United States v. Gendron ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 2, 1994
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 92-2003

    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,

    v.

    DANIEL A. GENDRON,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    _____________________



    ERRATA SHEET

    Please make the following correction in the opinion in
    the above case released on February 28, 1994:


    Appendix, Page 44, line 4: insert the word "suspected"
    before the word "child".







































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 92-2003

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    DANIEL A. GENDRON,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Jose Antonio Fuste,* U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Pollak,** Senior District Judge.
    _____________________
    ____________________

    Jonathan S. Sales, by Appointment of the Court, with whom The Law
    _________________ _______
    Office of William P. Homans, Jr. was on brief for appellant.
    ________________________________
    Robert E. Richardson with whom A. John Pappalardo, United States
    ____________________ __________________
    Attorney, and James F. Lang, Assistant United States Attorney, were on
    _____________
    brief for appellee.


    ____________________

    February 28, 1994
    ____________________

    _____________________

    * Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation.
    ** Of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.





















    BREYER, Chief Judge. Daniel Gendron ordered and
    ____________

    received a videotape that contained child pornography.

    Though he did not know it, the firm that sent him the tape

    was part of a law enforcement operation designed to catch

    child pornography buyers. A jury subsequently convicted

    Gendron of knowingly receiving child pornography through the

    mails. 18 U.S.C. 2252(a)(2). He now appeals that

    conviction, claiming that the child pornography statute is

    unconstitutional, that the government unlawfully entrapped

    him, and that the government's search warrant (for the tape

    in his house) was constitutionally defective. After

    considering these and other related claims, we affirm the

    conviction.

    I

    The Statute's Constitutionality
    _______________________________

    The child pornography statute reads as follows:

    (a) Any person who --
    ______________
    . . .

    (2) knowingly receives, or distributes,
    __________________
    any visual depiction that has been
    ________________________________________
    mailed, or has been shipped or
    ______
    transported in interstate or foreign
    ______________
    commerce, or which contains materials
    ________
    which have been mailed or so shipped or
    transported, by any means including by
    computer, or knowingly reproduces any
    visual depiction for distribution in
    interstate or foreign commerce by any


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    means including by computer or through
    the mails, if --
    __

    (A) the producing of such visual
    ______________________________
    depiction involves the use of a
    ___________________________________
    minor engaging in sexually explicit
    ___________________________________
    conduct; and
    ____________

    (B) such visual depiction is of
    ______________________________
    such conduct;
    _____________

    . . .

    shall be punished as provided in subsection
    _________________
    (b) . . . .


    18 U.S.C. 2252(a)(2) (emphasis added). Gendron points out

    that the Ninth Circuit has interpreted this statute as

    permitting a conviction of a person who does not know the
    ______________

    child-pornographic nature of the material received, and, for
    ______

    that reason, has found it unconstitutional. See United
    ___ ______

    States v. X-Citement Video, 982 F.2d 1285 (9th Cir. 1992),
    ______ _________________

    petition for cert. filed, 62 U.S.L.W. 3360 (1993). He says
    ________________________

    we should do the same.

    The Ninth Circuit, in United States v. Thomas, 893
    _____________ ______

    F.2d 1066 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 826 (1990),
    _____________

    considered the scope of the statute's word "knowingly." It

    held that "knowingly" modifies only the statute's word

    "receives" (or "reproduces"), not its subclause (A) or (B).

    Consequently, it "does not require" that a defendant "knew

    that the pornography he . . . received involved a minor."

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    Id. at 1070. Two years later, in X-Citement Video, the
    ___ _________________

    Ninth Circuit pointed out that the statute, as so

    interpreted, would permit conviction of a person who

    "knowingly receives" a video, but does not know that the
    ______________

    video contains child pornography. Because that

    interpretation would permit conviction of a person with an

    innocent state of mind, the court found the statute

    unconstitutional. X-Citement Video, 982 F.2d at 1292; see
    _________________ ___

    New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 765 (1982) (child
    _________ ______

    pornography statutes must involve "some element of scienter"

    to pass constitutional muster).

    We do not accept the Ninth Circuit's conclusion

    that the statute is unconstitutional, however, because we do

    not agree with the statutory premise set forth in Thomas.
    ______

    In our view, and in the view of all courts to have

    considered the matter since the X-Citement Video decision,
    _________________

    see United States v. Edwards, No. 92-CR-884, 1993 WL 453461
    ___ ______________ _______

    (N.D. Ill. Nov. 4, 1993); United States v. Long, 831 F.
    _____________ ____

    Supp. 582 (W.D. Ky. 1993); United States v. Kempton, 826 F.
    _____________ _______

    Supp. 386 (D. Kan. 1993); United States v. Prytz, 822 F.
    _____________ _____

    Supp. 311 (D.S.C. 1993), the statute's word "knowingly"

    modifies not only the word "receives," but also the

    statute's description of the "receive[d]" material's


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    pornographic content. That is to say, we understand the

    statute to require for conviction that the government prove

    not only that the defendant "knowingly receive[d]" material

    that he knows contains a "visual depiction" of a person

    "engaging in sexually explicit conduct," but also that the

    defendant knows that the person so depicted is a minor.

    Accord Edwards, 1993 WL 453461 at *5; Long, 831 F. Supp. at
    ______ _______ ____

    586; Kempton, 826 F. Supp. at 389; Prytz, 822 F. Supp. at
    _______ _____

    321.

    We concede that one cannot know automatically,

    simply from the position of the words in the sentence, just
    ______________________________________________________

    which of the words following "knowingly" the word

    "knowingly" is meant to modify. However, that linguistic

    fact simply reflects the more basic fact that statements,

    and parts of statements, quite often derive their meaning

    from context. The sentence "John knows that people speak

    Spanish in Tegucigalpa, which is the capital of Honduras,"

    taken by itself, leaves us uncertain whether or not John

    knows that Tegucigalpa is the capital of Honduras; but, the

    context of the story in which the sentence appears, a

    context that includes other sentences, may clear up our

    uncertainty and leave us with no doubt at all.




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    Similarly, when courts interpret criminal

    statutes, they draw upon context, including the statute's

    purpose and various background legal principles, to

    determine which states of mind accompany which particular

    elements of the offense. Thus, courts normally hold that

    the prosecutor need not prove the defendant's state of mind

    in respect to "jurisdictional facts" (for example, that an

    assault victim was a federal officer, or that stolen checks
    _______

    moved in the mail), whatever the mental state required for
    ___________

    the crime's other elements. E.g., United States v. Feola,
    ____ _____________ _____

    420 U.S. 671, 676-86 (1975); Barnes v. United States, 412
    ______ ______________

    U.S. 837, 847 (1973); United States v. Blassingame, 427 F.2d
    _____________ ___________

    329, 330 (2d Cir. 1970), cert. denied, 402 U.S. 945 (1971);
    ____________

    see generally S. Rep. No. 307, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 72-74
    _____________

    (1981). Context (what ordinarily counts as bad behavior;

    the reason why Congress mentions jurisdictional facts;

    etc.), in addition to the position of words in a sentence,

    helps a court decide how, and when, to interpret statutes as

    incorporating states of mind. See, e.g., Blassingame, 427
    ___ ____ ___________

    F.2d at 330.

