United States v. Joseph ( 2008 )


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  • 06-5911-cr
    U.S.A.. v. Joseph
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    August Term 2007
    Heard: May 13, 2008                                Decided: September 9, 2008
    Docket No. 06-5911-cr
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    DENNIS JOSEPH,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Before: NEWMAN, WALKER, and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges.
    Appeal from the December 21, 2006, judgment of the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of New York (Richard Owen,
    District Judge), sentencing the defendant to a term of 97 months for
    violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (b).       Defendant contends primarily that the
    jury charge permitted conviction on an invalid alternate basis.
    Conviction vacated and case remanded for a new trial.         Judge
    Walker dissents with a separate opinion.
    Nathaniel Z. Marmur, New York, N.Y. (Paul
    Shechtman, Stillman, Friedman & Shecht-
    man, P.C., New York, N.Y., on the
    brief), for Defendant-Appellant.
    Maria E. Douvas, Asst. U.S. Atty., New
    York, N.Y. (Michael J. Garcia, U.S.
    Atty., Anjan Sahni, Diane Gujarati,
    Asst. U.S. Attys., New York, N.Y., on
    the brief), for Appellee.
    JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
    This criminal appeal primarily concerns a claim that a jury
    charge permitted conviction on an invalid alternate basis. Defendant-
    Appellant Dennis Joseph appeals from the December 21, 2006, judgment
    of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Richard
    Owen, District Judge) sentencing him to 97 months after a jury found
    him guilty of using his computer to send messages on the Internet to
    entice an individual he believed to be an underaged girl to engage in
    unlawful   criminal     sexual    activity,      in   violation    of   
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (b).      On appeal, Joseph contends that he did not receive a fair
    trial for several reasons, including denial of an expert witness,
    denial   of    an   opportunity   to    rebut    prosecution      evidence,   and     an
    erroneous jury charge.      We conclude, primarily because of significant
    error in the jury charge, that a new trial is required.
    Background
    Joseph is 40 years old, married, and has a six-year-old child.
    In August 2005, he was arrested for using the Internet to solicit a
    person he believed to be a minor to engage in sexual activity, in
    violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (b).              After a seven-day trial in April
    2006, a mistrial was declared when the jury was unable to reach a
    verdict.
    -2-
    The evidence at the retrial included the following.                      In July
    2005, Joseph visited an Internet chat room called “I Love Older Men,”
    where he initiated a conversation with an individual with the screen
    name1 “Teen2Hot4U,” who purported to be a 13-year-old girl named
    “Lorie.” “Teen2Hot4U” was in fact Stephanie Good, a 55-year-old woman
    who spends 20 to 50 hours a week surfing the Internet for those she
    believes to be sexual predators and reporting her finds to the FBI.
    See   United       States   v.   Brand,   
    467 F.3d 179
    ,   183   (2d   Cir.    2006)
    (reporting Ms. Good’s Internet chat-room conversations using the
    screen name “Sara”).
    Using the screen name “DSax25” and describing himself as a 40-
    year-old professional musician, Joseph had approximately 50 instant
    message and email chats with Good, almost all of which he initiated.
    Most of the conversations were explicitly sexual and mentioned sexual
    acts that Joseph stated he would perform with “Lorie.”                           In one
    conversation Joseph mentioned he would be interested in meeting
    “Lorie” and asked, “[L]et’s just say...hypothetically.....where would
    1
    “A screen name is an appellation used to identify oneself in a
    chat room or when sending instant messages to another computer user.
    Although      it    can   be   the   user’s   real   name,    it   is   more   often   a
    pseudonym.” United States v. Mitchell, 
    353 F.3d 552
    , 554 n.3 (7th Cir.
    2003).
    -3-
    you want to meet?”      “Lorie” sent Joseph a picture, depicting Good at
    age 13 or 14 years.
    In a subsequent message, “Lorie” referred to her friend “Julie,”
    who was in fact FBI agent Austin Berglas posing as a 13-year-old girl.
    See Brand, 467 F.3d at 183 (reporting Berglas posing as “Julie”).
    Joseph asked for a picture of “Julie” and suggested that “Lorie” give
    “Julie”   his   email   address.   “Lorie”   later   provided   Joseph   with
    “Julie’s” screen name.      Joseph then began exchanging messages with
    “Julie,” describing sexual acts he wanted to perform with her.
    On August 25, 2005, Joseph initiated contact and told “Julie”
    that he wanted to see her and “Lorie.”           On August 30, he again
    contacted her and described sexual activity the two might enjoy. That
    same day he emailed “Julie,” indicating that he planned to be at
    Franklin Street in Manhattan the following day and asked “Julie” to
    let him know if that date worked for her.      The two exchanged various
    emails coordinating the meeting the next day.         On August 31, Joseph
    sent his final message to “Julie,“ and they agreed to meet outside the
    Franklin Street Station Café.      “Julie” asked if he was “really gonna
    be there” because she did not “wanna be standing there waiting,” and
    Joseph replied, “I can’t promise anything cause I’m still nervous and
    I don’t know how I will actually feel when I see you.       Is that Okay?”
    The remainder of the conversation, as reported by Berglas during his
    testimony, was as follows:
    -4-
    [“Julie”]: No.
    [Joseph]: Not okay?
    [“Julie”]: You may not show up?
    [Joseph]: I promise I will show up. I promise.
    [“Julie”]: So what do you mean? You may not like me?
    . . .
    [Joseph]: I just may have a problem because I am so much older
    than you
    [“Julie”]: Oh
    [Joseph]: But I will definitely be there and we can see then.
    Okay?
    Later that morning, Joseph showed up at the café, which was under
    surveillance, and was promptly arrested while looking into the window.
    He was not carrying a condom or a lubricant.   Cf. Brand, 467 F.3d at
    186 (Internet enticement defendant arrested with three condoms in
    glove compartment of his car).
    After his arrest, Joseph was advised of his rights and spoke with
    the arresting agents.   He told Berglas that he came downtown “to meet
    a . . . girl that he had met while chatting on the [I]nternet.”
    Joseph stated that “you really don’t know the actual age of people you
    talk to on the [I]nternet,” but indicated that he believed “Julie” was
    13 years old at the time he showed up at the café. Id.   Joseph stated
    he had no intention of having sex with “Julie” but wanted to warn her
    that “talking to older men on the internet about having sex was
    -5-
    dangerous.”
    The defense sought to portray Joseph as an individual with a
    proclivity for muscular women who never knowingly communicated with a
    minor over the Internet and primarily used the Internet for role-
    playing purposes.          His wife, Yana, testified about Joseph’s interest
    in muscular woman and his Internet addiction to sexual fantasy role-
    play.      On cross-examination, Yana testified that her husband was a
    member of an Internet group called “Muscleteens,” which, according to
    her, solicits pictures of muscular girls between the ages of five and
    twenty.
    Joseph testified on his own behalf.             He explained that “DSax25”
    was “an idealized version of what . . . Dennis Joseph can’t do but can
    on the [I]nternet.”          He testified that the he browsed the Internet
    looking for female bodybuilders.                He introduced 25 profiles of the
    people on his buddy list,2 21 of whom were adult female bodybuilders.
    Joseph      stated    that   when   he    encountered    “Lorie”   in    what   he
    believed was an “adult sex theme[d]” chat-room, he was convinced that
    she   was    an   adult     posing   as   a    teenager.      He   claimed    that    her
    familiarity with sexual terminology convinced him that she was part of
    a “make-believe, pretend world.”               When “Lorie” offered to introduce
    2
    A buddy list is a list of an instant messenger’s “friends,” and
    shows a user which of his buddies are online when he is.
