thus affirmed that an organized crime figure who orders a killing can face enhanced penalties for possessing a firearm in connection with that solicitation.
The Conclusion
**The Court affirmed Delligatti's Section 924(c) conviction.** Thomas wrote the majority opinion. The ruling resolves how the elements clause applies to inchoate offenses and holds that courts look to the completed offense that the inchoate crime targets when assessing whether that crime of violence element is satisfied.
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