United States v. Jacob Ross ( 2023 )


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  • USCA4 Appeal: 22-4054     Doc: 49         Filed: 06/30/2023    Pg: 1 of 20
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 22-4054
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    JACOB DAYLEN ROSS, a/ka/ Jake, a/ka/ Timneals207@gmail.com, a/k/a
    Jacobross292@gmail.com,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the United States District Court for the
    Western District of North Carolina, at Asheville. Martin K. Reidinger, Chief District
    Judge. (1:20-cr-00064-MR-WCM-1)
    Argued: March 22, 2023                                           Decided: June 30, 2023
    Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, DIAZ, and THACKER, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge Gregory wrote the opinion, in which Judge Diaz
    and Judge Thacker concurred.
    ARGUED: Geoffrey Ryan Willis, DYSART WILLIS, Raleigh, North Carolina, for
    Appellant. Anthony Joseph Enright, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Christian E. Dysart, DYSART
    WILLIS, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellant. Dena J. King, United States Attorney,
    OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellee.
    USCA4 Appeal: 22-4054       Doc: 49         Filed: 06/30/2023        Pg: 2 of 20
    GREGORY, Chief Judge:
    Jacob Daylen Ross was convicted of producing and possessing child pornography
    in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (a) and 18 U.S.C. § 2252A, respectively, and sentenced to
    fifty-five years in prison. On appeal, Ross argues that the district court erred by identifying
    him for a key government witness, Sosha Peters, after Peters was initially unable to make
    the in-court identification herself. Ross also contends that his sentence was grossly
    disproportionate to his offenses in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Finding no
    reversible error, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
    I.
    A.
    In June 2020, the McDowell County, North Carolina Sheriff’s Office (“MCSO”)
    received a report from Sosha Peters, who claimed that Jacob Ross might be sexually
    abusing children. Peters showed MCSO text messages she had exchanged with a phone
    number she said belonged to Ross (the “2873 number”), which appeared to corroborate her
    allegations. Based on that information, MCSO obtained a search warrant for the phone
    records for the 2873 number. The responsive records showed that the number was
    registered to Ross Skid Products. Ross’s parents owned that company, and Ross himself
    worked there.
    On June 24, officers conducted a traffic stop of Ross’s car based on an outstanding,
    unrelated arrest warrant. Following the stop, Ross consented to a search of a cell phone in
    his possession (the “8434 number”). MCSO discovered a photograph of a “very young”
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    girl’s genitalia on the phone. J.A. 116–17. MCSO then seized the phone and performed a
    forensic extraction, which revealed several additional images of child pornography.
    Pursuant to a search warrant, MCSO obtained the subscriber information for the 8434
    number, which showed that this phone, like the 2873 number, was registered to Ross Skid
    Products. MCSO also secured search warrants for three Google Mail accounts it had
    discovered while searching the phone. 1 The records Google provided revealed that each
    account was connected to one or both of the Ross Skid Products phone numbers. Two of
    the accounts were registered to “Jacob Ross,” and the third under the name “Tim Neals.”
    The data Google provided for the “Tim Neals” account contained a “selfie” photograph of
    Ross. J.A. 313.
    MCSO shared the seized cell phone and the Google account records with the U.S.
    Department of Homeland Security’s Homeland Security Investigations Division (“HSI”),
    which continued the investigation. James Brown, a computer forensic analyst for HSI,
    conducted a more extensive forensic extraction of the seized phone, which uncovered a
    total of twenty-eight images of child pornography involving young children. Many of the
    images were screenshots of video calls on WhatsApp, a messaging and video-call platform.
    The data associated with the WhatsApp images indicates that they were taken on June 8
    and June 16, 2020. Because they are screenshots from video calls, they include an image
    of the caller in a small window in the lower right-hand corner of the screen. In some, that
    1
    In addition, MCSO obtained and executed a search warrant for an office building
    and adjoining apartment owned by Ross Skid Products, as well as a cabin Ross owned,
    both of which were located in Marion, North Carolina. The searches of those properties
    did not uncover any incriminating evidence.