    The background context here includes the fact

    that, when a criminal statute is totally silent about state

    of mind (as is commonly the case), courts nonetheless assume


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    that Congress intended to require some kind of guilty

    knowledge with respect to major wrong-creating elements of

    major crimes. Liparota v. United States, 471 U.S. 419, 426
    ________ _____________

    (1985) (courts should not read criminal statutes as

    "requiring no mens rea"); United States v. United States
    ________ _____________ ______________

    Gypsum Co., 438 U.S. 422, 438 (1978) (in criminal statutes,
    __________

    "far more than the simple omission of the appropriate phrase

    from the statutory definition is necessary to justify

    dispensing with an intent requirement"); Morissette v.
    __________

    United States, 342 U.S. 246, 255-56, 263 (1952).
    _____________

    Thus, had the word "knowingly" not appeared at all

    in the child pornography statute, courts (while not

    insisting upon "knowledge" of the "interstate commerce"

    element of the offense, see supra pp. 5-6) would have
    ___ _____

    insisted nonetheless that prosecutors prove a guilty state

    of mind in respect to the nature of the material. For one

    thing, the fact that the material shows a child engaging in

    sexually explicit activity is not a secondary, or

    jurisdictional, aspect of the crime. It is the moral and

    criminal heart of the matter. For another thing, without

    such a requirement, the statute would severely punish purely

    innocent conduct. It would reach, for example, a post

    office employee who "knowingly distributes" mail but knows


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    nothing of its contents, or a film developer who for some

    reason returns an undeveloped roll of film to a customer.

    Congress could not have intended these results. Pp. 8-12,

    infra; see United States v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 580
    _____ ___ ______________ ________

    (1981) (courts must construe statutes to avoid absurd

    results); United States v. Ferryman, 897 F.2d 584, 589 (1st
    _____________ ________

    Cir. 1990) (same). Finally, as X-Citement Video itself
    ________________

    demonstrates, to read this criminal statute as "requiring no

    mens rea" (contrary to Liparota, 471 U.S. at 426) likely
    ________ ________

    makes it unconstitutional. See New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S.
    ___ ________ ______

    747, 765 (1982) (criminalization of child pornography must

    involve "some element of scienter on the part of the

    defendant"); see also Osborne v. Ohio, 495 U.S. 103, 113
    _________ _______ ____

    n.9, 115 (1990) (same; "recklessness" suffices). Such an

    interpretation therefore violates courts' duty to interpret

    federal statutes so that they are consistent with the

    federal Constitution whenever possible. E.g., Edward J.
    ____ _________

    DeBartolo Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr. Trades
    _______________ _________________________________________

    Council, 485 U.S. 568, 575 (1988).
    _______

    If we would interpret a silent statute as imposing
    ______

    a guilty state of mind requirement, how could Congress's

    explicit use of the word "knowingly" eliminate it? It seems

    far more likely that Congress used the word "knowingly" to


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    make clear that it did intend to insist that a defendant
    ___

    know the child-pornographic nature of the material. The

    legislative history confirms this view. For example,

    Senator Roth, the author of the amendment which extended the

    original bill to distribution as well as production, was

    asked whether the amendment meant that

    the distributor or seller must have
    [either] actual knowledge that the
    materials do contain child pornographic
    depictions, or [that] he should have had
    such actual knowledge.

    He responded:

    That is absolutely correct. This
    amendment, limited as it is by the
    phrase "knowingly," insures that only
    ____
    those sellers and distributors who are
    consciously and deliberately engaged in
    ________________________________________
    the marketing of child pornography and
    ____________________________________
    thereby are actively contributing to the
    maintenance of this form of child abuse
    are subject to prosecution under this
    amendment.

    123 Cong. Rec. 33,050 (1977) (emphasis added). The language

    to which Senator Roth referred found its way into the final

    law (with minor stylistic changes). Compare 123 Cong. Rec.
    _______

    33,061 (1977) (Senate bill with Roth amendment) with Pub. L.
    ____

    No. 95-225, 2(a), 92 Stat. 7, 7-8 (1978) (final version).

    Furthermore, the Department of Justice wrote

    Congress a letter in which it told Congress that the



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    use of the word "knowingly" in
    subsection 2252(a)(1) is appropriate to
    make it clear that the bill does not
    ___________________
    apply to . . . innocent transporters who
    ________ _________________________
    have no knowledge of the nature or
    ________________________________________
    character of the material they are
    _____________________________
    transporting.

    S. Rep. No. 438, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 29 (1978), reprinted
    _________

    in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 40, 64 (emphasis added) [hereinafter
    __

    "Report"]. Thus, the Department and the amendment's author

    agreed that the point of the statute's explicit use of the

    word "knowingly" lies in the application of that word to the

    nature of the material's contents, not to the nature of its
    ________

    distribution or receipt.

    It is true that the Department also said, in a

    different context,

    We assume that it was not the intention
    __________________
    of the drafters to require the
    Government to prove that the defendant
    _________ _____________
    knew the child was under age sixteen but
    ____________________________________
    merely to prove that the child was, in
    fact, less than age sixteen.

    Id., 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 64 (emphasis added). In saying
    ___

    this, however, the Department was referring to a different
    _________

    statutory provision -- one that penalized production, not
    __________

    distribution. And Congress responded by dropping the word

    "knowingly" from the production section of the statute, but

    not from the distribution section. H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 811,
    ___

    95th Cong., 2d Sess. 5, reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 69,
    ____________

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    69; compare Pub. L. No. 95-225, 2251(a), 92 Stat. 7, 7
    _______

    (1978) (knowledge not required in production prosecution)

    with id. 2252(a), 92 Stat. at 7-8 (knowledge required in
    ____ ___

    distribution or receipt prosecution).

    Finally, we concede that at one point the

    Department's letter suggests that there be no knowledge

    requirement with respect to age, even for distribution

    prosecutions. It said,

    To clarify the situation, the
    legislative history might reflect that
    the defendant's knowledge of the age of
    ________________________
    the child is not an element of the
    ________________________________
    offense, but that the bill is not
    ___
    intended to apply to innocent
    _______________________
    transportation with no knowledge of the
    ____________________
    nature or character of the material
    _____________________
    involved.

    Report, supra, at 29, 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 64 (emphasis
    _____

    added). We have found nothing in the statute or the

    legislative history, however, to suggest that Congress

    adopted this recommendation. To the contrary, the

    legislative history reveals congressional awareness of the

    important constitutional differences between adult and child

    pornography, the likely constitutional significance of age,

    and the concomitant constitutional need for a guilty state

    of mind requirement with respect to age. See, e.g., 123
    ___ ____

    Cong. Rec. 33,048 (1977) (statement of Sen. Goldwater); id.
    ___


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    at 33,051 (statement of Sen. Hatch). In light of this

    background, we conclude that the statute's word "knowingly"

    applies to age as well as to conduct. That being so, we

    find no constitutional obstacle to application of the

    statute in the case before us. (We note that while this

    opinion was circulating in draft form among the members of

    this panel, another panel of this court reached the same

    conclusion. See United States v. Gifford, No. 93-1645, slip
    ___ _____________ _______

    op. at 20-23 (1st Cir. Feb. __, 1994).)

    II

    Entrapment
    __________

    The evidence in this case demonstrated rather

    convincingly that Gendron ordered and received a videotape

    that he knew contained child pornography. Consequently,

    Gendron's strongest evidence-based claim does not deny his

    having engaged in conduct that violates the statute.