    -6-
    him to “Julie,” he played along.     Joseph believed “Julie” was also a
    sexually experienced adult engaged in role-playing.        Joseph testified
    that his belief was confirmed when “Julie” sent him a picture of
    herself with long nails because he found it difficult to believe that
    someone with long nails would be a gymnast.              The Government had
    earlier presented a witness who testified that, as a teenager, she had
    done gymnastics with long fingernails.
    Joseph also testified that after arranging the meeting with
    “Julie,” he worried that he might have misjudged the situation.
    Julie’s angry tone when he couldn’t “promise anything” made him think
    that she might, in fact, be a teenage girl.       Joseph claimed that he
    thought to himself “what am I going to do if [she] actually is a
    minor” and that he decided that if she was in fact a minor he was
    going to take her into the café, sit down, eat lunch, and explain to
    her that he was pretending because he thought she was an adult and
    that he was way too old to be involved with her.
    On   cross-examination   the   Government   asked    Joseph   about   his
    participation in the “Muscleteens” group, which his wife had mentioned
    during her cross-examination. Joseph admitted joining the site, which
    describes itself as a group encouraging users to post pictures of
    girls “between 5 and 18” showing off their muscles.         He claimed that
    when he joined there was a picture on the front cover of a bodybuilder
    who was 19 or 20, and that he did not recall seeing pictures of
    -7-
    younger girls.    He also stated that the few times he looked at the
    site,   the   pictures   had   changed,    and   that   each   time   they   were
    “predominately 19, 20, 21 and maybe 18-year-old bodybuilders.” Joseph
    claimed that he stopped visiting the site when “it started to change.”
    On rebuttal, the Government called Special Agent Sean Watson of
    the FBI who testified that in June, 2006, shortly before Joseph’s
    trial, Watson had joined the Muscleteens group in an undercover
    capacity and had viewed all of the pictures posted in that group
    before August 31, 2005, the date of Joseph’s arrest.            Over a defense
    objection, the prosecution was permitted to introduce pictures of
    young girls from the group.
    The evidence thus framed for the jury the issue of whether Joseph
    enticed “Julie” to meet with him for the purpose of engaging in
    unlawful sexual conduct with a person he thought was a minor, or
    whether, as he claimed, he was engaged only in role-playing, met her
    to determine her true identity, and had decided not to have any
    involvement with her if she turned out to be a minor.                  By their
    verdict, the jury obviously rejected his defense.
    Discussion
    The Appellant seeks a retrial because of an alleged error in the
    jury charge and several evidentiary rulings claimed to have              denied
    him a fair trial.
    I. Jury charge
    -8-
    Joseph contends that the trial judge committed reversible error
    by giving a jury charge that permitted a conviction on either of two
    bases, one of which is not an offense.      The indictment charged a
    violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (b) by using a facility of interstate
    commerce to “persuade and entice” a person under 18 to engage in
    sexual activity that constitutes a criminal offense.
    The District Judge instructed the jury on each of the three
    elements of the crime: (1) use of a facility or means of interstate
    commerce; (2) use of the Internet to knowingly attempt to persuade or
    entice a person whom the defendant believed to be under 18 years of
    age; and (3) that if sexual activity had occurred, the defendant could
    have been charged with a crime under New York Law.      The Appellant
    challenges the instruction elaborating on the “enticing” element:
    [T]he second element the Government must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt is that the defendant used the [I]nternet
    to knowingly attempt to persuade or entice a person who the
    defendant believed to be under the age of 18 years to engage
    in any sexual activity.
    . . .
    Now, as for the terms “persuading” and “[e]n[t]i[c]ing,” I
    charge you that these words are common usage and should be
    given their common meaning.     Persuade means to move by
    argument or entreaty or expostulation to a belief, position,
    or course of action--wow, that is a mouthful.       The term
    “entice” means to wrongfully solicit, persuade, procure,
    allure, attract, coax, or seduce, or to lure, induce,
    attempt, incite, or persuade a person to do a thing.
    I instruct you, the government does not need to prove that
    the defendant attempted to wholly create desire where such
    -9-
    desire never existed. The government only needs to show,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant attempted to
    convince or influence the person he believed was a 13 year
    old girl to engage in a sexual act with him, or made the
    possibility of a sexual act with him more appealing.
    (emphasis added)
    The     defendant     objected   to    the   italicized   portion   of    the
    “enticing” element at both trials and renews his claim on appeal.3
    3
    The Government contends that Joseph did not object at trial to
    the alternative language, “or made the possibility of a sexual act
    with him more appealing,” and only wanted the language amplified to
    include the words “with him,” which had not been in the proposed
    charge.     We disagree.
    At the charge conference, defense counsel challenged the “more
    appealing” language four times. First, he made clear his objection to
    the “more appealing” language by pointing out that under the charge
    “if he just makes the idea of sex more appealing, he could be
    convicted of a crime which could be just pure cybersex without any
    intent to induce or persuade.              And that is not covered by the
    statute.”     The “more appealing” language, he argued, “covers a wide
    variety of noncriminal conduct.”           Next, when the trial judge read the
    portion of the charge from the prior trial, which included the “more
    appealing”     language,    defense   counsel     repeated   his   objection   and
    -10-
    additionally complained that the language did not require a finding of
    sexual conduct committed with the defendant.               He stated: “That is
    their enticement charge, which, to me, your Honor, covers noncriminal
    conduct and lowers the burden of proof and doesn’t mention anything
    about having sex with him.” (emphasis added) Then, for a third time,
    he argued against the “more appealing” language by stating: “And that
    charge, as it is read right there[,] basically says, if you use a
    computer to have these kind[s] of conversations and you make sex more
    appealing, that is a crime, regardless whether it is with him,
    regardless      of   anything    else.”     (emphasis   added)    By     adding    the
    emphasized words defense counsel made clear that even if the sexual
    conduct   was    stated   to    be   more   appealing   “with    him,”    the     “more
    appealing” language, as he had previously stated, remained unlawful.
    Finally, after the words “with him” were added, defense counsel made
    clear that this addition met one objection but did not meet his more
    basic point that the “more appealing” language provided an alternative
    basis for conviction without proving enticement.                He stated, “[T]hat
    covers that one piece of it.            The other piece is that I think the
    charge, as given, lowers the burden of proof and basically says that
    you don’t have to persuade or entice.”
    The fact that we recite these four instances of objection to the
    -11-
    Where an instruction defining one of two alternative grounds is
    legally erroneous, a court must reverse unless it can determine with
    absolute certainty that the jury based its verdict on the ground on
    which it was correctly instructed. See Griffin v. United States, 
    502 U.S. 46
    , 58-60 (1991); Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 485,
    at 382 n.16 (2000).
    “[A] conviction under § 2422(b) requires a finding only of an
    attempt to entice or an intent to entice, and not an intent to perform
    the sexual act following the persuasion.” Brand, 467 F.3d at 202.
    Most of the jury instruction on the “enticement” element properly
    reflects the required focus on attempting or intending to entice. The
    instruction states that the Government need show only “that the
    defendant attempted to convince or influence the person he believed
    was a 13 year old girl to engage in a sexual act with him[.]”
    However, the alternative basis for conviction in that instruction--”or
    made the possibility of a sexual act with him more appealing”--does
    not reflect the requirement of an intent to entice.        Indeed, by
    providing the “more appealing” formulation as an alternative to the
    erroneous “more appealing” language one at a time does not mean that
    we have viewed them “in isolation,” as our dissenting colleague
    suggests. See dissenting op. at [4].   Indeed, their combined effect
    makes clear the force of defense counsel’s objection.