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    corner image depicts a man, whose face is not visible, either receiving oral sex from a
    woman or exposing himself. The screenshots also indicate that the WhatsApp user who
    made the calls—the user shown in the lower-right corner—went by the username “Jake.”
    Brown also extracted data from the WhatsApp application on the seized cell phone,
    including several WhatsApp text logs. The username for the WhatsApp profile on the
    phone was “Jake,” and the profile was connected to the 2873 number. 2 The text logs
    included messages between Jake and a woman in the Philippines named Analyn Tuanda
    Alcaraz, whose WhatsApp username was “Happy.” Several text messages show Jake
    directing Alcaraz to pose a child referred to as “Princess” in sexually explicit ways and to
    sexually molest the child. J.A. 265.      Some of those same messages appear in the
    background of pornographic screenshots from the video calls.
    In other WhatsApp text exchanges, Jake discussed making payments to Alcaraz.
    On June 8, 2020—the date of several pornographic screenshots—Jake told Alcaraz that
    “Angela” would send her money that day. J.A. 249. The seized phone contained images
    of a receipt and proof of payout for an earlier MoneyGram transaction, which showed that
    Angela Carpenter transferred $100 to Alcaraz on May 12, 2020. In response to a customs
    summons, MoneyGram provided data revealing that Angela Carpenter sent the May 12
    money transfer from a Wal-Mart store in Marion and Alcaraz received the money in the
    Philippines. The data also indicated that Whitney Carpenter, Angela’s adult daughter, sent
    another $100 MoneyGram transfer to Alcaraz on June 12, 2020.
    2
    A WhatsApp user can use the application on multiple phones despite originally
    creating an account with one phone number.
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    When reviewing the data from the three Google accounts, Brown found nine
    additional screenshots of child pornography from multiple WhatsApp video calls in March
    2020. In addition, the search history data for the accounts contained several search terms
    that referred to child pornography.
    B.
    In a February 2021 superseding indictment, a federal grand jury charged Ross with
    five counts of producing child pornography (
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (a)) and one count of
    possessing child pornography (18 U.S.C. § 2252A). Ross pled not guilty, and the district
    court held a three-day jury trial in March 2021.
    At trial, the Government first elicited testimony from law enforcement officers who
    played key roles in the investigation of Ross, including Brown, who testified in depth about
    the data extracted from the seized cell phone and Google accounts. The Government also
    called four women who had relationships with Ross: Angela Carpenter, Sosha Peters,
    Michele Tate, and Celeste Downing. The women testified that they witnessed Ross either
    participate in the WhatsApp calls, display other images of child pornography, talk about
    abducting or molesting children, or actually molest children. Angela Carpenter, for
    example, told the jury that Ross watched live videos of infant children—and sent messages
    instructing a woman in the Philippines to perform sex acts on the children—while
    Carpenter and Ross had sex. She further testified that she was performing oral sex on Ross
    in the corner images in certain screenshots from WhatsApp video calls. In other WhatsApp
    screenshots, a man in the corner image was wearing a shirt that Carpenter identified as
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    Ross’s. Carpenter also confirmed that she sent payments to women in the Philippines on
    Ross’s behalf, including the May 12 MoneyGram transfer to Alcaraz.
    Peters’s testimony—specifically, her in-court identification of Ross—is the most
    relevant to this appeal. Not long after Peters took the stand, the Government asked her to
    identify Ross in the courtroom. The following exchange ensued:
    GOVERNMENT: Okay. And when you came to Marion sometime in 2020
    did you meet the defendant, Jacob Ross?
    PETERS: Yes.
    GOVERNMENT: And do you see him here in the courtroom today?
    PETERS: Hmm-mm. (“No.”) 3
    GOVERNMENT: You don’t see him here in the courtroom? You can stand
    up if you need to.
    PETERS: Currently, no.