    Rather, he argues that the evidence shows the government

    "entrapped" him into doing so. Gendron notes that the

    entrapment defense has two parts: (1) the government's

    "inducement" of criminal behavior; (2) by a defendant who

    was not "predisposed" to commit the crime. See, e.g.,
    ___ ____

    United States v. Rodriguez, 858 F.2d 809, 812-15 (1st Cir.
    _____________ _________

    1988) (setting forth elements of entrapment and relevant


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    evidentiary burdens). Although the court submitted the

    entrapment issue to the jury, which found against Gendron,

    he argues that the evidence did not support the jury's

    verdict. He says that it did not allow the government to

    rebut his claim of "inducement," nor was it sufficient to

    show (beyond a reasonable doubt) his "predisposition" to

    commit the crime. Consequently, he says, particularly in

    light of a recent Supreme Court case that accepted rather

    similar arguments, Jacobson v. United States, 112 S. Ct.
    ________ _____________

    1535 (1992), the law requires a judgment of acquittal.

    It may help in evaluating Gendron's argument if we

    set forth in simplified terms our understanding of the

    entrapment defense and its elements. (For more

    comprehensive accounts, see, e.g., Rodriguez, supra; S. Rep.
    _________ _____

    No. 307, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 118-30 (1981); LaFave &

    Scott, Substantive Criminal Law 5.2 (1986); Louis M.

    Seidman, The Supreme Court, Entrapment, and Our Criminal
    __________________________________________________

    Justice Dilemma, 1981 Sup. Ct. Rev. 111.) The Supreme Court
    _______________

    has described that defense as resting upon an assumption

    that Congress, when enacting criminal statutes, does not

    intend the statute to apply to violations arising out of (1)

    the government's "abuse" of its crime "detection" and law
    _____

    "enforcement" efforts by "instigati[ng]" the criminal


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    behavior and "lur[ing]" to commit the crime (2) persons who

    are "otherwise innocent." Sorrells v. United States, 287
    __________________ ________ ______________

    U.S. 435, 448 (1932) (emphasis added). Consequently, the

    entrapment doctrine forbids punishment of an "otherwise
    _________

    innocent" person whose "alleged offense" is "the product of
    ________ __________

    the creative activity" of government officials. Id. at 451
    _____________________ ___

    (emphasis added). As the Supreme Court has recently stated,

    When the Government's quest for
    conviction leads to the apprehension of
    an otherwise law-abiding citizen who, if
    _____________________________ __
    left to his own devices, likely would
    _________________________
    have never run afoul of the law, the
    courts should intervene.

    Jacobson, 112 S. Ct. at 1543 (emphasis added). Since the
    ________

    Court has repeatedly expressed concern about both government
    ____

    "abuse" of its enforcement powers (or the like) and the
    ___

    "otherwise law-abiding citizen" (or the like), it is not

    surprising that the defense has two parts, one that focuses

    upon government "inducement" and the other upon the

    defendant's "predisposition."

    In describing "inducement," courts have

    distinguished between proper and improper law enforcement

    activities. It is proper (i.e., not an "inducement") for

    the government to use a "sting," at least where it amounts

    to providing a defendant with an "opportunity" to commit a

    crime. E.g., Sorrells, 287 U.S. at 441; Sherman v. United
    ____ ________ _______ ______

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    States, 356 U.S. 369, 372 (1958); United States v. Coady,
    ______ ______________ _____

    809 F.2d 119, 122 (1st Cir. 1987); United States v. Espinal,
    _____________ _______

    757 F.2d 423, 425 (1st Cir. 1985). Without this kind of law

    enforcement weapon, it would often prove difficult, or

    impossible, to stop certain seriously criminal activity,

    particularly activity involving drugs, or corruption, or

    other crimes in which no direct participant wants the crime

    detected. See Hampton v. United States, 425 U.S. 484, 495
    ___ _______ _____________

    n.7 (1976) (Powell, J., concurring in judgment); United
    ______

    States v. Bradley, 820 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir. 1987).
    ______ _______

    An improper "inducement," however, goes beyond

    providing an ordinary "opportunity to commit a crime."

    Jacobson, 112 S. Ct. at 1541. An "inducement" consists of
    ________

    an "opportunity" plus something else -- typically, excessive
    ____

    pressure by the government upon the defendant or the

    government's taking advantage of an alternative, non-

    criminal type of motive. A "sting" that combines an

    ordinary opportunity with these extra elements runs the risk

    of catching in the law enforcement net not only those who

    might well have committed the crime elsewhere (in the

    absence of the sting), but also those who (in its absence)

    likely would never have done so. Insofar as the net catches




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    the latter, it stretches beyond its basic law enforcement

    purpose.

    Some examples of improper "inducement" may help.

    Courts have found a basis for sending the entrapment issue

    to the jury (or finding entrapment established as a matter

    of law) where government officials: (1) used "intimidation"

    and "threats" against a defendant's family, United States v.
    _____________

    Becerra, 992 F.2d 960, 963 (9th Cir. 1993); (2) called every
    _______

    day, "began threatening" the defendant, and were

    belligerent, United States v. Groll, 992 F.2d 755, 759 (7th
    _____________ _____

    Cir. 1993); (3) engaged in "forceful" solicitation and

    "dogged insistence until [defendant] capitulated,"

    Rodriguez, 858 F.2d at 815; (4) played upon defendant's
    _________

    sympathy for informant's common narcotics experience and

    withdrawal symptoms, Sherman, 356 U.S. at 373; (5) played
    _______

    upon sentiment of "one former war buddy . . . for another"

    to get liquor (during prohibition), Sorrells, 287 U.S. at
    ________

    440-41; (6) used "repeated suggestions" which succeeded only

    when defendant had lost his job and needed money for his

    family's food and rent, United States v. Kessee, 992 F.2d
    ______________ ______

    1001, 1003 (9th Cir. 1993); (7) told defendant that she (the

    agent) was suicidal and in desperate need of money, United
    ______

    States v. Sullivan, 919 F.2d 1403, 1419 & n.21 (10th Cir.
    ______ ________


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    1990). The background and context of each example

    illustrate possible government "overreaching" -- of its

    having acted unfairly by employing

    methods of persuasion or inducement that
    create a substantial risk that such an
    offense will be committed by persons
    other than those who are ready to commit
    it.

    Model Penal Code 2.13(1)(b).

    The second part of the entrapment defense,

    "predisposition," is somewhat more difficult to understand.

    Some Supreme Court Justices (and the Model Penal Code's

    authors) have argued that "predisposition" is not even

    relevant. Rather, they thought that the defense should

    focus only upon government impropriety, preventing law

    enforcement officers from using methods that might lead

    ordinary law-abiding citizens astray, whether or not the

    particular defendant was "predisposed" to commit the crime.

    See, e.g., Model Penal Code 2.13; Sorrells, 287 U.S. at
    ___ ____ ________

    453 (Roberts, J., joined by Brandeis & Stone, JJ.,

    concurring) (arguing for this "objective" view of the

    defense); Sherman, 356 U.S. at 378 (Frankfurter, J., joined
    _______

    by Douglas, Harlan & Brennan, JJ., concurring) (same). The

    Supreme Court itself, however, has rejected this view. It

    saw in the entrapment defense not so much a sanction used to


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    control police conduct, but rather a protection of the

    ordinary law-abiding citizen against government

    overreaching. Consequently, it saw no need to permit a

    defendant to take advantage of that defense unless he

    himself was such a citizen. See, e.g., Sorrells, 287 U.S.
    ___ ____ ________

    at 448; Sherman, 356 U.S. at 376-77; United States v.
    _______ ______________

    Russell, 411 U.S. 423, 433-35 (1973). The upshot is that we
    _______

    must find out just who that "innocent person" is. Who is

    the "otherwise law-abiding citizen" who would not
    _________

    "otherwise" have committed the crime?