    -12-
    “convince or influence” language, which had previously been explained
    as   examples    of   “enticing,”   the    challenged   language   permitted
    conviction even if Joseph did not intend to entice “Julie” into
    engaging in a sexual act with him.
    Joseph sought to defend the charge against him by claiming that
    he was only engaging in cybersex conversation (simulating sex via
    sexual communication over the Internet), without any intent to entice
    “Julie” to engage in sexual conduct with him.           He claimed that he
    agreed to meet her only to see if she was an adult role-player or
    really a child, and that, if she turned out to be a child, he would do
    nothing further.      Of course, the jury did not have to credit his
    explanation, and the portions of his conversations that could be
    understood as intended to make the possibility of a sexual act with
    him “more appealing” were evidence supporting an inference that he did
    intend to entice her.     But the offense remains “enticing,” and making
    a sexual act “more appealing” in the absence of an intent to entice is
    not a crime.4     If jurors thought that Joseph only wanted to make
    “Julie” think that sexual conduct with him would be appealing, but did
    not intend to entice her to engage in such conduct with him, they
    would have convicted him for having cybersex conversation, which is
    4
    Cybersex conversation constituting the transfer of “obscene
    matter” via the Internet to a person under 16 might well violate 
    18 U.S.C. § 1470
    , but Joseph was not charged with that offense.
    -13-
    not a crime, but not for violating section 2242(b).
    The risk of an improper conviction based only on the “more
    appealing” formulation was heightened by the Government’s summation.
    First, the prosecutor told the jury that “the defendant wanted Julie
    to think that engaging in a sexual act with him would be appealing and
    enticing.    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a federal crime.”
    Although the word “enticing” was used, it was used to reflect the
    effect on “Julie,” not whether Joseph’s intent was to entice. See
    United   States   v.   Dhingra,   
    371 F.3d 557
    ,   567   (9th   Cir.   2004)
    (emphasizing that focus of section 2422(b) is on the defendant, not
    the victim); United States v. Rashkovski, 
    301 F.3d 1133
    , 1137 (9th
    Cir. 2002) (Under section 2422, “it is the defendant’s intent that
    forms the basis for his criminal liability, not the victims’.”).
    Then the prosecutor went further and invited the jury to rely
    solely on the “more appealing” alternative in the charge.            She told
    the jury: “The crime that he’s been charged with is enticement, that
    he was attempting to persuade or entice a minor into sexual activity.
    As I expect the judge to instruct you, that means the government need
    only show that the defendant attempted to make the possibility of a
    sexual act with him more appealing to someone he thought was a minor.”
    Trial Transcript 1048-49 (emphasis added).        In fact, that was not all
    that the Government needed to show.
    The “more appealing” formulation apparently derives from language
    -14-
    in United States v. Rashkovski, 
    301 F.3d 1133
     (9th Cir. 2002), which
    the Government cited to the District Court in support of its request
    to include this formulation.    In Rashkovski, a defendant convicted of
    enticing women to come to the United States from Russia for the
    purpose of prostitution challenged the sufficiency of the evidence on
    the ground that the women wanted to leave Russia of their own accord.
    See 
    id. at 1136
    .     The Ninth Circuit affirmed the conviction for
    violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (a) because the defendant had offered to
    make and had paid for the women’s travel, and they had accepted his
    offer   and   traveled   with   his   assistance.   See   
    id. at 1137
    .
    “Enticement,” the Court stated, “merely requires that [the defendant]
    have convinced or influenced [the women] to actually undergo the
    journey, or made the possibility more appealing.” 
    Id.
               There is no
    indication that the “more appealing” formulation was included in the
    jury charge at all, much less as an alternative to a required finding
    of enticement.     We agree with the Ninth Circuit that making a
    possibility more appealing can be evidence of enticement, but we do
    not read that Court’s opinion as a ruling that doing so can be a basis
    for conviction under either subsection of section 2422 in the absence
    of enticement. See United States v. Tykarsky, 
    446 F.3d 458
    , 473 (3d
    Cir. 2006) (“‘persuade,’ ‘induce,’ ‘entice,” and ‘coerce’ . . . have
    a plain and ordinary meaning that does not need further technical
    explanation”); United States v. Kaye, 
    451 F. Supp. 775
    , 783 (E.D. Va.
    -15-
    2006) (convicting defendant of violating section 2422(b) based on
    plain meaning of “entice” without regard to the “more appealing”
    formulation from Rashkovski).
    Because the jury charge permitted conviction on an invalid basis
    and because the risk that the jury grounded its verdict on that basis
    is not insubstantial, the defendant is entitled to a new trial.5
    5
    Our dissenting colleague, believing the error not to have been
    preserved, declines to find plain error because he views the evidence
    of guilt as “conclusive.” Dissenting op. at [16].     Even if the error
    had not been preserved, the test for affirming, notwithstanding
    submission to a jury of an invalid legal basis for conviction, is not
    whether there is conclusive evidence of guilt under the valid basis.
    A verdict must be set aside where it “‘is supportable on one ground,
    but not on another, and it is impossible to tell which ground the jury
    selected.’” Griffin, 
    502 U.S. at 52
     (quoting Yates v. United States,
    
    354 U.S. 298
    , 312 (1957)); see United States v. Foley, 
    73 F.3d 484
    ,
    494 (2d Cir. 1996) (conviction reversed for plain error where court
    “unable to determine” whether finding of guilt rested on valid or
    invalid basis); United States v. Scotti, 
    47 F.3d 1237
    , 1246 (2d Cir.
    1995) (order for new trial affirmed “[b]ecause the jury may have
    reached its verdict” on invalid basis).
    -16-
    II.   Evidentiary rulings
    Since the case must be retried, we comment briefly on two
    evidentiary rulings, challenged on appeal, that are likely to arise on
    retrial.
    (a)     “Muscleteens” photos.
    The Appellant contends that it was error for the prosecution to
    introduce a group of photos of young girls displayed on an Internet
    website called “Muscleteens,”6 although the main objection is that once
    Our dissenting colleague relies on United States v. Skelly, 
    442 F.3d 94
     (2d Cir. 2006).        The error in Skelly was the submission of an
    incomplete charge on a valid alternative legal theory, not, as here,
    the   submission    to   the   jury   of   an   invalid   alternate   basis   for
    conviction that did not state a criminal offense.            Moreover, because
    the properly charged basis in Skelly “occupied the entirety of [the
    prosecution’s] opening statement and all but a few remarks in its
    closing statement, “ 
    id. at 99
    , we were able to conclude that it was
    “overwhelmingly likely that any reasonable juror would have convicted
    on the basis of the Government’s primary theory.” 
    Id.
               In the pending
    case, we cannot possibly reach that conclusion in light of the
    Government’s summation urging conviction “solely” on the invalid
    basis.
    6
    These photos had not been introduced at the first trial, which
    resulted in      a mistrial.
    -17-
    the photos were in evidence, the defense was unfairly prevented from
    showing that Joseph had not looked at them.
    Joseph testified that he had joined numerous Internet member
    group concerned with bodybuilding, including one called “Muscleteens.”