    GOVERNMENT: Okay.
    PETERS: I can’t tell.
    GOVERNMENT: All right. So when you knew the defendant did he have
    a beard or not have a beard?
    PETERS: He did not.
    GOVERNMENT: Okay. And could that affect whether you recognize him?
    PETERS: Yes.
    GOVERNMENT: Okay. Your Honor, if I could go ahead and ask the
    defendant to remove his mask and we’ll see if Ms. Peters can recognize him
    if he’s not wearing a mask as well.
    THE COURT: Mr. Ross, if you would please take down your mask.
    3
    This interpretation of Peters’s response is contained in the trial transcript.
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    (Defendant indicating.)
    PETERS: Yeah. Right here. (Indicating.)
    GOVERNMENT: So you recognize the defendant now?
    PETERS: Yeah.
    GOVERNMENT: Are you certain of that? Did the removal of the mask
    assist you with that?
    PETERS: Yeah.
    GOVERNMENT: Okay. So go ahead. And could you describe what he’s
    wearing?
    PETERS: He’s wearing a black tux.
    GOVERNMENT: A black jacket; is that right?
    PETERS: Yes, sir.
    GOVERNMENT: Okay. And could you point to where he’s located?
    PETERS: Right there. (Indicating.)
    GOVERNMENT: And what color mask is he wearing right now?
    PETERS: White.
    GOVERNMENT: Your Honor, I’d ask the record to reflect the witness
    identified the defendant, Jacob Ross.
    THE COURT: The record will so reflect.
    J.A. 468–69. Ross’s trial counsel did not object to Peter’s in-court identification.
    Peters went on to testify that she had a sexual relationship with Ross that began in
    late April or early May 2020 and continued for approximately one month. She explained
    that she was homeless and “heavily under the influence of drugs” at the time and that Ross
    offered her “[d]rugs and money” to stay with him in the apartment attached to the Ross
    Skids Products office. J.A. 472, 498. According to Peters, Ross told her he was sexually
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    interested in children and showed her images of child pornography, including “live videos”
    that he cast from his cell phone to the television screen in the apartment. J.A. 475–76.
    Peters explained that Ross interacted with the person on the other end of the video calls.
    She specifically recalled that on one occasion, Ross “told one female to go get princess and
    show him her private areas,” and that the woman on the other end complied. J.A. 477.
    Peters further stated that she performed oral sex on Ross while he watched the videos.
    In addition, Peters provided testimony about other acts of child sexual abuse that
    Ross allegedly attempted or committed. She testified about text messages she received
    from Ross that discussed having young children brought to the apartment for sex. In
    graphic detail, Peters also recounted seeing Ross sexually molest two young children—a
    five-year-old girl and an eight-month-old boy. And she claimed that Ross had once
    blindfolded her and taken her to a building he called the “dungeon,” where she saw five
    children Ross said he had “kidnap[ped] and [] was trying to sell.” 4 J.A. 489.
    The jury convicted Ross on all six counts. Based on Ross’s offenses and lengthy
    criminal history, the presentence report (“PSR”) concluded that the Sentencing Guidelines
    advised a sentence of 2,040 months (170 years). The district court adopted the PSR but
    imposed a downward variance sentence of 660 months (55 years). The court recognized
    that this was “tantamount to a life sentence” for Ross, who was forty-seven years old at the
    4
    Angela Carpenter also testified that Ross had told her about a “dungeon,” but
    Peters was the only witness who claimed to have visited it. Law enforcement never
    discovered such a place. Before arresting Ross, MCSO obtained a warrant to install a GPS
    tracking device on his vehicle in an effort to see “if there w[ere] any actual kids that [were]
    being held anywhere,” but the tracking warrant did not produce any useful information.
    J.A. 100.
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    time of sentencing. J.A. 718. Nevertheless, it concluded that such a sentence was
    necessary given the severity of Ross’s conduct, which it described as “among the most
    extreme that I have seen in these child porn cases.” J.A. 716.