    The question's difficulty lies in the word

    "otherwise." That word requires us to abstract from present

    circumstances. We cannot simply ask whether, without the

    government's present activity, the defendant would likely

    have committed the crime when he did. After all, without
    ____

    the government's having presented that opportunity, the
    ____

    defendant, no matter how "predisposed," would likely not

    have acted then. Nor can we simply ask whether the
    ____

    defendant would have acted similarly at some other time had
    ___

    he faced similar circumstances, since his present behavior
    _______________________________

    virtually compels an affirmative answer to the question

    phrased in this way.




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    The right way to ask the question, it seems to us,

    is to abstract from -- to assume away -- the present

    circumstances insofar as they reveal government
    ___________________________________________

    overreaching. That is to say, we should ask how the
    ____________

    defendant likely would have reacted to an ordinary
    ________

    opportunity to commit the crime. See Jacobson, 112 S. Ct.
    ___ ________

    at 1540 n.2. By using the word "ordinary," we mean an

    opportunity that lacked those special features of the

    government's conduct that made of it an "inducement," or an

    "overreaching." Was the defendant "predisposed" to respond

    affirmatively to a proper, not to an improper, lure?
    ______ ________

    This way of looking at the matter seems to flow

    from the way in which the Supreme Court has resolved the

    clash between "objective" and "subjective" views of

    entrapment -- at least if one looks at that resolution as

    simply denying the defense to one whom it is not designed to

    help, namely the kind of defendant who (without a "sting")

    might well be out committing crimes of the sort that a

    "sting" seeks to stop. See Russell, 411 U.S. at 434.
    ___ _______

    Further, our effort to define "predisposition" through

    reference to the nature of the government conduct reflects

    the fact that, despite partial descriptions that focus

    primarily upon the defendant's state of mind, government
    __________


    -20-
    20




















    misconduct lies at the heart of the entrapment defense.

    Were that not so -- were the issue simply the defendant's

    state of mind -- the law would permit an innocent minded

    defendant to raise an entrapment claim when a private person
    _______

    "induced" him (through similar "overreaching" conduct) to

    commit a crime. But the law does not authorize the defense

    in those circumstances, however "outrageous" the private

    person's conduct. E.g., Russell, 411 U.S. at 433; United
    ____ _______ ______

    States v. Jones, 950 F.2d 1309 (7th Cir. 1991); United
    ______ _____ ______

    States v. Bradley, 820 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir. 1987); United
    ______ _______ ______

    States v. Emmert, 829 F.2d 805 (9th Cir. 1987); United
    ______ ______ ______

    States v. McLernon, 746 F.2d 1098 (6th Cir. 1984); Whiting
    ______ ________ _______

    v. United States, 321 F.2d 72, 76 (1st Cir. 1963).
    _____________

    Finally, this way of phrasing the question

    prevents one from concluding automatically, simply from the

    fact that the defendant committed the crime, that he was

    "predisposed" to commit it. At the same time, if the answer

    to the question so phrased is affirmative, the defendant

    would seem to be the sort of person (and his conduct in this

    instance is the sort of conduct) that the criminal statute

    intends to punish. He is, in other words, someone who would

    likely commit the crime under the circumstances and for the

    reasons normally associated with that crime, and who


    -21-
    21




















    therefore poses the sort of threat to society that the

    statute seeks to control, and which the government, through

    the "sting," seeks to stop.

    We turn now to Jacobson v. United States, the
    ________ _____________

    recent child pornography case where the Supreme Court found

    entrapment as a matter of law, and upon which Gendron

    heavily relies. Government agents found Jacobson's name on

    a bookstore mailing list that indicated that the store had

    mailed photos of naked children to Jacobson. Government

    agents then sent Jacobson letters from fictitious people and

    organizations, soliciting orders for child pornography. In

    three respects, however, they did more than provide an

    ordinary opportunity to buy child pornography: First, the

    solicitations reflected a psychologically "graduated" set of

    responses to Jacobson's own noncriminal responses, beginning

    with innocent lures and progressing to frank offers. The

    government started with a "sexual attitude questionnaire,"

    which elicited a general interest in "pre-teen sex"; it

    followed with letters containing general, nonexplicit

    references implying a possibility of child pornography; it

    then sent Jacobson more personal correspondence; and,

    finally (but after Jacobson had discontinued the

    correspondence), it sent him child pornography catalogues.


    -22-
    22




















    112 S. Ct. at 1538-39. Second, the government's soliciting

    letters sometimes depicted their senders as "free speech"

    lobbying organizations and fighters for the "right to read

    what we desire"; they asked Jacobson to "fight against

    censorship and the infringement of individual rights." Id.
    ___

    at 1538, 1542. Third, the government's effort to provide an

    "opportunity" to buy child pornography stretched out over

    two and a half years. Taken together, one might find in

    these three sets of circumstances -- the graduated response,

    the long time period, the appeal to a proper (free speech)

    motive -- a substantial risk of inducing an ordinary law-

    abiding person to commit the crime. Indeed, the government

    conceded in Jacobson that its methods amounted, for
    ________

    entrapment purposes, to an improper "inducement." Id. at
    ___

    1540 n.2.

    Jacobson's importance, however, concerns the
    ________

    "predisposition" part of the entrapment defense. The Court

    held that the evidence, as a matter of law, required

    acquittal because a reasonable jury would have had to doubt

    Jacobson's predisposition. The evidence of predisposition

    consisted of two facts: (1) that before the government

    became involved Jacobson was on a private bookstore's

    mailing list for dubious photos; and (2) that he responded


    -23-
    23




















    affirmatively to the government's solicitations. The first

    fact, the Court wrote, showed little about a predisposition

    to act unlawfully because ordering the photos was lawful at
    __

    the time. 112 S. Ct. at 1542. The second, placing orders,

    could not show how Jacobson would have acted had the

    solicitation lacked the three elements we just mentioned,

    namely, the improper appeals to anti-censorship motives, the

    graduated response, and the lengthy time frame. Id. at
    ___

    1542-43. The government therefore failed to show

    "predisposition" (beyond a reasonable doubt). That means

    (as we understand it) that the government's evidence did not

    show how Jacobson would have acted had he been faced with an

    ordinary "opportunity" to commit the crime rather than a

    special "inducement."

