United States v. Kallestad ( 2001 )


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  •                 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 98-51089
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    CHARLES O. KALLESTAD,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    Before REYNALDO G. GARZA, JOLLY, and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges.
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
    In this 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     case we consider a challenge to the
    constitutionality of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(4)(B), which prohibits the
    possession of sexually explicit depictions of minors if those
    depictions or the materials used to produce them were shipped in
    interstate    commerce.1      We   are   persuaded   that   Congress   could
    1
    At the time of Kallestad’s charged conduct, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(4)(B) provided criminal penalties for any person who
    (B) knowingly possesses 3 or more books, magazines,
    periodicals, films, video tapes, or other matter which
    contain any visual depiction that has been mailed, or has
    been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign
    commerce, or which was produced using materials which
    have been mailed or so shipped or transported, by any
    means including by computer, if –
    (i) the producing of such visual depiction
    rationally conclude that to regulate a national market in child
    pornography it was necessary to regulate its local possession.
    I
    Government agents found a large number of nude photos and
    films of women, some of whom appeared to be minors, in Kallestad’s
    home.    They      also   found   notes        he    made    regarding    the   women,
    including their names, addresses, and phone numbers.                      Agents used
    these notes to locate some of the women, and they discovered that
    several of them were minors at the time the photos and films were
    taken.
    Kallestad had advertised in the Austin American Statesman
    newspaper    for    “slender      female       nude       models."      Some    of   the
    advertisements      stated     that    the          age     of    the   "models"     was
    "unimportant."        Several     of   the      girls       who   responded     to   the
    advertisement were 16 to 17 years old, and most of them told
    involves the use of a minor                      engaging    in
    sexually explicit conduct; and
    (ii) such visual depiction is of such conduct.
    