    Ross timely appealed the district court’s final judgment, and we have jurisdiction
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    II.
    On appeal, Ross first challenges the district court’s role in Peters’s in-court
    identification. Ordinarily, when a defendant fails to object to an identification at trial, we
    review the trial court’s decision to admit the identification for plain error. See United States
    v. Wilkerson, 
    84 F.3d 692
    , 694–95 (4th Cir. 1996). Ross, however, argues that the
    procedure leading to Peters’s identification qualifies as structural error—which warrants
    “automatic reversal”—because the district court actually identified him for the witness.
    United States v. Poole, 
    640 F.3d 114
    , 118 (4th Cir. 2011). In the alternative, even if the
    identification procedure was not structural error, Ross contends that it at least constitutes
    plain error. For the reasons that follow, neither argument is availing.
    A.
    To qualify as structural, an error must not only “implicate a defendant’s
    constitutional rights” but also “affect the very framework in which a trial proceeds.” 
    Id.
    Structural errors are “so intrinsically harmful to the proceeding that [they] render the trial
    an unreliable vehicle for determining innocence or guilt.” 
    Id. at 119
    . For example, an error
    may qualify as structural if it “calls into question the objectivity of those charged with
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    bringing a defendant to judgment,” such as “when the trial judge is discovered to have had
    some basis for rendering a biased judgment.” Vasquez v. Hillery, 
    474 U.S. 254
    , 263 (1986).
    Structural errors are “unquantifiable and indeterminate” and thus “defy analysis by
    ‘harmless-error’ standards.” Poole, 
    640 F.3d at 119
     (quoting Sullivan v. Louisiana, 
    508 U.S. 275
    , 281–82 (1993)).
    This is a difficult standard to meet, and the Supreme Court has characterized errors
    as structural only in a handful of cases. See Sullivan, 
    508 U.S. at
    281–82 (error instructing
    jury about the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard); Vasquez, 
    474 U.S. at
    263–64 (racial
    discrimination in grand jury proceedings); McKaskle v. Wiggins, 
    465 U.S. 168
    , 177 n.8
    (1984) (denial of defendant’s right to self-representation); Waller v. Georgia, 
    467 U.S. 39
    ,
    49–50 (1984) (violation of right to public trial); Glasser v. United States, 
    315 U.S. 60
    , 76
    (1942) (denial of counsel); Tumey v. Ohio, 
    273 U.S. 510
    , 535 (1927) (financially biased
    judge). Though it has not expressly held as much, the Supreme Court has indicated that
    errors in identification procedures do not rise to this level. It has explained that “[w]hile
    identification testimony is significant evidence, such testimony is still only evidence, and,
    unlike the presence of counsel, is not a factor that goes to the very heart—the ‘integrity’—
    of the adversary process.” Manson v. Braithwaite, 
    432 U.S. 98
    , 113 n.14 (1977) (citation
    omitted); see also Watkins v. Sowders, 
    449 U.S. 341
    , 348 (1981) (same). As such, the
    Court has declined to adopt a “strict exclusionary rule” for unduly suggestive
    identifications. Manson, 
    432 U.S. at 113
    .
    This precedent leaves very little room for Ross to argue that the Peters identification
    qualifies as structural error. Indeed, the Second Circuit has relied on Watkins to hold that the
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    “erroneous introduction of identification evidence is not a structural error.” Wray v. Johnson,
    
    202 F.3d 515
    , 525 (2d Cir. 2000). Regardless of how suggestive the procedure might have
    been, Peters’s in-court identification of Ross was “still only evidence,” not a defect in the very
    framework of Ross’s trial. Manson, 
    432 U.S. at
    113 n.14. Ross’s defense counsel had an
    opportunity to “both cross-examine the identification witness[] and argue in summation as to
    factors causing doubts as to the accuracy of the identification—including . . . any
    suggestibility in the identification procedure.” 
    Id.