    He indicated that this site “was made for young girls to show off
    their muscles” and acknowledged that a document describing the site
    stated that pictures could be posted of girls between 5 and 18.                     He
    said that “[t]he pictures change, some weekly, some monthly”; that
    when he joined the group, the picture on front of group’s site was an
    adult bodybuilder; that he normally looked at photos of 18-21-year-
    olds; and that when the site “started to change” he “didn’t go back
    and visit” anymore.
    At the conclusion of the defense case, the prosecution indicated
    it   wanted    to   call    an   FBI   agent      to   introduce   photos   from    the
    Muscleteens group for the purpose of rebutting Joseph’s testimony that
    the photos were predominately of 18- and 19-year-old girls.                   Defense
    counsel argued that the images were “remarkably prejudicial” and that
    there was nothing “to suggest to the jury that [Joseph] had looked .
    . . at all this stuff.”           The prosecutor responded, “That’s not what
    we’re suggesting,” and argued that the photographs should be admitted
    to   rebut    Joseph’s     testimony   that       Muscleteens    “had   predominately
    pictures of 19- to 20-year-old girls.”                   The Judge overruled the
    defense      objection     and   allowed   the     prosecution     to   introduce   the
    -18-
    pictures.     Many of the photos appeared to be girls under 18.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel sought to ask Watson if
    there was any evidence that Joseph had looked at the Muscleteens
    photos     that    Watson    had   introduced.          The   Judge     sustained       the
    prosecutor’s objection and stated, “The subject matter is not to be
    explored.”
    Having       introduced    the    photos    for    the     limited       purpose   of
    challenging Joseph’s credibility on one point and disclaimed any
    broader purpose, the prosecution then argued in summation that the
    photos were “devastating evidence of the defendant’s predisposition”
    to entice young girls.7        When defense counsel sought to respond in his
    summation that there was no evidence that Joseph had ever looked at
    the Muscleteens photos, the Court cut off the argument, stating that
    “[Watson] was not proffered for more than one issue, and that was all
    7
    Having told the jury that the photos were “devastating evidence,”
    the Government is somewhat disingenuous in now arguing that any error
    in admitting them was harmless.                 The prosecutor also engaged in
    dubious     conduct   by    inviting   the   jury      to   consider    “why     [defense
    counsel] got so excited about these photos.”                  Cf.     United States v.
    Gonzalez, 
    488 F.2d 833
    , 836 (2d Cir. 1973) (reversible error found
    where     prosecutor’s      derogatory    remarks       about       defense     counsel’s
    objection coupled with statements in summation prejudiced defendant).
    -19-
    that the court will permit you to inquire about.      So don’t go there.”
    Although admission of the Muscleteens photos was not erroneous,
    if they become relevant at a retrial, the defendant must be accorded
    an opportunity to present evidence that he did not view them.
    (b)     Expert Testimony.   Also likely to recur at retrial is the
    issue of whether the defendant’s expert witness, Dr. James Herriot,
    should be permitted to testify about role-playing in the context of
    sexually explicit conversations on the Internet.        Dr. Herriot is an
    Associate Professor of Clinical Sexuality at the Institute of Advanced
    Human Sexuality in San Francisco.         Dr. Herriot proposed to testify
    about a distinct culture of the Internet in which one can become a
    “fantasy character[].”      He would also explain the realities and
    motivations of online role-playing via chatrooms and email.           Dr.
    Herriot wrote his Ph.D. thesis on sexual communication on the Internet
    and had testified previously on the subject in federal court.8        The
    District Court sustained the Government’s objection to Dr. Herriot’s
    testimony, primarily on the ground of relevance.9
    8
    In a case similar to Joseph’s, Dr. Herriott’s testimony was
    admitted, over the Government’s objection, and the defendant was
    acquitted. See United States v. Wragg, 01 Cr. 6107, docket entries
    nos. 86, 88, 90, 97.
    9
    An issue also arose as to the timeliness of the defense’s
    proffer.    To the extent that timeliness concerned the District Court,
    -20-
    Although the admission or exclusion of expert testimony is
    committed to the discretion of the court, see United States v.
    DiDomenico, 
    985 F.2d 1159
    , 1163 (2d Cir. 1993), we urge the District
    Court to give a more thorough consideration to the defendant’s claim
    to present Dr. Herriot’s testimony, in the event it is offered at
    retrial.
    Dr. Herriot’s field of study and experience qualified him to
    offer    relevant    testimony.      He    has   conducted   a   large   number    of
    interviews and studied chat-room conversations to understand sexual
    behavior on the Internet.           Social science “research, theories and
    opinions cannot have the exactness of hard science methodologies,”
    Jenson v. Eveleth Taconite Co., 
    130 F.3d 1287
     (8th Cir. 1997), and
    “expert testimony need not be based on statistical analysis in order
    to be probative.” United States v. Long, 
    328 F.3d 655
    , 66 (D.C. Cir.
    2003).    “[P]eer review, publication, potential error rate, etc. . . .
    are not applicable to this kind of testimony, whose reliability
    depends heavily on the knowledge and experience of the expert, rather
    than the methodology of theory behind it.” United States v. Hankey,
    there may have been a misunderstanding of Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(b)(1)(C)
    since    the    Government   made   no    request   for   disclosure     of   defense
    experts.       In any event, a timeliness issue is not likely to arise at
    retrial.
    -21-
    
    203 F.3d 1160
    , 1169 (9th Cir. 2003).              In such cases, the place to
    “quibble    with   [an    expert’s]    academic     training”    is   “on   cross-
    examination” and goes to his “testimony’s weight . . . not its
    admissibility.” McCullock v. H.B. Fuller Co., 
    61 F.3d 1038
    , 1043 (2d
    Cir. 1995).
    To    the   extent   that   the   District    Court   was   concerned   that
    Herriot’s testimony would rely on hearsay, that would not be a valid
    objection. See Fed. R. Evid. 703 (“If of a type reasonably relied upon
    by experts in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences
    upon the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence
    in order for the opinion or inference to be admitted.”).                    Social
    science experts commonly base their opinions on interviews.
    Dr. Herriot’s opinions appear to be highly likely to assist the
    jury “to understand the evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 702. Defense counsel
    represented that Dr. Herriot
    will testify that . . . [a] major component of the entertainment
    on the Internet is the rapid repartee, in addition to having
    imaginative fun.   When engaging in Internet role-play, people
    love to experiment with their personas. Typically, people weave
    a bit of truth about themselves with a great deal of imagination
    and/or exaggeration.     The Internet presents [a] competitive
    entertainment. . . . Sexually explicit conversations tend to
    drive the chatting relationship, and are fueled by the anonymity
    of the created personas. . . . Often, chatters become curious
    about who is “behind the screen.”       There are many methods
    chatters use to “de-mask” the other participant: such as asking
    for a photograph, attempting a phone conversation, asking for
    information that can be independently verified or even attempting
    to meet in a public space.
    -22-
    Although     some   jurors    may   have   familiarity    with    Internet
    messaging, it is unlikely that the average juror is familiar with the
    role-playing activity that Dr. Herriot was prepared to explain in the
    specific context of sexually oriented conversation in cyberspace.
    Many prospective jurors at Joseph’s trial acknowledged that they had
    never visited a chat-room, and professed no understanding of what
    occurs there.       Obviously a jury would not have to accept Joseph’s
    claim that he planned only to meet “Julie” to learn who she was and
    that he lacked any intention to engage in sexual conduct with her, but
    the   frequent     occurrence      of   such   “de-mask[ing]”   of     chat-room
    participants might provide support for his defense.