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(4)(B) (1991). Section 2252(a)(4) was amended
    on October 30, 1998.     See Protection of Children From Sexual
    Predators Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-314, Title II, §§ 202(a),
    203(a), 
    112 Stat. 2977
    , 2977-78. The amended statute makes it an
    offense to possess one or more (rather than three or more) sexually
    explicit depictions of a minor. See 
    18 U.S.C.A. § 2252
    (a)(4)(B)
    (2000). The amendments also provide for an affirmative defense
    when three or fewer matters are possessed and the defendant either
    promptly destroyed them or contacted law enforcement authorities.
    See 
    18 U.S.C.A. § 2252
    (c) (2000).         Kallestad’s conduct was
    completed by October 31, 1991, the date on which officers
    discovered the photographs.    Since Kallestad’s conduct occurred
    before the statute was amended, the government was required to
    prove that he had three or more or sexually explicit depictions of
    a minor.
    2
    Kallestad their ages and that they were high school students.
    Kallestad took pictures and made films of the girls engaged in
    sexually explicit conduct and in some instances of them engaging in
    such       conduct   with   him.        The   photos   and   films   were    made   at
    Kallestad’s home in Austin, Texas.                 The film used to make the
    photos and films was manufactured outside of Texas.
    Kallestad was convicted of numerous offenses including six
    counts charging violations of section 2252(a)(4)(B).2                       On direct
    appeal, we vacated his sentence, finding an error in his sentence.
    After Kallestad was resentenced, he moved for relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    .         He argues that his conviction for possession of
    material involving the sexual exploitation of minors should be
    vacated because the statute making that conduct an offense exceeds
    the authority of Congress under the Commerce Clause. Kallestad did
    not raise this issue on direct appeal.
    The magistrate recommended denying relief, and the district
    court did so, also denying a certificate of appealability.                           We
    granted       a   certificate      of   appealability    on   the    issue    of    the
    constitutionality           of   the    statute    prohibiting       possession      of
    materials involving the sexual exploitation of minors.
    II
    The government argues that Kallestad’s challenge is barred
    because he did not raise the question on direct appeal.                     A section
    2255 movant who fails to raise a constitutional or jurisdictional
    2
    His other offenses included conspiracy to commit bank fraud,
    bank fraud, aiding and abetting, and making false statements to a
    federally insured bank.
    3
    issue on direct appeal waives the issue for a collateral attack on
    his conviction, unless there is cause for the default and prejudice
    as a result.3     Kallestad argues that his counsel was ineffective
    for not raising the issue on direct appeal.
    It is true that ineffective assistance of counsel can meet the
    cause and prejudice requirement for overcoming procedural default
    in a section 2255 motion.4      We do not consider the contention
    further because the government failed to preserve the issue.    The
    government asserted the procedural bar before the magistrate, but
    filed no objection to the magistrate’s proposed findings and
    recommendations even though Kallestad filed objections and the
    district court conducted a de novo review of the case.          The
    government must invoke the procedural bar in the district court to
    raise it here.5    A party who fails to file written objections to a
    magistrate judge’s proposed findings and recommendations waives the
    objection, and on appeal we will review the issue for plain error
    only.6    The district court did not err in reaching the merits of
    the constitutional challenge.
    III
    3
    United States v. Patten, 
    40 F.3d 774
    , 776-77 (5th Cir. 1994)
    (per curiam); United States v. Pierce, 
    959 F.2d 1297
    , 1301 (5th
    Cir. 1992); United States v. Capua, 
    656 F.2d 1033
    , 1037 (5th Cir.
    Unit A 1981).
    4
    Patten, 
    40 F.3d at 776-77
    ; Pierce, 
    959 F.2d at 1301
    .
    5
    See United States v. Drobny, 
    955 F.2d 990
    , 995 (5th Cir.
    1992).
    6
    See Douglass v. United Services Auto Ass’n, 
    79 F.3d 1415
    ,
    1428-29 (5th Cir. 1996).
    4
    Kallestad argues that section 2252(a)(4)(B), which prohibits
    mere possession of child pornography, is beyond Congress’s power
    under the Commerce Clause. We review this constitutional challenge
    to a federal statute de novo.7
    Similar arguments have been made in, and rejected by, other
    courts.     The Third Circuit, in United States v. Rodia,8 rejected a
    similar challenge by a defendant convicted of possessing child
    pornography.     The court noted that, in passing the 1978 Protection
    of Children Against Sexual Exploitation Act, Congress explicitly
    found that child pornography was a “multi-million dollar industry,”
    and the court concluded that there was a “substantial interstate
    market” in child pornography.9    The Rodia court then analogized to
    Wickard v. Filburn,10 and upheld the statute.11    Other courts have
    upheld section 2252(a)(4)(B) based on its jurisdictional hook,
    which requires that either the pornography itself, or the material
    used to manufacture it, has moved in interstate commerce.12
    In United States v. Lopez,13 the Supreme Court defined three
    7
    See United States v. Jennings, 
    195 F.3d 795
    , 800 (5th Cir.
    1999).
    8
    
    194 F.3d 465
    , 477-79 (3d Cir. 1999).
    9
    
    Id. at 474
    .
    10
    
    317 U.S. 111
     (1942).
    11
    See Rodia, 
    194 F.3d at 476
    ; see also United States v.
    Robinson, 
    137 F.3d 652
    , 655-56 (1st Cir. 1998).
    12
    See United States v. Bausch, 
    140 F.3d 739
    , 740-42 (8th Cir.
    1998); Robinson, 
    137 F.3d at 654-55
    .
    13
    