     Thus, any error in admitting Peters’s
    identification was not “unquantifiable and indeterminate.” Poole, 
    640 F.3d at 119
    .
    Ross counters that the identification procedure here was uniquely problematic
    because the district court made the identification for Peters and thereby “provided
    testimony against” Ross. 5 Reply Br. at 2. The district court’s decision to refer to Ross by
    name might well have been ill-advised, but it is not enough to “call[] into question the
    [court’s] objectivity.” Vasquez, 
    474 U.S. at 263
    . The court’s actions create no greater
    objectivity concerns than other alleged errors the Fourth Circuit has treated as non-
    structural. In United States v. Poole, for instance, the defendant claimed that the district
    court violated due process during a bench trial by referring repeatedly to his co-defendants’
    guilty pleas (which were not in evidence) and then relying on those pleas to convict the
    defendant. 
    640 F.3d at
    116–18. This Court held that the district court’s actions did not
    5
    In fact, it was the Government—not the court—who first directed Peters’s
    attention to Ross and identified him by name. After asking Peters if she had met “the
    defendant, Jacob Ross,” the Government requested that the court “ask the defendant to
    remove his mask.” J.A. 468–69. The court then stated, “Mr. Ross, if you would please
    take down your mask.” J.A. 469.
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    qualify as structural error, but rather were “a classic example of a trial error.” 
    Id. at 119
    .
    It reasoned that the court’s statements about the co-defendants’ guilty pleas “occurred at
    various discrete times during the presentation of the case and in the court’s memorandum
    opinion” and “c[ould] be measured against the other evidence that was properly admitted
    during the trial.” 
    Id.
    The district court’s alleged error here shares the same key features. For starters,
    Peters’s identification occurred at a “discrete time” during the trial. 
    Id.
     In addition, its
    impact “can be measured against the other evidence that was properly admitted during the
    trial”—including Peters’s other testimony implicating Ross. 
    Id.
     This Court has done
    exactly that in prior cases when reviewing the improper admission of identification
    testimony. See, e.g., United States v. Greene, 
    704 F.3d 298
    , 303–04 (4th Cir. 2013)
    (holding that admission of resemblance testimony did not qualify as plain error because it
    did not affect the outcome of trial); Thompson v. Leeke, 
    756 F.2d 314
    , 316 (4th Cir. 1985)
    (applying harmless-error review to identification issue). To the extent the district court
    erred in admitting the Peters identification, that error would not fall within the “very limited
    class” of errors that qualify as structural. Poole, 
    640 F.3d at 119
    .
    B.
    Having established that the district court’s alleged error was not structural, we next
    must assess whether the court nonetheless plainly erred by creating or allowing an overly
    suggestive identification procedure. When reviewing the court’s actions for plain error,
    we first ask whether the district court committed any error in relation to the Peters
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    identification. See United States v. Moore, 
    11 F.3d 475
    , 481 (4th Cir. 1993). Here, that
    question is dispositive, as Ross has failed to identify any cognizable error.
    In his opening brief, Ross argued in passing that the Peters identification violated his
    due process rights. The Supreme Court has recognized that “reliability is the linchpin in
    determining the admissibility of identification testimony.” Manson, 
    432 U.S. at 114
    .
    “[E]ven where unnecessarily suggestive procedures are used, due process does not require
    exclusion of the evidence if the identification was sufficiently reliable to preclude the
    substantial likelihood of misidentification.” United States v. Ivey, 
    60 F.4th 99
    , 109 (4th Cir.
    2023) (quoting United States v. Saint Louis, 
    889 F.3d 145
    , 152 (4th Cir. 2018) (cleaned up)).
    Courts therefore follow a two-step framework for assessing due process challenges
    to identification testimony. “First, the court must consider whether the identification
    procedure is unnecessarily suggestive.” Greene, 
    704 F.3d at 305
     (quoting Satcher v. Pruett,
    
    126 F.3d 561
    , 566 (4th Cir. 1997)). “Second, if the procedure was unnecessarily suggestive,
    a court must look at several factors to determine if the identification testimony is nevertheless
    reliable under the totality of the circumstances.” 