    Numerous courts have upheld the admission of expert testimony to
    explain conduct not normally familiar to most jurors. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Hayward, 
    359 F.3d 631
    , 635 (3d Cir. 2004) (modus
    operandi of child molesters); United States v. Alzanki, 
    54 F.3d 994
    ,
    1005-06 (1st Cir. 1995) (tendency of abuse victims to remain with
    their abusers); United States v. Azure, 
    801 F.2d 336
    , 340 (8th Cir.
    1986) (inability of children to distinguish truth from fantasy).            Dr.
    Herriot’s testimony would seem to be similarly relevant.10
    10
    Our dissenting colleague sees little need for Dr. Herriot’s
    testimony because the role-playing explanation for the defendant’s
    conduct was adequately presented by the defendant’s own testimony. See
    -23-
    Conclusion
    Primarily because the jury was permitted to convict on an invalid
    legal basis, the conviction may not stand. The conviction is vacated,
    and the case is remanded for a new trial.
    dissenting op. at [21].   However, when the Government implores a jury
    to find the defendant and his explanation not credible, we think the
    presentation of that explanation from a qualified expert would be
    significant, especially where the explanation is not one with which
    jurors are likely to have familiarity.
    -24-
    USA v. Joseph
    No. 06-5911-cr
    JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that Joseph objected to
    the “more appealing” language at trial and therefore preserved that
    challenge for appellate review.    Even if Joseph initially raised such
    an objection – and I do not believe he did so with sufficient clarity
    or particularity – the record shows that by the end of the charge
    conference, he had abandoned it.
    Because Joseph did not preserve his challenge at trial, we should
    review that claim for plain error, United States v. Cohen, 
    427 F.3d 164
    , 172 (2d Cir. 2005), “which is a very stringent standard requiring
    a serious injustice or a conviction in a manner inconsistent with
    fairness and integrity of judicial proceedings,” United States v.
    Walsh, 
    194 F.3d 37
    , 53-54 (2d Cir. 1999) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).   Under the plain error standard, Joseph bears the
    burden of showing that he was prejudiced, United States v. Logan, 
    419 F.3d 172
    , 179 (2d Cir. 2005), but he cannot do so because there was
    conclusive evidence of his guilt so that any error in the jury charge
    did not “affect[] the outcome of the district court proceedings,”
    United States v. Skelly, 
    442 F.3d 94
    , 99 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal
    -25-
    quotation marks and citation omitted).         I would therefore affirm the
    judgment of conviction.
    I.   Joseph’s Objections at the Charge Conference
    The charge conference included an extensive discussion regarding
    the following sentence in the proposed charge: “The government only
    need[] show, beyond a reasonable doubt, the defendant . . . made the
    possibility of the sexual activity more appealing.” App. at 150.5-.6.
    There was some additional, albeit brief, discussion of the portion of
    the charge defining the terms “persuade” and “entice.”
    Three purported objections to these instructions are at issue in
    this case, the first of which I believe was not properly made and, in
    any event, was abandoned.     For ease of reference, I will refer to them
    as objections A, B, and C.    Joseph argues, and the majority maintains,
    that he objected (A) to the language that the government only needed
    to show that Joseph “made the possibility of the sexual activity more
    appealing.”    The objection, of course, would be that this language
    leaves   out   enticement,   which   is   a   part   of   the   crime,   although
    enticement is charged elsewhere, including as an alternative theory in
    the same sentence.    The government argues, and I agree, that at trial
    Joseph did not make objection A (to the “more appealing” language
    itself); he only objected (B) to the omission of the words “with him,”
    -26-
    which he wished to insert just before “more appealing,” and (C) to the
    proposed charge’s inclusion of explicit definitions for the terms
    “entice” and “persuade” as opposed to a more general allusion to the
    plain meaning of those terms.
    On my reading of the record, the charge conference proceeded in
    three “phases.”    During phase I, Joseph made the broad-brush argument
    that the proposed charge, which, as the majority notes, was adapted
    from a Ninth Circuit case, see Maj. Op. at [14], “impermissibly lowers
    the burden of proof,” App. at 150.2.             Rather than identify specific
    language (such as the “more appealing” language) as erroneous, defense
    counsel argued that “this charge, here, covers a wide variety of
    noncriminal conduct.”         App. at 150.3 (emphasis added).
    During    phase    II,    defense   counsel,    the   government,   and   the
    district court focused their discussion on objection B. Specifically,
    the defense objected that “nowhere else in the charge does it say[]
    that [the defendant] needs to be using [the Internet] to persuade or
    induce a minor to engage in a sexual act with him.”             
    Id. at 150
    .3-.4
    (emphasis     added).         The   government    countered    that   “everybody
    understands that what we’re charging him with is making the act of
    sexual contact more appealing with him, not with somebody else.”               
    Id. at 150
    .5.   And the district court agreed that “[t]here is no question
    -27-
    . . . here what we’re talking about.”           
    Id. at 150
    .7.   Objection A was
    at no point a subject of discussion in phase II.
    During phase III, defense counsel affirmatively requested that
    the charge include the “more appealing” language, so that the phrase
    would read, “[s]exual activity ‘with him’ more appealing.”             
    Id.
        The
    government agreed to the insertion of “with him” into the “more
    appealing” clause, and the district court accepted the change.                See
    
    id. at 150
    .8.     During   this    phase,   defense   counsel   also   raised
    objection C when he asked the district court to charge the plain
    meaning of “entice” or “persuade” without added embellishment.               
    Id.
    Noticeably absent from the charge conference transcript is any
    explicit discussion during any phase between defense counsel, the
    government, and the district court of objection A.              Had there been
    such a discussion, I have little doubt that the conscientious district
    judge, who labored mightily over the charge, would have addressed the
    problem.
    II.   Unpreserved Error
    Applying      well-established    policy    considerations    and    Second
    Circuit case law, it is evident that objection A was not preserved for
    two reasons.        First, even if some of defense counsel’s statements
    could, when viewed in isolation and taken outside of their context, be
    -28-
    construed as objecting to the “more appealing” language itself,1 any
    such objection was stated in terms too general and indistinct to
    apprise the district court (and the government) of the position that
    Joseph now asserts on appeal.       Second, any such objection was plainly
    abandoned during phase III when defense counsel personally requested
    and affirmatively accepted the language, “made the possibility of
    sexual activity with him more appealing.”
    A.      Insufficient Clarity
    Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 30(d), “[a] party who
    objects to any portion of the instructions . . . must inform the court
    of the specific objection and the grounds for the objection before the
    jury retires to deliberate.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 30(d) (emphasis added).
    As this court has recognized, the specificity requirement is not to be
    taken lightly, because it helps to ensure that the objection is
    squarely and clearly presented to the district court, which guarantees
    1
    For example, the majority notes defense counsel’s statement that
    “the jurors are thinking, if he just makes the idea of sex more
    appealing, he could be convicted of a crime which could be just pure
    cybersex without any intent to induce or persuade.        And that is not
    covered by the statute.”     App. at 150.4; see also Maj. Op. at [10] n.3
    (quoting this language).     As I illustrate below, when this statement
    is viewed in its context, it is clear that the government and the
    district court only perceived the defense as raising objection B.
    -29-
    that the court of first instance has a meaningful opportunity to
    consider and correct any error prior to review by a court of appeals.
    See United States v. Weintraub, 
    273 F.3d 139
    , 145-46 (2d Cir. 2001)
    (applying plain error review to defendant’s jury charge objection
    because “it was insufficiently particular to raise the question now
    presented and thus preserve it for appeal.    By failing to draw the
    district court’s attention to the problem that Weintraub now complains
    of, the defendants deprived the district court of the opportunity to
    correct its putative error.”); see also Skelly, 
    442 F.3d at 99
    (conducting plain error review because “[t]he defendants . . . failed
    to raise a specific objection to the omission of [certain] language
    from the charge”).
