United States v. Carroll ( 1997 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion








    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________


    No. 96-1709


    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    CHRISTOPHER B. CARROLL,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    _________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

    [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________

    _________________________

    M. Kristin Spath, Assistant Federal Defender, Federal ___________________
    Defender Office, on brief for appellant.
    Paul M. Gagnon, United States Attorney, and Jean B. Weld, _______________ ____________
    Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.

    _________________________

    February 3, 1997

    _________________________

















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. In this case a jury convicted SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

    defendant-appellant Christopher B. Carroll of violating a federal

    child pornography statute. Following the imposition of sentence,

    Carroll appeals. The key question involves an elusive comma.

    Having found the comma, we affirm.

    I. I. __

    Background Background __________

    In the summer of 1995, the appellant separated from his

    wife, Tammy. While sorting out her husband's personal effects,

    Tammy discovered two rolls of undeveloped film. The film

    contained 46 photographs of the appellant's adolescent niece,

    Brittany.1 Many of these photographs depicted Brittany in

    various states of undress, wearing her mother's lingerie, holding

    sex toys and inserting them in body cavities, and posing

    suggestively. After an investigation spearheaded by the Federal

    Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the government concluded that the

    appellant took these photographs on January 8, 1995 (when

    Brittany was 13 years of age). Carroll's indictment, trial,

    conviction, and sentencing followed.

    II. II. ___

    Analysis Analysis ________

    In this venue, the appellant advances two assignments

    of error. We discuss them in sequence.


    ____________________

    1Brittany is a pseudonym which we employ in compliance with
    the confidentiality requirements of 18 U.S.C. 3509(d)(1)
    (1994).

    2












    A. A. __

    Sufficiency of the Evidence Sufficiency of the Evidence ___________________________

    The statute of conviction provides in relevant part:

    Any person who [1] employs, uses,
    persuades, induces, entices, or coerces any
    minor to engage in, or [2] who has a minor
    assist any other person to engage in, or [3]
    who transports any minor in interstate or
    foreign commerce, or in any Territory or
    Possession of the United States, with the
    intent that such minor engage in[,] any
    sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of
    producing any visual depiction of such
    conduct shall be punished as provided [by
    law] if such person knows or has reason to
    know that such visual depiction will be
    transported in interstate or foreign commerce
    or mailed, or if such visual depiction has
    actually been transported in interstate or
    foreign commerce or mailed.

    18 U.S.C. 2251(a)(1994) (arabic numerals supplied; propriety of

    including bracketed comma to be discussed infra). In this _____

    instance the government accused Carroll, under the first

    statutory category, of using or persuading Brittany to

    participate in making sexually explicit depictions. The judge

    instructed the jurors that, in order to convict, they must find

    that the government proved three elements beyond a reasonable

    doubt: (1) that the defendant "knowingly used or persuaded [the

    minor] to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of

    producing a visual depiction of that conduct"; (2) that "at the

    time such conduct was engaged in, the defendant knew that [the

    minor] was under the age of eighteen years"; and (3) that the

    defendant "knew or had reason to know that such visual depiction

    would be transported in interstate commerce." The appellant


    3












    claims that the government did not prove the last of these

    elements and that the court therefore erred in denying his motion

    for judgment of acquittal.

    A trial court must enter a judgment of acquittal in a

    criminal case if "the evidence is insufficient to sustain a

    conviction." Fed. R. Crim. P. 29(a). We afford de novo review

    to Rule 29 determinations, see United States v. Olbres, 61 F.3d ___ _____________ ______

    967, 970 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 522 (1995), _____ ______

    employing a familiar mantra: "If the evidence presented, taken

    in the light most flattering to the prosecution, together with

    all reasonable inferences favorable to it, permits a rational

    jury to find each essential element of the crime charged beyond a

    reasonable doubt, then the evidence is legally sufficient." Id. ___

    In conducting this tamisage, we consider all the evidence, direct

    and circumstantial, and resolve all evidentiary conflicts in

    favor of the verdict. See United States v. Amparo, 961 F.2d 288, ___ _____________ ______

    290 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 878 (1992). Under this _____ ______

    formula, the evidence before us suffices to sustain a finding

    that the appellant intended to transport the pornographic

    depictions in interstate commerce (and therefore knew that they

    would be so transported).