    Gendron's case is similar to Jacobson's in two

    respects. The government initially found Gendron's name on

    a "naked children" mailing list, and the government sent him

    child pornography solicitations over a fairly long period of

    time (one of the "sham" companies was also involved in

    Jacobson). There are, however, two critical differences.
    ________

    First, any governmental "overreaching" here was

    less extensive than in Jacobson. The government neither
    ________

    "graduated" its responses (from innocent lure to frank


    -24-
    24




















    offer) nor, with one exception, did it appeal to any motive

    other than the desire to see child pornography. The

    exception consists of one solicitation (also present in

    Jacobson) in which the government's sham company referred to
    ________

    "hysterical nonsense" about pornography, and asked why the

    government was "spending millions of dollars to exercise

    international censorship while tons of drugs" enter the

    country "easily." Nonetheless, here the government did not

    disguise itself as a "sexual rights" lobbying organization,

    seeking to lobby Congress to remove restraints and funding

    its efforts through pornographic catalogue sales. Nor did

    the government ask Gendron to commit the crime as a matter

    of principle. See 112 S. Ct. at 1538-39, 1542. Since the
    ___

    "overreaching" here was far less extensive than in Jacobson,
    ________

    there is less reason to believe that government

    "overreaching" (i.e., an improper "inducement") could lead

    an "otherwise innocent" person to commit the crime. See
    ___

    Gifford, No. 93-1645, slip op. at 15-16.
    _______

    Second, the record contains substantial evidence

    of Gendron's state of mind; that evidence permits the

    conclusion that (inducement or not) he was "predisposed" to

    commit the crime. In late 1986, when Gendron first received

    a verbally explicit "child pornography" catalogue from the


    -25-
    25




















    government's sham company, he placed an order accompanied by

    a letter in which he said,

    I have finally found the kind of
    educational material I've been dreaming
    of possessing for quite some time. I .
    . . [am so] excited that I have decided
    to order two of your titles . . . .

    The government did not fill the order, but three years later

    Gendron responded to a letter from another sham, a pretend

    foreign company, which spoke of "hard to obtain erotica."

    He wrote,

    I am very interested in the other part
    of your services that are very difficult
    to obtain in my country. . . . I am
    becoming very bored with adult
    pornography . . . . I like very young
    girls only and color videos. Can you
    help me.

    The sham firm responded with an explicit child pornography

    catalogue, and Gendron ordered several of the titles.

    (Again the government did not fill the order.) A few months

    later the government sent Gendron a third explicit child

    pornography catalogue. Gendron sent back an order and a

    check. Two months later, he wrote again, asking if the firm

    had "forgotten" his order, making clear that he still wanted

    "this type of educational materials," stating, "don't worry,

    I am not connected in any way with law enforcement," and

    adding "Please Hurry." (This time the government filled the


    -26-
    26




















    order with the video that led to this prosecution.) Unlike

    Jacobson's correspondence, Gendron's correspondence reveals

    only a desire to view child pornography; it contains nothing

    like Jacobson's urging of a "counter attack" against those

    "who are determined to curtail our freedoms." 112 S. Ct. at

    1538. (See Appendix for a detailed chronology of the events

    in Gendron's case.)

    This evidence, taken together, reveals a defendant

    who met an initial opportunity to buy child pornography with

    enthusiasm, who responded to each further government

    initiative with a purchase order, and who, unlike Jacobson,

    showed no particular interest in an anti-censorship

    campaign. This evidence, as we have said, permits a jury to

    find (beyond a reasonable doubt) that Gendron would have

    responded affirmatively to the most ordinary of

    opportunities, and, hence, was "predisposed" to commit the

    crime. We therefore find the jury's entrapment decision

    lawful.

    III

    Search and Seizure
    __________________

    Government agents searched Gendron's house, and

    seized the primary piece of evidence (the videotape),




    -27-
    27




















    pursuant to a warrant. That warrant authorized (1) a search

    of

    the residence of Daniel A. Gendron, 105
    Winthrop Street, Rehoboth, Massachusetts
    02769;

    for (2) a "VHS videocassette labeled PTL (1)" and related

    items; (3) "after delivery by mail to and receipt by Daniel
    ________________________________________________

    Gendron" of a specifically described parcel (containing the
    _______

    tape) until the expiration of the warrant (ten days after

    its issuance). Gendron concedes that the warrant meets the

    Constitution's two basic requirements: its issuance was

    supported by "probable cause" to believe that evidence of

    criminal activity would exist in his house after the

    delivery of the tape; and it "particularly describ[es] the

    place to be searched, and the . . . things to be seized."

    U.S. Const. amend. IV. He claims that it is nonetheless

    invalid because it is an "anticipatory warrant" which fails

    adequately to specify the time at which it will take effect.
    ____

    Gendron cites in support a recent case decided by a

    different panel of this court, United States v.
    _______________

    Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d 8 (1st Cir. 1993).
    ____________

    In general, the simple fact that a warrant is

    "anticipatory" -- i.e., that it takes effect, not upon

    issuance, but at a specified future time -- does not


    -28-
    28




















    invalidate a warrant or make it somehow suspect or legally

    disfavored. Warrants often do specify that they will take

    effect upon issuance. But the Constitution imposes no such

    requirement. Rather, it says that a search must not be

    "unreasonable," and that warrants must be supported by

    "probable cause." U.S. Const. amend. IV. There is nothing

    unreasonable about authorizing a search for tomorrow, not

    today, when reliable information indicates that, say, the

    marijuana will reach the house, not now, but then. Nor does

    it seem automatically unreasonable to tie the warrant's

    search authority to the future event that brings with it the

    probable cause (e.g., the time of "delivery of a large brown

    package addressed to X with return address Y").

    Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d at 10-11. In principle, the use of a
    ____________

    "triggering event" can help assure that the search takes

    place only when justified by "probable cause"; and
    ____

    anticipatory warrants may thereby offer greater, not lesser,

    protection against unreasonable invasion of a citizen's

    privacy. As one commentator has put it,

    as a general proposition the facts put
    forward to justify issuance of an
    anticipatory warrant are more likely to
    establish that probable cause will exist
    at the time of the search than the
    typical warrant based solely upon the
    known prior location of the items to be
    searched at the place to be searched.

    -29-
    29




















    2 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure 3.7(c), at 97 (2d

    ed.

    1987). Were "anticipatory warrants" unlawful, law

    enforcement agents would have to wait until the triggering

    event occurred; then, if time did not permit a warrant

    application, they would have to forego a legitimate search,

    or, more likely, simply conduct the search (justified by

    "exigent circumstances") without any warrant at all. See
    ___

    Vale v. Louisiana, 399 U.S. 30, 34-35 (1970); 2 LaFave,
    ____ _________

    supra, 6.5. We are not surprised that courts have found
    _____

    "anticipatory warrants," considered as a class, perfectly

    consistent with the Constitution. E.g., Ricciardelli, 998
    ____ ____________

    F.2d at 10-11; United States v. Garcia, 882 F.2d 699, 703
    _____________ ______

    (2d Cir. 1989); United States v. Goodwin, 854 F.2d 33, 36
    _____________ _______

    (4th Cir. 1988); United States v. Hale, 784 F.2d 1465, 1468-
    _____________ ____

    69 (9th Cir. 1986); People v. Glen, 282 N.E.2d 614, 617
    ______ ____

    (N.Y. 1972).

    Gendron argues, however, that the warrant's

    reference to "delivery by mail to and receipt by Daniel

    Gendron" does not describe with sufficient clarity its

    "triggering event," i.e., the particular time when it will

    take effect. We agree with Gendron that a warrant must

    clearly say when it takes effect. We also agree that a


    -30-
    30




















    warrant that says it takes effect upon the occurrence of a

    future event runs a greater risk of ambiguity than a warrant

    that refers only to a specific day, month, and year (as do

    ordinary search warrants). That is why courts have required

    that the conditions upon which anticipatory warrants become

    effective be "explicit, clear, and narrowly drawn."

    Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d at 12 (quoting Garcia, 882 F.2d at
    ____________ ______

    703-04). That said, however, we do not find any fatal flaw

    in the warrant's description.

    First, the law's requirement with respect to

    specificity of time must be one of reasonable specificity.
    __________

    Glen, 282 N.E.2d at 619 (warrant should require search to be
    ____

    "reasonably contemporaneous" with arrival of contraband); 2

    LaFave, supra, 3.7(c), at 99 & n.103 (citing Glen). One
    _____ ____

    can understand how a specificity requirement in respect to

    time, like those in respect to "place to be searched" or

    "things to be seized," U.S. Const. amend. IV, might limit

    the discretion of law enforcement officers to decide when

    and where and what to search, thereby avoiding the "hated

    general writs of assistance of pre-Revolutionary times,"

    Glen, 282 N.E.2d at 617, and assuring the existence of
    ____

    "probable cause." 2 LaFave, supra, 3.7(c), at 99; id.
    _____ ___

    4.5, at 207; id. 4.6(a), at 236. But we know of no
    ___


    -31-
    31




















    justification for a stricter standard in respect to
    ________

    specificity of time than in respect to the other two

    (constitutionally referenced) search parameters.

    Ricciardelli, while stating that the contraband must be on a
    ____________

    "sure and irreversible course" to the place to be searched,

    998 F.2d at 13, did not purport to set forth any special new
    _______

    rule requiring more specificity where time, rather than,

    say, place, is at issue. To the contrary, Ricciardelli says
    ____________

    that a warrant's restrictions in respect to time and place

    should be "similar." Id. at 12.
    ___

    Second, the law tells us that we are to read

    descriptions in warrants (and in their supporting

    documents), not "hypertechnical[ly]," but in a "commonsense"

    fashion. United States v. Ventresca, 380 U.S. 102, 109
    ______________ _________

    (1965); see also, e.g., United States v. Bianco, 998 F.2d
    ________ ____ _____________ ______

    1112, 1116-17 (2d Cir. 1993); In re Grand Jury Subpoenas,
    ___________________________

    926 F.2d 847, 855 (9th Cir. 1991); United States v. Antone,
    _____________ ______

    753 F.2d 1301, 1307 (5th Cir. 1985); United States v.
    _____________

    Charest, 602 F.2d 1015, 1017 (1st Cir. 1979). Read in a
    _______

    commonsense fashion, the warrant's words seem specific and

    clear. Gendron takes the word "receipt," however, from the

    phrase "delivery by mail to and receipt by Daniel Gendron,"

    and argues that it is fatally ambiguous because it might


    -32-
    32




















    mean "receipt" anywhere, say, downtown or at the Post

    Office. But, as we have pointed out, see supra pp. 5-6,
    ___ _____

    context helps to provide a word's meaning. The context

    includes, at least, the rest of the warrant, which describes

    Gendron's house, makes clear that the object of the search

    is a video that will arrive at that house by mail, and

    mentions "delivery by mail" to that house. Common sense

    suggests that the words "receipt by Daniel Gendron" also

    refer to receipt at that house, and not to receipt downtown

    or at the Post Office, or (to use our own farfetched

    example) in Okinawa.

    We recognize that it is logically possible to read

    the word "receipt" as if it referred to receipt somewhere

    other than at Gendron's house. But that logical fact does

    not make the word any less specific. The logical fact that

    the world undoubtedly contains people named "Daniel Gendron"

    other than the defendant here does not mean that the

    warrant's triggering event, "delivery by mail to and receipt

    by Daniel Gendron," is ambiguous because it does not specify

    that the "Daniel Gendron" to whom it refers is the one

    residing at the address to be searched. Despite the logical

    possibility that the post office might accidentally deliver

    the tape to some other Daniel Gendron, thus apparently


    -33-
    33




















    fulfilling the literal terms of the warrant, the warrant is

    adequately specific as to the person to receive the tape.

    Specificity does not lie in writing words that deny all

    unintended logical possibilities. Rather, it lies in a

    combination of language and context, which together permit

    the communication of clear, simple direction. Any effort to

    negate all unintended logical possibilities through the

    written word alone would produce linguistic complication and

    confusion to the point where a warrant, in practice, would

    fail to give the clear direction that is its very point.

    That is why we must avoid reading a warrant's language

    "hypertechnically." See Ventresca, 380 U.S. at 109.
    ___ _________

    Were it not for Ricciardelli, we would end the
    ____________

    discussion here. We must concede, however, that

    Ricciardelli found unlawfully ambiguous a warrant with
    ____________

    virtually identical language, namely, language that

    triggered the warrant upon

    delivery by mail to and receipt by
    Steven Ricciardelli of the . . . package
    containing the videotape.

    998 F.2d at 9. We find a significant difference, however,

    in the factual context in which the warrant was issued. The

    Ricciardelli panel referred to what it considered a critical
    ____________

    fact:


    -34-
    34




















    the (apparently significant) chance that
    the package would not be delivered to
    Ricciardelli's home at all -- a
    possibility that [the postal inspectors]
    undeniably had envisioned.

    Id. at 17. The opinion also makes clear that the "delivery
    ___

    by mail" was by special delivery with a "return receipt,"

    and that the postal inspectors had "contingency plans" in

    the event that Ricciardelli received the package somewhere

    other than his home. Id. at 9, 17 & n.9. (As it happened,
    ___

    the "letter carrier tried to deliver the package" but

    Ricciardelli was not home, so "the postman left a notice"

    that he could "collect the item at the post office," and

    Ricciardelli, in fact, did pick up the package at the post

    office, not at his home. Id. at 9-10.)
    ___

    In light of these background facts, one can

    understand why the panel might have thought the word

    "receipt," in context, was ambiguous as to where the receipt

    might take place. After all, even the highly specific

    language in this case describing the item to be seized,

    namely "VHS videocassette labeled PTL (1)," could be thought
    _____

    ambiguous if the background of this case had revealed a

    serious possibility of two such items (imagine that Gendron
    ___

    had worked for a firm called "PTL Realty Co." and had taken

    home a series of demonstration videos). This is simply to


    -35-
    35




















    say that background facts can sometimes turn hypothetical

    possibilities, such as receipt in Okinawa or delivery to the

    wrong Daniel Gendron, into practical possibilities that, in

    context, might mean that one reading a warrant in a

    "commonsense" fashion would nonetheless find significant

    ambiguity.

    Here, however, no background fact created

    significant ambiguity. On the contrary, the postal

    inspector's affidavit specified that the parcel "will be

    placed for routine delivery" to Gendron "through the U.S.

    Postal Service, Rehoboth, MA"; that after the parcel "is

    delivered by mail and taken into the residence," there will
    ____________________________

    be "probable cause to believe" that evidence of criminal

    conduct will be "located" in the house; and that

    surveillance will commence from the time
    the parcel is placed for delivery [at
    the Rehoboth Post Office] and continue
    until the parcel has been delivered to
    105 Winthrop St., Rehoboth, MA,

    with probable cause to search arising only "after the parcel
    ____

    has entered the premises" (emphasis added). Moreover, at
    ____________________

    trial, the postal inspector testified that

    if Mr. Gendron was in Florida, we aren't
    entitled to search his house or his
    parents' house. Once it was delivered
    into the house, then the search warrant
    ______________
    became effective.