    Id.
     The relevant factors include: (1) “the
    opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime”; (2) “the witness’
    degree of attention” at the time of the offense; (3) “the accuracy of the witness’ prior
    description of the criminal”; (4) “the level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the
    confrontation”; and (5) “the length of time between the crime and the confrontation.” Saint
    Louis, 
    889 F.3d at 153
     (quoting Neil v. Biggers, 
    409 U.S. 188
    , 199–200 (1972)). “We weigh
    these factors against the corrupting effect of the suggestive identification itself, keeping in
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    mind that the exclusion of such evidence is the exception to the rule that favors the
    admissibility of eyewitness identification for the jury’s consideration.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    While the Supreme Court articulated this framework in cases addressing the
    admissibility of prior out-of-court identifications (such as police lineups), we have applied
    the same test when evaluating a witness’s first-time identification in court. 6 See Greene,
    
    704 F.3d at 303
    . Here, even if we assume that Peters’s identification of Ross involved an
    unduly suggestive procedure at the first step, Ross apparently concedes that he cannot
    prevail at the second step. During oral argument, his counsel admitted that the Biggers
    factors, if applied to Peters’s identification, “weigh in favor of the Government.” 7 Oral
    Argument at 7:00–7:32.
    Ross’s concession on this point is understandable. Peters’s detailed trial testimony
    about her relationship and interactions with Ross leaves little doubt that her identification was
    reliable under the relevant factors.8 First, her month-long intimate relationship with Ross—
    6
    The Government argues that the two-step due process test applies only when law
    enforcement (including prosecutors) created the suggestive identification procedure, and
    thus is inapplicable here, where the court was responsible for the allegedly suggestive
    conditions. But we see no reason why the same framework is not equally applicable in this
    case. At any rate, as we have noted, the Government played a role in creating the allegedly
    suggestive conditions for Peters’s identification.
    7
    In his briefs, Ross did not even acknowledge the second step of the due process
    analysis or the Biggers factors, even after the Government discussed the factors in its
    response brief.
    8
    The “Biggers factors” are best suited to evaluate the reliability of an identification
    made by an eyewitness who had one discrete run-in with the perpetrator. In Greene, for
    example, the witness was a bank teller who observed a robbery. See 
    704 F.3d at 301
    .
    While Peters’s past relationship with Ross distinguishes her from the typical eyewitness,
    the Biggers factors remain useful in assessing the reliability of her identification.
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    a fact Ross never disputed at trial—certainly gave her numerous opportunities to view Ross
    around the time of his offenses. Cf. Saint Louis, 
    889 F.3d at
    153–54 (concluding that the
    opportunity-to-view factor “strongly support[s] a finding of reliability” where a kidnapping
    victim “was able to see her captors and speak with them during the seven days she was held”).
    Second, Peters demonstrated a high “degree of attention” to details that corroborated
    her relationship with Ross and knowledge of the offenses. 
    Id. at 154
    . She described the
    interior of the Ross Skid Products apartment in detail, including the color of the walls,
    which she accurately called “a teal color or bluish green.” J.A. 472–73. More importantly,
    Peters recalled specific—and sometimes graphic—details about conversations she had
    with Ross, Ross’s WhatsApp video calls, and sexual assaults she claimed he committed
    against two children.
    Third, Peters’s prior description of Ross in her June 2020 police report also proved
    accurate. At that time, Peters showed MCSO texts she had received from the 2873 number,
    which phone records confirmed was connected to Ross. When the Government asked her
    about the same text messages at trial, Peters immediately recognized them and again
    identified the phone number as Ross’s.