    The government sought to satisfy the interstate

    commerce element here in two ways, both featuring Brittany's

    testimony. One approach involved the intended use of the

    sexually explicit photographs. According to Brittany, the

    appellant discussed with her his plan to scan the images into a


    4












    friend's computer and distribute them on the Internet. This

    testimony, if believed, proved the government's point.

    Transmission of photographs by means of the Internet is

    tantamount to moving photographs across state lines and thus

    constitutes transportation in interstate commerce. See United ___ ______

    States v. Thomas, 74 F.3d 701, 706-07 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, ______ ______ _____ ______

    117 S. Ct. 74 (1996); United States v. Maxwell, 42 M.J. 568, 580 _____________ _______

    (U.S.A.F.C.A. 1995). And here, since the photographs were taken

    in New Hampshire but the computer that Carroll allegedly planned

    to use was located in Massachusetts, interstate transportation

    perforce would have occurred when the appellant carried the

    fruits of his labor across the New Hampshire border into

    Massachusetts.

    The government's second approach involved the

    anticipated processing of the photographs. Brittany testified

    without contradiction that Carroll told her he was going to take

    the film to Massachusetts to be developed. If believed, this

    testimony, in and of itself, would forge the requisite interstate

    link. See 18 U.S.C. 10 (1994) (defining "interstate commerce" ___

    for purposes of Title 18); cf. Rodriguez v. Clark Color Labs., ___ _________ _________________

    921 F.2d 347, 349 (1st Cir. 1990) (indicating in dictum that

    knowing mailing of undeveloped negatives across state lines

    satisfies interstate commerce element under child pornography

    statutes).

    The appellant mounts a ferocious attack on the

    credibility of Brittany's testimony. He notes, among other


    5












    things, that she did not mention the Internet connection when she

    first testified; that, on cross-examination, she originally said

    that her grandmother had told her that Carroll wanted to place

    her pictures on the Internet; and that she changed her story on

    redirect examination, asserting for the first time that the

    appellant had mentioned the Internet to her. He also assails

    Brittany's account of his supposed plan for developing the

    prints, stressing that she did not make this revelation until

    shortly before the trial.

    For purposes of Rule 29, the government's proof passes

    muster. The appellant's criticisms of Brittany's testimony go to

    the weight of the evidence, not to its sufficiency, and therefore

    were properly left to the jury. Some degree of inconsistency is

    not surprising when a minor testifies about traumatic events

    instigated by a close relative. Here, moreover, the

    inconsistencies came in response to a series of leading questions

    by defense counsel; on redirect, after refreshing her

    recollection by perusing reports of interviews she had given to

    an FBI agent, Brittany's memory cleared. In these circumstances,

    a fair-minded jury could easily believe that her refreshed

    recollection represented an accurate account of the relevant

    events and that Carroll took the photographs with the intention

    either to have them developed out of state, or to put them on the

    Internet, or both.

    This conclusion is reinforced by other evidence that

    supports Brittany's testimony on redirect examination. The


    6












    record suggests, for example, that the appellant and his friend

    (Doug Allen) had in the past attempted to scan pornographic

    images into Allen's computer, thus permitting the jury to infer

    that the two men knew how to circulate photographs on the

    Internet and might want to put Brittany's likenesses to similar

    use. Allen also testified that he and Carroll intended to form

    an on-line dating service utilizing both pictures and personal

    messages. Carroll apparently knew about a similar service being

    offered in New Hampshire which depicted topless females with

    black bars across their faces to conceal their identities. Given

    this background, Brittany's testimony that Carroll told her that

    he would put her picture on the Internet with a little black

    strip across her eyes could have suggested to a thoughtful jury

    that he intended to use the sexually explicit photographs to

    promote his embryonic dating service.

    We have said enough on this score. In the final

    analysis, the appellant's argument boils down to a plaint that

    the jury misjudged Brittany's veracity. Credibility

    determinations are, of course, squarely within the jury's domain.