    The importance of preservation for purposes of appellate review
    cannot be understated:
    Rule 30 provides that no party may assign as error any
    portion of the charge unless that party objects to it before the
    jury retires to consider its verdict.      The purpose of this
    provision is to give the trial court an opportunity to correct
    any error or omission in the charge before the jury begins its
    deliberations. If prompt objection is made as the rule requires,
    the error can then be corrected. As the Supreme Court has said:
    Orderly procedure requires that the respective adversaries’
    views as to how the jury should be instructed be presented
    to the trial judge in time to enable him to deliver an
    accurate charge and to minimize the risk of committing
    reversible error.
    The objecting party must state distinctly the matter to
    which it objects and the ground of its objections. The objection
    must be specific enough so that the trial court can perceive the
    basis on which it is claimed that the instruction was erroneous.
    -30-
    . . . Accordingly, where the court and opposing counsel
    understand the defendant’s position, even a vague objection
    should be held sufficient.
    2A Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 484 (3d ed.
    2000) (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted) (quoting Henderson v.
    Kibbe, 
    431 U.S. 145
    , 154 (1977)).    Conversely, where the trial court
    and opposing counsel do not understand the defendant’s objection
    because it was not “state[d] distinctly,” the requirements of Rule 30
    have not been met.
    A defendant’s failure to state his objection with sufficient
    clarity to apprise the district court of his position results in plain
    error review.   Cf. United States v. Lemire, 
    720 F.2d 1327
    , 1343 n.25
    (D.C. Cir. 1983) (“Where, as here, the defense fails to specify
    sufficiently the portion of the charge to which it objects, and
    therefore fails to comport with Rule 30, we will reverse only if the
    instruction is ‘plain error’ – if the error causes a substantial
    miscarriage of justice. . . . Of course, for those objections that the
    defendants raised with sufficient particularity to apprise the trial
    judge of their dissatisfaction, we do not demand ‘plain error’ in
    order to reverse.”).   When, as here, an objection is made at trial but
    is at best ambiguous, or when the appellant’s objection focuses on a
    different problem than that targeted on appeal, it is unpreserved.
    See United States v. Vasquez, 
    267 F.3d 79
    , 87 (2d Cir. 2001) (“During
    the charge conference, Vasquez did object to the aspect of the charge
    -31-
    involving heroin and cocaine trafficking, but the basis for his
    objection is ambiguous. . . . Where an appellant states distinctly,
    under Rule 30, the grounds for objecting the charge below, but urges
    a different ground on appeal, the objection is not properly preserved
    on   appeal         and   we   therefore   review    for    plain   error.     Vasquez’s
    situation falls squarely within this rule . . . .”).
    In this case, if defense counsel meant to object to the inclusion
    of the “more appealing” language itself (objection A), he never made
    this clear at trial.             His objection was too general and imprecise to
    apprise the district court that the defense was seeking the deletion
    of the “more appealing” clause,2 and it therefore failed to provide the
    2
    At no point did defense counsel make explicit that he was
    advocating the omission of the “more appealing” language altogether.
    Although he specifically requested the insertion of “with him,” he
    never requested the removal of “more appealing.”                       Furthermore, his
    objections about “cover[ing] noncriminal conduct” were more general
    objections to “the charge,” not specific objections to the “more
    appealing” language.             See App. at 150.6 (“That is their enticement
    charge, which, to me, your Honor, covers noncriminal conduct and
    lowers the burden of proof . . . .” (emphasis added)); 
    id. at 150
    .3
    (“And        this    charge,    here,   covers   a   wide    variety    of   noncriminal
    conduct.” (emphasis added)); see also 
    id. at 150
    .7 (“[T]he charge, as
    given, lowers the burden of proof . . . .).                   A general objection to
    -32-
    district court an opportunity to correct the error.     Nor did defense
    counsel’s statements at trial adequately inform opposing counsel of
    the position that Joseph now asserts on appeal.    The record shows that
    both the district court’s and the government’s responses throughout
    the charge conference addressed and focused solely on the omission of
    “with him,” demonstrating that it was this objection – and not any
    broader challenge to the “more appealing” language – that was in fact
    conveyed to and perceived by the district court and the government.3
    “the charge” does not indicate what particular aspect of the proposed
    enticement charge defense counsel found problematic.
    3
    The majority construes defense counsel’s statement, “if he just
    makes the idea of sex more appealing, he could be convicted of a crime
    which could be just pure cybersex without any intent to induce or
    persuade,” App. at 150.4, as raising objection A.          However, the
    responses from the government and district court – and indeed defense
    counsel himself – centered on the insertion of “with him,” indicating
    that their understanding was that defense counsel was actually raising
    objection B:
    The Defense:      But it needs to be, he needs to be attempting to
    induce or persuading someone he believes to be a
    minor to engage.
    -33-
    The Court:        Yeah.
    The Defense:      The statute is intended that he engage in a
    sexual act with him, and –
    The Government:        No, to make it more appealing to someone.
    The Defense:      With him, but the way that charge –
    The Government:           That’s not necessarily true.   It could be
    that he makes it more sexually appealing to
    a friend of his, too, but in this particular
    case, yes, everybody understands that what
    we’re charging him with is making the act of
    sexual contact more appealing with him, not
    with somebody else.
    The Defense:      You have no problem to amending the charge to a
    word like that?
    The Government:        To with him?
    -34-
    The Court:        No –
    The Defense:      You need to prove that he was intended to induced
    or persuaded [sic], whichever, induce or entice .
    . . or persuade in equal contact with him.             That
    would be illegal.
    The Government:          It   is   in     the   charge.   It   is   under the
    government’s theory of the case.
    The Defense:      I remember that it wasn’t in there last time . .
    . .
    
    Id. at 150
    .4-.5 (emphasis added).
    In this exchange, defense counsel never argued for the complete
    omission of the “more appealing” language from the charge.                Instead,
    he asked the government to agree to amend the charge to add “with him”
    to that clause.   Indeed, the suggestion to expand upon or clarify the
    “more appealing” clause is incompatible with the suggestion to strike
    it in its entirety because the former presumes retention of the “more
    appealing” language.    See also 
    id. at 150
    .7 (The Defense: “It does no
    -35-
    Furthermore, during the charge conference, defense counsel had
    several opportunities to voice an objection to the “more appealing”
    language itself and make clear to the district court and to the
    government that he was objecting to more than just the omission of
    “with him.”     Defense counsel, however, remained silent.4           Thus, any
    one any harm to clarify it by adding it [i.e., “with him”] to that
    section of the charge . . . .”).
    4
    For example, during phase II of the charge conference, defense
    counsel said nothing during the following colloquy:
    The Court:        Okay.     I’m    looking     at   the   paragraph    at the
    bottom.   I instruct you . . . . The government
    only needs show, beyond a reasonable doubt, the
    defendant attempted to convince or influence the
    victim to engage in a sexual act or made the
    possibility      of    the     sexual     activity     more
    appealing.
    Now, I gather that stays in, right?
    The Government:        Right.
    -36-
    broader objection that defense counsel may have raised (or intended to
    raise) was not made clear to the district court, which cannot fairly
    be said to have been apprised of the argument.   Cf. Freytag v. Comm’r,
    
    501 U.S. 868
    , 895 (1991) (Scalia, J., concurring in part, joined by
    O’Connor, Kennedy & Souter, J.J.) (“The very word ‘review’ presupposes
    that a litigant’s arguments have been raised and considered in the
    tribunal of first instance.”).