    The fourth factor, the witness’s level of certainty at the time of the confrontation, is
    the only one that arguably weighs in Ross’s favor. At trial, Peters initially could not
    identify Ross in the courtroom, even after the Government directed her attention to the
    “defendant, Jacob Ross.” J.A. 468. But once the court instructed Ross to remove his mask,
    Peters identified him with certainty. This suggests that the mask, perhaps combined with
    Ross’s beard (a recent change in his appearance), was the main impediment to an initial
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    identification. The fact that Peters could not identify the masked Ross even after the
    Government named him as the defendant seems to reinforce this point. In any event, Ross
    has never argued that the level-of-certainty factor—or any other factor, for that matter—
    demonstrates that Peters’s identification was unreliable.
    Fifth, and finally, while the ten-month gap between Peters’s observations and her
    in-court identification “would be a seriously negative factor” in a typical eyewitness
    identification case, Biggers, 
    409 U.S. at 200
    , it does not create a reliability problem under
    the unique circumstances of this case. Unlike the conventional eyewitness, Peters did not
    merely observe Ross on one occasion, but had a month-long intimate relationship with him.
    As Ross himself recognizes, the Biggers factors demonstrate that Peters’s in-court
    identification was reliable, even if the procedure leading to that identification was
    improperly suggestive. Ross therefore cannot establish that the identification violated his
    due process rights.
    III.
    Ross separately argues that his fifty-five-year prison sentence is disproportionate to
    his offenses and therefore violates the Eighth Amendment.            We review an Eighth
    Amendment proportionality challenge to a sentence de novo. 9 United States v. Cobler, 
    748 F.3d 570
    , 574 (4th Cir. 2014).
    9
    The Government argues that Ross’s proportionality challenge is subject to plain-
    error review because Ross failed to object to his sentence on this particular ground. We
    disagree. A defendant may preserve an issue by informing the court “when the court ruling
    or order is made or sought.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 51(b) (emphasis added). Here, Ross
    (Continued)
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    A term-of-years prison sentence such as Ross’s may violate the Eighth Amendment’s
    prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment when it is “disproportionate to the crime for
    which it is imposed.” 
    Id. at 575
    . Ross raises an “as-applied” challenge to his sentence, alleging
    that his fifty-five-year sentence is disproportionately harsh “given all the circumstances in [his]
    particular case.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    , 59 (2010)).
    The Eighth Amendment’s “narrow proportionality principle” “does not require
    strict proportionality between crime and sentence,” but “forbids only extreme sentences
    that are grossly disproportionate to the crime.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 59–60).
    To determine whether a defendant’s sentence meets this standard, an appellate court
    follows a two-step test. First, the court conducts “a ‘threshold comparison’ of the gravity
    of the offense and the severity of the sentence” and asks whether that comparison “leads to
    an inference of gross disproportionality.” Id. (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 59–60). This
    step is satisfied only in a “rare case.” Graham, 560 U.S. at 60. If the court concludes that
    it can draw such an inference, it next compares the defendant’s sentence “(1) to sentences
    for other offenses in the same jurisdiction; and (2) to sentences for similar offenses in other
    preserved his proportionality challenge in his sentencing memorandum, which, in arguing
    for a 360-month sentence, suggested that the much longer Guidelines sentence might be
    “subject to future [c]onstitutional review” as an Eighth Amendment violation. Sentencing
    Memorandum at 5–6, United States v. Ross, No. 1:20-CR-64-MR-WCM-1 (W.D.N.C. Jan.
    13, 2022), ECF No. 54. At the sentencing hearing, Ross’s counsel again asked the district
    court to “consider a sentence of 360 months” based on “the constitutional issues that we
    outlined in the sentencing memorandum,” J.A. 704, and the district court noted it had
    reviewed the memorandum. Because Ross brought the issue to the court’s attention, he
    did not also need to lodge a formal objection after the court imposed the 660-month
    sentence. See Holguin-Hernandez v. United States, 
    140 S. Ct. 762
    , 766 (2020) (holding
    that defendant preserved a reasonableness challenge to a sentence because he had
    “advocate[d] for a sentence shorter than the one ultimately imposed”).