    514 U.S. 549
     (1995).
    5
    categories of activity Congress may regulate under the Commerce
    Clause:    channels   of    interstate       commerce,    persons      or   things
    traveling     in   interstate   commerce,        and    activities     having    a
    substantial effect on interstate commerce.14              In United States v.
    Morrison,15 the Court clarified how the third category is to be
    analyzed.     Courts are directed to inquire (1) whether the statute
    regulates “commerce,” or an activity that might be deemed an
    “economic activity,” broadly defined; (2) whether the statute has
    an “express jurisdictional element” that restricts its application
    to activities that have “an explicit connection with or effect on
    interstate commerce”; (3) whether congressional findings support
    the judgment that the activity in question has a substantial effect
    on interstate commerce; and (4) whether the act made an offense has
    an attenuated relationship to that substantial effect on interstate
    commerce.16
    Kallestad argues that his offense falls within the third
    category, and like the crime of possessing a gun near a school
    zone, does not have a sufficiently substantial effect on interstate
    commerce to fall within Congress’s authority.                    He challenges
    section 2252(a)(4)(B)       facially       and   as   applied.    We    find    his
    challenge unpersuasive.
    A
    14
    
    Id. at 558-59
    .
    15
    
    120 S.Ct. 1740
     (2000).
    16
    
    Id. at 1749-51
    .
    6
    Applying      the   first   Morrison   factor,     the    conduct   being
    regulated here is commercial in character, defined broadly. As the
    1986 Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography found, much of
    the interstate traffic in child pornography “involves photographs
    taken     by   child   abusers   themselves,    and   then    either   kept   or
    informally distributed to other child abusers.”17             Such pornography
    is exchanged through the mails,18 and also becomes the basis for
    commercial child pornography magazines, which are made not with
    photographs taken by the magazine producers, but rather with
    homemade photographs submitted by private child abusers.19                This
    case is therefore distinct from Lopez, as the child pornography
    statute "represents Congressional regulation of an item bound up
    with interstate attributes and thus differs in substantial respect
    from legislation concerning possession of a firearm within a purely
    local school zone."20 Moreover, Wickard affirms that, when a person
    produces for their own consumption a product that is traded in an
    interstate market, his conduct is economic in character. Kallestad
    may not have intended to sell his photographs, but then Filburn
    never intended to sell his wheat.21            In this regard, Kallestad’s
    17
    Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography: Final Report
    406 (U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 1986).
    18
    Id. at 407.
    19
    Id. at 408.
    20
    United States v. Knutson, 
    113 F.3d 27
    , 30 (5th Cir. 1997),
    quoting United States v. Wilks, 
    58 F.3d 1518
    , 1521 (10th Cir.
    1995).
    21
    See Wickard, 
    317 U.S. at 114
    . The dissent implies that
    Wickard is no longer tenable in the wake of the Supreme Court's
    7
    conduct was unlike the rape at issue in Morrison.
    B
    Section 2252(a)(4)(B) also contains a jurisdictional hook.22
    Section    2252(a)(4)(B)       makes    it   an    offense     to   possess   child
    pornography      that   “has   been     mailed,     or   has   been      shipped   or
    transported      in   interstate   or    foreign     commerce,      or    which    was
    produced by using materials which have been mailed or so shipped or
    transported.”23 No evidence demonstrated that Kallestad’s pictures
    moved in interstate commerce, but the evidence established that his
    film did.
    This jurisdictional element is not alone sufficient to render
    section 2252(a)(4)(B) constitutional.              That argument, advanced by
    the government, has no principled limit.                 Where the relationship
    between    the   interstate     and     local     activity     is   attenuated,      a
    jurisdictional hook alone cannot justify aggregating effects upon
    decisions in Lopez and Morrison. Although the Court has noted that
    Wickard resides in the outer boundaries of the Commerce Power, see
    United States v. Lopez, 
    514 U.S. 549
    , 560 (1995), it has never
    overruled the case. The Court has repeatedly underscored its
    unwillingness to recognize the overruling of its prior decisions by
    implication. See Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 237 (1997) ("We
    do not acknowledge, and we do not hold that other courts should
    conclude our more recent cases have, by implication, overruled an
    earlier precedent. . . . [T]he Court of Appeals should follow the
    case which directly controls, leaving to this Court the prerogative
    of overruling its own decisions.") (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    22
    This court has said that the lack of such an element was
    central to the Lopez Court’s decision to strike down the Gun-Free
    School Zones Act. See United States v. Luna, 
    165 F.3d 316
    , 320
    (5th Cir. 1999).
    23
    