    -36-
    36




















    He added that the house was under surveillance because

    it was important to us that if that
    piece didn't get delivered, you don't
    execute the search warrant.

    Tr. at 115-16 (emphasis added). Consequently, unlike

    Ricciardelli, nothing in the record here suggests a
    ____________

    background in which the warrant's words, adequately specific

    in the context of the warrant, could, as a practical matter,

    convey a different meaning.

    For these reasons, we distinguish Ricciardelli and
    ____________

    find that it does not control the outcome here. To make

    certain that our reading of the case is correct, however, we

    have circulated a draft of this opinion to the entire court.

    The concurring judge in Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d at 17
    ____________

    (Torruella, J., concurring) believes that his views there

    would require a holding in Gendron's favor here. But, a

    majority of the court agrees with our reading of

    Ricciardelli which distinguishes that case from this one.
    ____________

    See, e.g., United States v. Rivera, 994 F.2d 942, 950-51
    ___ ____ ______________ ______

    (1st Cir. 1993). We therefore do not accept Gendron's

    Fourth Amendment claim.

    IV

    Other Arguments
    _______________




    -37-
    37




















    Gendron makes three further arguments, none of

    which requires extended discussion.

    1. Jury Instruction. Gendron argues that the
    ________________

    trial court should have specifically instructed the jury

    that it must find he knew the person depicted on the tape

    was under the age of 18. Gendron did not ask for this

    charge, nor did he object to the instruction the judge gave,

    which required the jury to find that he "knew the character
    __________________

    and nature of the material." Nonetheless, he says that the
    ___________________________

    judge's "error" was "plain." Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b); see
    ___

    generally Arrieta-Agressot v. United States, 3 F.3d 525, 528
    _________ ________________ _____________

    (1st Cir. 1993). In context, however, we believe the charge

    the judge gave made the point that Gendron now makes. See
    ___

    Estelle v. McGuire, 112 S.Ct. 475, 482 & n.4 (1991) (in
    _______ _______

    evaluating a jury charge, court should ask "'whether there

    is a reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the

    challenged instruction in a way' that violates the

    Constitution," in light of "the context of the instructions

    as a whole and the trial record") (quoting Boyde v.
    _____

    California, 494 U.S. 370, 380 (1990)). The jury was fully
    __________

    aware that the issue was child pornography. The remainder
    _____

    of the charge referred frequently to children. (Indeed, the

    film depicted a nine year old child.) Thus, in all


    -38-
    38




















    likelihood, it understood the words "character and nature"

    to encompass age as well as explicit sexual acts. Since

    Gendron asked for no more and we can find no significant

    likelihood of prejudice, there is no plain error. Arrieta-
    ________

    Agressot, 3 F.3d at 528.
    ________

    2. Closing Statement. Gendron points to two
    __________________

    statements in the prosecutor's closing argument that, he

    says, are factually erroneous and significantly prejudicial.

    In one instance, the prosecutor described the item that

    Gendron had ordered from the private mail order catalogue

    (sometime before 1985) as follows:

    I think the title of it was Nancy.
    Nancy is described as 13, and her
    friends from No. 6, and No. 6 is
    prepubescence. Two pretty prepubescents
    are taught how to become geishas. This
    10 year old, Nancy, and her friends, a
    10 year old having sex with a 12 year
    old a delicate blond at 12, having sex
    with her playmate, 7, hide and seek,
    combat, rock. What is his interest in
    this, ladies and gentlemen? Children.
    Female children.

    In fact, the record contains the relevant catalogue
    descriptions, which read as follows:

    E-2 NANCY: 13, and her friends from #6
    _________
    THROB. An impish 10 year-old, a
    delicate blonde of 12, and a fetching 10
    with her playmate of 7 hide-and-seek,
    tumble, and romp.

    J-6 KIMONO I: Two pretty pubescents are
    ____________
    taught how to become geishas. From full

    -39-
    39




















    costume and make-up to nudity. Some
    censoring.

    Gendron's argument centers on the absence of the phrase

    "having sex" in the actual descriptions.

    In the other instance, the prosecutor described

    the pornographic tape that the government sent Gendron as

    containing

    explicit depictions of a 9 to 11 year
    old girl being raped, being sexually
    abused, by teenage boys and an adult
    male.

    In fact, the tape does not contain depictions of forcible

    rape (although, as the government points out, its depictions

    of a child engaging in sex amount to "statutory rape").

    We agree with Gendron that the prosecutor's

    statements were wrong and that she should not have made

    them. We cannot agree, however, that they entitle Gendron

    to a new trial. That is because Gendron did not object to

    the statements at the time. Had he done so, we are certain

    that the district court would have ordered a correction, and

    a correction would have cured any harm by pointing out the

    facts. In the absence of an objection, however, we will

    normally not order a new trial unless there is a

    "substantial chance that absent the error the jury would

    have acquitted," or, for some other reason, we fear a


    -40-
    40




















    "miscarriage of justice." United States v. Young, 470 U.S.
    _____________ _____

    1, 15 (1985); Arrieta-Agressot, 3 F.3d at 528. We see no
    ________________

    such miscarriage, nor any significant likelihood of

    acquittal, here.

    The evidence in this case was strong, perhaps

    overwhelming. The jury saw portions of the tape, which

    portrays a nine year old girl engaging in sexually explicit

    activities with teenage and adult men. Gendron says nothing

    to suggest that the tape leaves any doubt about the unlawful

    nature of its contents. Thus, in this particular case, we

    do not think the single use of the word "rape," forceful as

    it is, could have had any significant prejudicial impact on

    the jury beyond the impact of the tape itself. The question

    of the videotape descriptions, because of their relevance to

    the "predisposition" element of Gendron's entrapment

    defense, is a little closer. But, as we have described,

    supra pp. 24-26, the evidence of predisposition was very
    _____

    strong. We do not believe the misdescription of the

    original mail order would likely have had any practical

    effect on the jury's "no entrapment" finding, particularly

    because the correct description was admitted into evidence

    and available to the jury. In light of the strength of the

    government's case ("an important factor in considering the


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    likely effect of borderline rhetoric," United States v.
    ______________

    Mejia-Lozano, 829 F.2d 268, 274 (1st Cir. 1987)), whether we
    ____________

    consider the two misstatements separately or together, the

    "error" they reflect is not "plain."

    3. Other Erotica. Gendron argues that the court
    _____________

    erred in allowing, as evidence of "predisposition," various

    "child erotic" (but not illegal) items seized at his home.

    He does not seriously argue, however, that the items were

    not relevant. See Jacobson, 112 S. Ct. at 1542 (stating
    ________ ___ ________

    that similar material "by itself" was not sufficient to show

    predisposition). Rather, he says its usefulness was

    outweighed by its tendency to prejudice the jury. Fed. R.

    Evid. 403. The balancing at issue, however, is for the

    district court, not this court. United States v. Williams,
    _____________ ________

    985 F.2d 634, 637 (1st Cir. 1993). The court might

    reasonably have concluded, in light of the nature of the

    basic evidence in the case (the videotape itself), that the

    nature of the additional child-erotic material made no

    significant prejudicial difference. We find no abuse of

    discretion in this determination.

    Gendron's additional arguments are without merit.

