PD, everyone can see that you were being sarcastic. You were trying to argue that the federal government does NOT have jurisdiction over every person in the United States, and that both "common sense" and the Tully case somehow "dispute" the idea that the federal government has jurisdiction over every person in the United States.Yes yes we know the federal government has jurisdiction over every person in the us.
The only thing that disputes that besides common sense is us v tully 140 fed. 899
YOU WERE WRONG. The Court in Tully did not say that, and the Court in Tully did not rule that.
Except for foreigners with diplomatic immunity, etc., the general rule is that the federal government DOES have "jurisdiction" over every person in the United States -- jurisdiction in the sense in which you intended. That means: the power of Congress to enact federal criminal laws is not limited to areas within federal enclaves, the District of Columbia, or areas subject to "exclusive" federal jurisdiction.
Again, the problem in Tully was that the SPECIFIC LAW IN QUESTION used the phrase "exclusive" jurisdiction. The federal court decided that the place at which the murder occurred, although it was a military base owned by the federal government, was not a place where the federal government had retained exclusive political jurisdiction. THAT was the reason for the result in Tully -- not because of some stupid imaginary rule that the federal government does not have jurisdiction over every person in the United States.