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    jurisdictions.” Cobler, 
    748 F.3d at 575
    . The sentence violates the Eighth Amendment only
    if that comparative analysis validates the inference of gross disproportionality. 
    Id.
    The Supreme Court has identified a non-capital sentence as grossly disproportionate
    in just one case, where a repeat offender received a life sentence without parole for passing
    a bad check for $100. Solem v. Helm, 
    463 U.S. 277
    , 296–97 (1983). In reaching that
    conclusion, the Court emphasized that passing a bad check was “one of the most passive
    felonies a person could commit” and “involved neither violence nor threat of violence to
    any person.” 
    Id.
     The Court has rejected all other proportionality challenges to life
    sentences,   consistently    declining   to   draw   the   threshold   inference   of   gross
    disproportionality. See, e.g., Ewing v. California, 
    538 U.S. 11
    , 28–30 (2003) (upholding
    sentence of twenty-five years to life under California’s “three-strikes” law, where
    defendant’s third offense was theft of $1,200 in golf clubs); Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
    , 997 (1991) (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment)
    (upholding sentence of life without parole for first-time offender convicted of possessing
    672 grams of cocaine); Hutto v. Davis, 
    454 U.S. 370
    , 374–75 (1982) (per curiam)
    (upholding forty-year sentence for possession with intent to distribute nine ounces of
    marijuana); Rummel v. Estelle, 
    445 U.S. 263
    , 285 (1980) (rejecting proportionality
    challenge to mandatory life sentence under Texas recidivist statute for offense of obtaining
    $120.75 by false pretenses).      The Fourth Circuit, too, has “not identified a grossly
    disproportionate life sentence or putative life sentence in the wake of Solem.” United States
    v. Said, 
    798 F.3d 182
    , 198 (4th Cir. 2015).
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    Based on this precedent, we cannot infer that Ross’s fifty-five-year sentence is
    grossly disproportionate to his offenses. Even if we assume that his sentence is the
    functional equivalent of a life sentence without the possibility of parole, 10 his child
    pornography offenses “are at least as grave as the drug offense in Harmelin, which the
    Supreme Court deemed sufficiently egregious to justify a similar sentence.” Cobler, 
    748 F.3d at 580
    . On multiple occasions, Ross paid a woman in the Philippines not only to pose
    very young children in a pornographic manner, but also to molest them for his own sexual
    gratification. Ross’s offenses, which directly facilitated the exploitation and sexual abuse
    of particularly vulnerable victims, are far from “one of the most passive felonies a person
    could commit.” Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 296
    ; see also United States v. Dowell, 
    771 F.3d 162
    ,
    168–69 (4th Cir. 2014) (emphasizing harm caused by exploitation and molestation of a
    young child in holding that defendant’s 960-month sentence for producing child
    pornography did not give rise to threshold inference of gross disproportionality).
    A functional life sentence is a severe punishment by any measure. That said, the
    Supreme Court has instructed that “rational legislative judgment[s]” to impose harsh
    sentences for serious offenses generally are “entitled to deference” in the proportionality
    analysis.   Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at 30
    .      Ross’s sentence reflects Congress’s “legislative
    judgment”—to which we defer—“that [child pornography is] harmful to the physiological,
    emotional, and mental health of children, and that preventing the sexual exploitation of this
    10
    The Supreme Court has not clarified whether, for Eighth Amendment purposes,
    a lengthy term-of-years sentence may be treated as the equivalent of a sentence of life
    imprisonment without parole. See Cobler, 
    748 F.3d at
    580 n.4.
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    uniquely vulnerable group ‘constitutes a government objective of surpassing importance.’”
    Cobler, 
    748 F.3d at 580
     (quoting New York v. Ferber, 
    458 U.S. 747
    , 757–58 (1982)).
    Because this is not one of the “rare case[s]” where we can draw an inference of gross
    disproportionality, Graham, 560 U.S. at 60, Ross’s Eighth Amendment challenge to his
    sentence fails.
    IV.
    For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
    AFFIRMED
    20