    See United States v. Romero, 32 F.3d 641, 646 (1st Cir. 1994); ___ _____________ ______

    United States v. O'Brien, 14 F.3d 703, 706-07 (1st Cir. 1994). ______________ _______

    Eyewitness testimony is rarely seamless, and appellate courts

    ordinarily should decline invitations to second-guess a jury's

    considered decision about whether to credit particular testimony

    despite the fact that it contains inconsistencies. This case

    falls comfortably within the sweep of that generality. Resolving


    7












    evidentiary conflicts and drawing reasonable inferences in the

    government's favor, as the Rule 29 standard requires, see Olbres, ___ ______

    61 F.3d at 970, the evidence is adequate to support a finding

    that the appellant intended to transport the sexually explicit

    photographs in interstate commerce. No more is exigible.



    B. B. __

    The Judge's Charge The Judge's Charge __________________

    The appellant's next point is grammatically intriguing

    but legally impuissant. He posits that a trial judge has an

    obligation to instruct the jury on every element of the offense

    of conviction, that flouting this obligation constitutes

    reversible error, and that such a lapse occurred here. In the

    circumstances of this case, we agree with the first two-thirds of

    the appellant's triangular hypothesis, see, e.g., United States ___ ____ _____________

    v. DiRico, 78 F.3d 732, 735 (1st Cir. 1996), but we take issue ______

    with his conclusion that the charge omitted necessary

    information.

    In enumerating the elements of the offense, the judge

    refused to include a requirement that the government prove the

    defendant knowingly persuaded the minor to engage in sexually

    explicit conduct "with the intent that such minor engage in" such

    conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction thereof.

    It is to this omission that the appellant assigns error,

    asserting that section 2251(a) must be read so that the phrase

    quoted above modifies all three types of actions criminalized


    8












    under the statute, namely, (1) employing, using, persuading,

    inducing, enticing, or coercing a minor to engage in sexually

    explicit conduct (the "use" category, under which Carroll was

    charged); (2) having a minor assist another person to engage in

    such conduct (the "assistance" category); and (3) transporting a

    minor in interstate or foreign commerce (the "transportation"

    category). This assertion depends almost entirely on the absence

    of punctuation immediately following the quoted phrase; it is

    only the putative lack of a comma that makes arguable the theory

    that the phrase modifies the trailing phrase "any sexually

    explicit conduct" and, thus, applies to all three categories of

    proscribed behavior.2

    For reasons that will appear, the district court bought

    into the proposition that no comma lurked in the critical place

    ____________________

    2A graphic iteration of a portion of the statute may help to
    illustrate the point:

    Any person [1] who employs, uses,
    persuades, induces, entices, or coerces any
    minor to engage in, or [2] who has a minor
    assist any other person to engage in, or [3]
    who transports any minor in interstate or
    foreign commerce, or in any Territory or
    Possession of the United States, with the ________
    intent that such minor engage in[,] any any _____________________________________
    sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of
    producing any visual depiction of such producing any visual depiction of such
    conduct. . . . conduct. . . .

    18 U.S.C. 2251(a) (arabic numerals, underscoring, and bold
    facing supplied). The issue is whether the underscored phrase
    should be read as accompanying the passage in bold face, or
    whether it should be considered a part of what we have termed the
    third category of proscribed conduct (and, thus, does not modify
    the passage in bold face). This depends, in part, on whether the
    text contains the bracketed comma.

    9












    and acted upon this perception; it assumed that Congress

    inadvertently omitted the comma, read the statute as if it were

    there, and confined the quoted phrase to the third category of

    proscribed conduct (transportation).3 We review the district

    court's solution to this enigma de novo. See Strickland v. ___ __________

    Commissioner, Me. Dep't of Human Servs., 96 F.3d 542, 545 (1st _________________________________________

    Cir. 1996) (holding that questions of statutory construction

    receive nondeferential review).

    Insofar as we can tell, the judge's underlying premise

    that the statute did not contain a comma in the critical place

    arose because both parties conceded as much below (as they do

    on appeal); other federal courts had accepted the premise as

    true, see, e.g., United States v. Thomas, 893 F.2d 1066, 1068 ___ ____ _____________ ______

    (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 826 (1990); and the statute as _____ ______

    printed in updates of the United States Code Annotated, e.g., ____

    West Supp. 1996, and as rendered in at least one computerized

    legal research data base, omitted the comma. But appearances

    often are deceiving. See Aesop, The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing ___ ______________________________

    (circa 550 B.C.). In point of fact, the authoritative version of

    the statute does contain the elusive comma. Congress added the

    language in question by enacting Pub. L. 99-628, 3, 100 Stat.