    B.      Forfeiture Through Express Acceptance
    In this case, not only did the defendant fail to make a clear
    objection to the “more appealing” language itself, but any such
    argument that could be gleaned from the record was plainly abandoned
    during phase III of the charge conference, when defense counsel
    expressly accepted the “more appealing” language by requesting that
    the charge read, “[s]exual activity ‘with him’ more appealing,”5 and
    The Court:        Now, where does – where does the – the enticement
    charge go, and what does it knock out, or – or
    does it not knock anything out.
    Id. 150.5-.6 (emphasis added).       Such passive behavior by defense
    counsel, wholly at odds with the defendant’s argument on appeal that
    the specific objection to that language was raised below, is telling.
    5
    That portion of the charge conference proceeded as follows:
    -37-
    The Government:          Basically, you just want it to say . . . The
    government        only      need       show     beyond     a
    reasonable         doubt        that    the     defendant
    attempted     to     convince      or    influence       the
    victim to engage in sexual activity.                     You
    want to add the words “with him,” or made
    the possibility of the sexual activity more
    appealing.        And that covers your objection?
    The Defense:      Sexual activity “with him” more appealing.
    The Government:          Two words “with him” or made the possibility
    of   the    sexual    activity         “with    him”   more
    appealing?
    The Defense:      And that covers that one piece of it.                  The other
    piece is that I think the charge, as given,
    lowers the burden of proof and basically says
    that   you   don’t       have     to    persuade      or   entice.
    [Objection C] And we’re asking for the plain
    meaning and I don’t really understand why we
    wouldn’t just take the plain meaning of entice or
    -38-
    then turned the discussion to objection C.               App. at 150.7.      This court
    has held that such behavior constitutes forfeiture of the objection
    and   will   result    in     plain   error   review.         See   United   States   v.
    Giovanelli, 
    464 F.3d 346
    , 351 (2d Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (“[I]f a
    party invited the charge or affirmatively waived his position,” []he
    has waived any right to appellate review of the charge.                      Giovanelli
    has waived his challenge to Judge Rakoff’s jury charge. . . . [W]hen
    Judge Rakoff, responding to Giovanelli’s objection, presented the
    parties with a revised draft jury charge that no longer included the
    ‘natural     and    probable      effect’     language,       Giovanelli’s     counsel
    acknowledged that she was happy about that particular omission. Thus,
    there was ‘approval or invitation’ of the omission (indeed, both).”
    (alteration,       internal    quotation      marks,    and    citations     omitted));
    Weintraub, 
    273 F.3d at 146
     (“Weintraub also argues that counsel
    properly objected during the charge conference.                     To the contrary,
    defense counsel not only did not seek the instruction that Weintraub
    now   argues   for,     they     affirmatively         accepted     the   government’s
    formulation. . . . We consequently review for plain error.”).
    Joseph also forfeited objection A when he failed to correct the
    government’s and the district court’s apparent understanding that he
    persuade as Sand recommends.
    App. at 150.7-.8 (emphasis added).
    -39-
    was only raising objection B.     After the defense expressly requested
    the insertion of “with him,” the government replied, “if all defense
    attorney is asking is that we put in “with him” . . . and made the
    possibility of sexual activity ‘with him’ more appealing . . . into
    the charge, we don’t have an objection.”           App. at 150.8.    The
    government thereby gave defense counsel an opportunity to correct any
    misunderstanding and point out other objections.       Rather than raise
    objection A and argue that the “more appealing” language should be
    struck in its entirety, defense counsel reiterated objection C, that
    the original charge erroneously included explicit definitions for
    “persuade” and “entice” rather than a simple reference to their plain
    meaning.     He stated, “And just the other issue concerning the plain
    meaning.”6 
    Id.
     Joseph therefore forfeited any previous objection that
    6
    Earlier during phase III, defense counsel had stated:
    And that covers that one piece of it.     The other piece is that I
    think the charge, as given, lowers the burden of proof and
    basically says that you don’t have to persuade or entice.       And
    we’re asking for the plain meaning and I don’t really understand
    why we wouldn’t just take the plain meaning of entice or persuade
    as Sand recommends.
    App. at 150.7-.8 (emphasis added).        The majority interprets “[t]he
    -40-
    other piece” of defense counsel’s objection as an objection that even
    with the addition of “with him,” the “more appealing” language was
    erroneous because it permitted the jury to convict without finding
    that the defendant persuaded or enticed.       See Maj. Op. at [11] n.3.
    In other words, the majority asserts that defense counsel continued to
    raise objection A, even after objection B had been resolved to his
    satisfaction.
    As an initial matter, this reading ignores the fact that defense
    counsel stated that “the charge, as given, lowers the burden of proof
    and basically says that you don’t have to persuade or entice.”           App.
    at 150.7-.8 (emphasis added). At that point in the charge conference,
    the district court had not yet accepted the addition of “with him.”
    Defense   counsel’s   statement   thus   referred   back   to   the   original
    proposed charge, and not to the charge as amended to include “with
    him.” I therefore disagree with the majority that defense counsel was
    arguing that the “more appealing” language was erroneous even with the
    addition of “with him,” and that “the other piece” of his objection
    was to the “more appealing” language itself.
    Plainly, “the other piece” of the objection was to the expansion
    of the meanings of “persuade” and “entice” in the original charge –
    -41-
    he might have made to the “more appealing” clause itself, and, under
    Second Circuit case law, we should review such a challenge for plain
    error.
    III. Applying Plain Error Review
    Although Weintraub states, “[i]n general, it is the rare case in
    which an improper instruction will justify reversal of a criminal
    conviction when no objection has been made in the trial court,” 
    273 F.3d at 145
     (alteration omitted) (quoting Henderson, 
    431 U.S. at 154
    ),
    objection C.     The original charge stated: “Persuade means to move by
    argument or entreaty or expostulation to a belief, position, or course
    of action . . . .       The term ‘entice’ means to wrongfully solicit,
    persuade, procure, allure, attract, coax, or seduce, or to lure,
    induce, attempt, incite, or persuade a person to do a thing.”
    Here, defense counsel was arguing that the inclusion of explicit
    definitions or synonyms for “persuade” and “entice” lowered the burden
    of proof and would, in effect, allow the jury to convict without
    finding that Joseph persuaded or enticed.                 For example, under the
    charge, as given, the jury could convict upon finding that Joseph
    “wrongfully solicit[ed]” a minor.           For that reason, defense counsel
    “ask[ed]   for    the   plain    meaning”      of   those    terms,   without   any
    embellishment.      This   was    the    subject     of     his   second   objection
    (objection C), not the “more appealing” language.
    -42-
    the same is true when, as here, the objection that was made was
    insufficient to preserve the error.                       Under plain error review, we
    “revers[e]      only    if     the    error    is     clear      or     obvious    and    affects
    substantial rights. To affect substantial rights, an error “must have
    been prejudicial: It must have affected the outcome of the district
    court proceedings.”            United States v. Ganim, 
    510 F.3d 134
    , 152 (2d
    Cir.   2007).         “[T]he       defendant    bears      the    burden      of   establishing
    prejudice.”         Logan, 
    419 F.3d at 179
    ; see also United States v. Olano,
    
    507 U.S. 725
    ,     734    (1993)       (noting       that    when    an   error      has   been
    preserved, “a court of appeals normally engages in a specific analysis
    of the district court record – a so-called ‘harmless error’ inquiry –
    to determine whether the error was prejudicial. [Plain error review]
    normally      requires       the    same   kind     of    inquiry,       with   one   important
    difference: It is the defendant rather than the Government who bears
    the burden of persuasion with respect to prejudice.”)