    For the above reasons, the judgment of the

    district court is


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    Affirmed.
    ________














































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    POLLAK, District Judge (concurring). I concur in
    ______________

    the judgment of the court and in the court's carefully

    wrought and illuminating opinion. The opinion addresses,

    comprehensively and in painstaking detail, all of the

    substantial questions presented. I would add only a few

    words.

    First. As the court's opinion makes clear,
    _____

    constitutional difficulties of serious dimension would

    attend the child-pornography statute if, in prosecutions for

    knowing receipt of a "visual depiction" of "a minor engaged

    in sexually explicit conduct," 18 U.S.C. 2252(a)(2), the

    phrase "knowingly receives" were not construed as requiring

    the government to establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, that

    the "visual depiction" was one which the defendant knew to

    involve, not just pornography, but child pornography. These
    _____

    potential constitutional difficulties are obviated by the

    court's persuasive demonstration of "congressional awareness

    of the important constitutional differences between adult

    and child pornography," with the result that, as the court

    concludes, the proper reading of what Congress wrote is

    "that the statute's word 'knowingly' applies to age as well

    as conduct."




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    In the case at bar, appellant Gendron contends

    that the pertinent aspect of the charge given by the trial

    court -- namely that the government was required to prove

    that Gendron "knew the character and nature of the material"

    -- was deficient in that it did not say expressly that the

    government had to have proved that Gendron knew that one of

    the actors depicted in the videotape was a minor. But, as

    the court notes, Gendron did not request such an

    instruction. Moreover, as the court shows, it is highly

    unlikely that the jury could have failed to understand that

    the central focus of the charge was that Gendron was eager

    to acquire, and through the government's good offices

    ultimately did acquire, a videotape depicting child
    _____

    pornography. That is to say, in the case at bar the fact

    that the trial court did not give the more particularized

    charge that appellant did not request cannot realistically

    be supposed to have affected the jury's deliberations in a

    fashion detrimental to appellant. In future trials under

    this statute, defendants will presumably request, and trial

    courts will surely give, a more particularized statement of

    what "knowingly" comprehends.

    Second. The fact that the methods pursued by
    ______

    government agents to offer Gendron a tempting opportunity to


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    commit a crime were not only successful but have been found

    by this court (correctly, in my view) not to have been

    unlawful -- i.e., not to have crossed the line into the

    forbidden realm of entrapment -- does not, in my judgment,

    signify that those methods of enforcing this sort of statute

    are something to be proud of.




































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    APPENDIX

    Chronology of events in the Gendron case:
    ________________________________________

    November, 1984: Government agents discover

    Gendron's name on the mailing list of Milton Midge, a

    suspected child pornography distributor. Midge's records

    indicate that Gendron had ordered a videotape entitled

    "Nancy," whose description reads: "NANCY: 13, and her
    _____

    friends from #6 THROB. An impish 10 year-old, a delicate

    blonde of 12, and a fetching 10 with her playmate of 7 hide-

    and-seek, tumble, and romp."



    Spring, 1986: Post office initiates an operation

    involving the fictitious "Far Eastern Trading Company" and

    sends a flier to Gendron (and others) asking those

    interested in information about Far Eastern's "youthful

    material" to return a coupon with the customer's name,

    address, and a signed affirmation that the customer is not a

    law enforcement officer interested in "entrapping Far

    Eastern Trading Company, its agents or customers."



    October 12, 1986: Gendron fills out the coupon

    and returns it to Far Eastern. In reply, Far Eastern sends

    Gendron a catalogue of materials available for order. Each


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    item's description clearly indicates that it depicts

    sexually explicit activities involving minors.



    December 29, 1986: Gendron sends a handwritten

    letter to Far Eastern ordering two videotapes. The text of

    the letter is:

    FROM 12-29-86
    Mr. Daniel A. Gendron
    [address]

    Hi Peter:
    I'm very happy to know you and very happy to
    know that I have finally found the kind of
    educational material I've been dreaming of
    possessing for quite some time. I'm sorry to say
    I have never had any delightful experiences of
    which I find in your catalogue.
    I was getting very excited just reading your
    material. So excited that I have decided to order
    two of your titles in VHS format, LOLITA'S SEX
    LESSON 119.95 AND CHILDREN SEX ORGY 129.95 A TOTAL
    OF 249.90 PLUS COD CHARGES.
    I question why I could only pick two titles.
    Also the LOVELY TEENS TITLES had no prices listed.
    Do you have any specials on buying in larger
    quantities of VHS tapes. I would also like to
    know more about whether you have color tapes with
    sound and how many minutes long are they. Thank
    you.
    /s/ Daniel Gendron



    The government did not fill the order.



    April, 1988: Gendron's name is found on the

    mailinglist of N.M.P.C., a pornography distributor in Miami.

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    October, 1989: A new government sham company,

    "Artistes Internationale," sends a flier to Gendron (and

    others from the N.M.P.C. mailing list) indicating that it

    carried "extremely hard to obtain erotica," but not

    specifically mentioning child pornography. The flier asked

    those interested in more information to reply by letter.



    October 16, 1989: Gendron sends a letter to

    Artistes requesting information about child pornography.

    The text of the letter is:

    Daniel A. Gendron 10/16/89
    [address]

    Gentlemen
    I am a customer of N.M.P.C. 6883 Bird Rd. #
    102 Miami, Florida 33155 who has stated that they
    have contracted part of you [sic] services that
    they can handle in the U.S.A. Well like many
    others like me I am very interested in the other
    part of your services that are very diffcult [sic]
    to obtain in my country.
    I am becoming very board [sic] with adult
    pornograpy [sic] and have always been interested
    in owning something different if you know what I
    mean. I am single 41 years of age with low income
    as a janitor. I like very young girls only and
    color videos. Can you help me. Thank you

    /s/ Daniel Gendron

    In reply, Artistes sends Gendron a catalogue. Each item's

    description clearly indicates that it portrays minors in

    sexually explicit activities.


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    December 18, 1989: Gendron submits an order to

    Artistes for four child-pornographic videotapes, along with

    a notation reading "Please send more order forms and

    materials," and a Christmas card. The order was not filled.



    March 17, 1990: Gendron places an order with a

    third sham company, "Can American," for two videotapes whose

    descriptions clearly indicate their child-pornographic

    content.



    May 4, 1990: Gendron writes a letter to Can

    American complaining about the delay in filling his order.

    The text of the letter is:

    Gentlemen:
    Have you forgotten my order of March 17th.
    It is now May 4, 1990. I sent you a good check
    for 149.90 to pay for one tape PTL(1) and one mag
    LVM(2).
    Sufficient time for a check to clear is two
    weeks. It has been 7 weeks. If you cannot
    deliver as promised then cancel my order and
    return my check or if you have already cashed it
    send me a refund. Please don't force me to take
    other action to get my money back. Don't worry, I
    am not connected in any way with law enforcement.
    This is the first time I have ever sought to
    obtain this type of educational materials [sic].
    I wanted it for my small library of video
    collections. Please Hurry.
    /s/ Dan Gendron




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    May 16, 1990: Law enforcement officers obtain an

    anticipatory search warrant from U.S. Magistrate Joyce

    London Alexander, which authorizes a search of Gendron's

    house after the Can American tape is delivered to him.



    May 18, 1990: The post office delivers the tape

    to Gendron. Shortly thereafter, law enforcement officers

    execute the search warrant and search Gendron's house,

    seizing the Can American tape and various related items.






























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