    3510 (1986). The text of the amendment, as disclosed in the

    ____________________

    3The court impliedly premised this interpretive rationale on
    its power to "disregard the punctuation [contained in a statute],
    or repunctuate, if need be, [in order] to render the true meaning
    of the statute." United States Nat'l Bank v. Independent Ins. _________________________ ________________
    Agents of Am., Inc., 508 U.S. 439, 462 (1993) (citations ______________________
    omitted).

    10












    Statutes at Large, shows a comma after "engage in." Conflicts

    between the text of a statute as it appears in the Statutes at

    Large, on one hand, and in usually reliable but unofficial

    sources such as the United States Code Annotated, on the other

    hand, are rare, but, when they occur, the rendition of the law

    contained in the Statutes at Large controls.4 See United States ___ _____________

    Nat'l Bank v. Independent Ins. Agents of Am., Inc., 508 U.S. 439, __________ ____________________________________

    448 (1993).

    Having made the determination that section 2251(a)

    actually contains (and thus is to be read with) a comma after the

    phrase "with the intent that such minor engage in," we readily

    conclude that the district judge described the essential elements

    of the offense correctly in his jury instructions. With the

    comma in place, we regard the proper interpretation of the

    statute as self-evident. Wherever possible, statutes should be

    construed in a commonsense manner, O'Connell v. Shalala, 79 F.3d _________ _______

    170, 176 (1st Cir. 1996), honoring plain meaning, In re Thinking ______________

    Machines Corp., 67 F.3d 1021, 1024-25 (1st Cir. 1995), and _______________

    avoiding absurd or counterintuitive results, Sullivan v. CIA, 992 ________ ___

    F.2d 1249, 1252 (1st Cir. 1993).

    In this instance the phrase in question, read

    naturally, modifies only the transportation category. Any other

    reading would defeat the linguistic parallelism which marks

    section 2251(a) and would result in a curiously lopsided piece of
    ____________________

    4In all events, recent versions of the United States Code
    (as opposed to the United States Code Annotated) include a comma
    at the critical place.

    11












    legislation.5 Here, too, a construction consistent with plain

    meaning comports with the logic of the statute. One who

    persuades a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct, or who

    has a minor assist another person in such conduct, commits an act

    which in and of itself is worthy of criminal sanction. By

    contrast, one who transports a minor across state lines (no more,

    no less) has done nothing inherently wrong unless his intent at

    the time is blameworthy. On that basis, the idea that section

    2251(a) embodies an additional scienter requirement (having an

    intent that the minor thereafter engage in proscribed conduct)

    solely with reference to the transportation category is both

    easily explicable and eminently sensible. Cf. O'Connell, 79 F.3d ___ _________

    at 176 (counselling courts to examine "the statute as a whole,

    giving due weight to design, structure, and purpose as well as to

    aggregate language").

    The history of section 2251(a) supports this

    interpretation. Congress amended the law in 1986 to engraft the

    transportation category (including the disputed phrase) onto

    section 2251(a). Prior to this amendment, the use category, like

    the assistance category, required proof only of the three

    elements that the judge included in his charge. See Pub. L. 95- ___

    225, 2(a), 92 Stat. 7 (1978). To suggest, in the absence of

    any confirmatory legislative history, that the 1986 amendment

    added a new intent element to both the use and assistance
    ____________________

    5As mentioned earlier, the statute criminalizes three
    separate types of conduct, and each category is described in a
    clause ending with the words "engage in."

    12












    categories, instead of merely supplying an additional, self-

    contained category, strains credulity. See generally ___ _________

    Passamaquoddy Tribe v. State of Me., 75 F.3d 784, 788-89 (1st ___________________ _____________

    Cir. 1996) (in interpreting statutes, courts should take into

    account preexisting statutory provisions).

    To recapitulate, we hold that the phrase "with the

    intent that such minor engage in" sexually explicit conduct does

    not apply to the use category of section 2251(a). It follows

    that the trial court's instructions accurately limned the

    essential elements of the offense.

    III. III. ____

    Conclusion Conclusion __________

    We need go no further. Having dispatched the seeming

    grammatical anomaly, no serious question remains. It clearly

    appears that the appellant was fairly tried and lawfully

    convicted. Accordingly, the judgment below must be



    Affirmed. Affirmed. ________


















    13