    Joseph cannot meet his burden because there was conclusive
    evidence to support the properly charged theory that, using the
    Internet,      he    “attempted       to   convince       or    influence       the   person    he
    believed was a 13 year old girl to engage in a sexual act with him.”
    A. 158.1; see Skelly, 
    442 F.3d at 99
     (finding no prejudice on plain
    error review because the government’s “primary theory [of liability]
    was supported by overwhelming proof”).                           The evidence belies any
    suggestion, argued by the defendant, that he was just role-playing.
    -43-
    In his online conversations with “Julie,” the FBI agent, Joseph
    made numerous comments demonstrating his intent to entice her into
    engaging in sexual acts with him. Furthermore, on multiple occasions,
    Joseph made statements indicating a genuine belief (prior to the day
    he arranged to meet Julie) that Julie was a minor.   For example, on
    August 22, 2005, the following online exchange took place:
    Joseph:   everyone has different things that really turn them on
    . . . for instance . . . i love touching and kissing .
    . . i could caress a girl’s body for hours, touching,
    kissing, slowly all over . . . every inch is like a
    delicious meal to be savored slowly
    . . . .
    Julie:    is that what you wanna do with us?
    . . . .
    Joseph:   yes, i want to touch you, caress you, kiss you . . .
    and show and te[]ach you things that feel good to you
    and me . . . but only if you want to
    Julie:    u really do?
    Joseph:   yes, but no one can know, because i would go straight
    to jail
    Julie:    what do u mean?
    Joseph:   you are too young for me . . . it is illegal . . . . i
    want to show you both how touching and kissing can be
    so, so hot
    Supplemental App. at 86-87.
    The next day, Joseph again chatted with Julie and described in
    explicit detail the sexual acts that he wanted to perform with her.
    He stated, “i kept thinki[n]g about having sex with you like that
    -44-
    until we both came.”   When Julie asked, “do u really wanna do this in
    person . . . or just pretend,” Joseph replied, “i really want to . .
    . I’m just afraid someone will find out.”         App. at 95 (emphasis
    added).
    Trying to arrange a meeting with Julie, Joseph said, “i just told
    lorie i have some fr[ee] time next wed in the late morning.”     Julie
    asked, “really? . . . what do u wanna do?” and Joseph replied, “i want
    to see you both . . . i have to ad[]mit, I’m very nervous about it
    all, knowing how young you both are . . . but i am also very excited
    and want to see if we have chemistry . . . i know i’m going to want to
    have my hands all over you when i see you.”   Supplemental App. at 99
    (emphasis added).   This conversation followed:
    Joseph:   we need to find a private place where no one will watch
    us or accidentally find us
    Julie:    like the park?
    Joseph:   if there[ ]is good privacy there, sure.
    Julie:    w[o]uldnt it be w[ei]rd to do that out in the open?
    Joseph:   yes, defin[i]tely . . . not a good place for sex, but
    maybe some kissing and touching
    Julie:    ok . . . so u don’t want to do sex?
    Joseph:   i wish we could find a private indoor place . . . not
    outside[]in the park (until you are 18 :-))
    
    Id. at 100-01
    ; see also 
    id. at 106
     (“[I] just may have a problem
    because i am so much older than you[.]”); 
    id. at 107
     (“[P]romise me
    you won’t get me in trouble? . . . and have me arrested[.]”).    These
    -45-
    conversations, among others, starkly refute Joseph’s claims that when
    he chatted with Julie, he was simply role-playing and believed that
    Julie was a sexually experienced adult posing as a minor.
    Because       there    was     abundant       evidence   supporting       Joseph’s
    conviction, there was no prejudice and therefore no plain error
    requiring vacatur and remand.              See Skelly, 
    442 F.3d at 99
     (“This is
    not a case, then, where it is impossible to determine which of two
    competing    theories      formed    the    basis    for   conviction,       for   it   is
    overwhelmingly likely that any reasonable juror would have convicted
    on the basis of the Government’s primary theory.                      Accordingly, we
    conclude that the otherwise forfeited error in the district court’s
    instruction does not constitute plain error that we may notice.”).
    Moreover, assuming arguendo that the error did affect Joseph’s
    substantial rights by affecting the outcome of his district court
    proceedings, “the court of appeals has authority to order correction,
    but is not required to do so.”             Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 735
    .        The Supreme
    Court has stated that a reviewing court’s remedial discretion “should
    be employed in those circumstances in which a miscarriage of justice
    would otherwise result” – that is, if the error “seriously affects the
    fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
    
    Id.
     (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citations omitted); see
    also United States v. Crowley, 
    318 F.3d 401
    , 415 (2d Cir. 2003).                        No
    error   in   the   case    before    us    calls    into   question    the    fairness,
    -46-
    integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.
    IV.   The District Court’s Evidentiary Rulings
    The majority, anticipating a retrial, “urge[s] the District Court
    to give a more thorough consideration to the Defendant’s claim to
    present Dr. Herriot’s testimony [on Internet role-playing], in the
    event it is offered at retrial.”     Maj. Op. at [19].    The majority
    believes that Dr. Herriot’s testimony would be probative and “highly
    likely to assist the jury to understand the evidence.”     
    Id.
     at [20]
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).     Nevertheless, the
    majority acknowledges that “the admission or exclusion of expert
    testimony is committed to the discretion of the court.”    
    Id.
     at [19].
    I agree that the exclusion of Dr. Herriot’s testimony was within
    the sound discretion of the trial judge, but I would refrain from
    suggesting that the district court admit that evidence if it is
    presented at retrial.   Even if Dr. Herriot was a qualified expert, as
    the majority seems to believe, see 
    id.
     at [18-19], I believe the
    evidence was properly excludable under Federal Rule of Evidence 403.
    While testimony about a culture of role-playing on the Internet may
    have been “relevant” under the low threshold set by Rule 401, it was
    within the district court’s discretion to find that the testimony
    lacked sufficient probative value.   Evidence that some people engage
    in role-playing on the Internet sheds little light on whether Joseph
    did so in this particular case, when he was having sexually explicit
    -47-
    conversations with “Julie.”
    Weighing against this low probative value were “considerations of
    undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative
    evidence.”   Fed. R. Evid. 403.       Even without Dr. Herriot’s expert
    testimony, there was ample opportunity to present the defense’s role-
    playing theory from Joseph’s own testimony that he was only engaging
    in sexual fantasy role-play.      See Maj. Op. at [6-8, 12].   For example,
    Joseph testified that his Internet screen name “is kind of . . . an
    idealized version of what . . . Dennis Joseph can’t do but can do on
    the internet.”     App. at 114.     He further testified to his general
    practice of “playing pretend” on the Internet: “And going back maybe
    seven or eight years ago, I would pretend to be things that I’m
    actually not.    I would pretend to be bodybuilders.   I would pretend to
    be very wealthy. . . . Sometimes I would pretend to be homosexual.”
    
    Id.
       It was the province of the jury to decide whether to credit
    Joseph’s testimony that he was simply role-playing.
    Because I believe the district court acted within its discretion
    in excluding Dr. Herriot’s testimony, I would not suggest that it
    reconsider that decision upon retrial.
    V.    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    -48-