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(4)(B).
    8
    interstate commerce to find Congressional power under the Commerce
    Clause.    It is one thing for Congress to prohibit possession of a
    weapon that has itself moved in interstate commerce, but it is
    quite another thing for Congress to prohibit homicides using such
    weapons.
    What the jurisdictional hook does accomplish in this case,
    however, is to limit prosecutions under section 2252(a)(4)(B) to a
    smaller    universe   of   provable   offenses.    It    further   reflects
    Congress’s sensitivity to the limits upon its commerce power, and
    Congress’s express interest in regulating national markets.
    C
    Ample findings establish the proposition that local possession
    of child pornography impacts interstate commerce.           In passing the
    original 1977 Act, Congress found that child pornography was
    harmful    to   children,    and   represented    “a    large   industry   –
    representing millions of dollars in annual revenue – that operates
    on a nationwide scale and relies heavily on the use of the mails
    and other instrumentalities of interstate and foreign commerce.”24
    Even then Congress did not reach for local possession.                 That
    effort, now at issue, came only after the widely reported Meese
    Commission extensively documented the interstate, commercial nature
    of child pornography.25
    These findings show that child pornography is a growing,
    24
    S. Rep. No. 95-438, 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 40, 44.
    25
    See Part A, supra.    The Meese Commission also advocated
    expanding the jurisdictional coverage of the then-existing version
    of the statute to encompass activities that "affect" commerce. See
    Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, supra, at 475.
    9
    predatory business that exploits and injures the most vulnerable
    among us. Congress found that the child pornography trade operates
    across the United States, out of major cities and small towns
    alike, to reach consumers nationwide.26
    D
    We come, therefore, to the fourth Morrison factor – whether or
    not the act criminalized has only an attenuated relationship to
    interstate commerce.          As explained in Morrison, as well as in our
    opinion in United States v. Bird,27 and the dissent in United States
    v.   Hickman,28      the   question     is       the   rationality    of    Congress’s
    judgment. We ask whether Congress could rationally have determined
    that    it    must    reach    local,    intrastate         conduct    in    order   to
    effectively regulate a national, interstate market.
    It is not sufficient merely for Congress to analogize the
    local conduct it seeks to regulate to some form of interstate
    conduct it may permissibly regulate.                   Such a license would invite
    the “house that Jack built” justification for federal authority,
    unfettered and nigh unprincipled.                      Yet the commerce power has
    internal limits, that are judicially enforceable.                     We enforce one
    such internal limit today by asking if there is a national market
    in the sense that its discrete and local parts are interdependent
    and interact.         This inquiry lays aside large classes of local
    conduct that, while they may present a serious, even “national,”
    26
    1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 42-48.
    27
    
    124 F.3d 667
     (5th Cir. 1997).
    28
    
    179 F.3d 230
    , 232-33 (5th Cir. 1999) (equally divided en
    banc) (Higginbotham, J., dissenting).
    10
    problem, do not involve a national market.            For example, that the
    homicide rate is high and presents a national concern does not mean
    that Congress may federally regulate purely local murder.
    Congress      determined   that    an    interstate   market     in    child
    pornography exists.         No one questions Congress’s authority to
    regulate that market directly.               Unlike the rape at issue in
    Morrison, the possession of child pornography interacts with a
    national market on both the supply and demand side.              Applying the
    commerce power, read through the Necessary and Proper Clause,
    Congress    can   reach    purely   local     possession   if   it   rationally
    determines that doing so is necessary to effectively regulate the
    national market.
    Congress could reach such a conclusion with respect to child
    pornography because it may often be impossible to determine whether
    a specific piece of child pornography has moved in interstate
    commerce.     In    some   cases,   law      enforcement   officials       may   be
    fortunate enough to intercept child pornography en route.                  Absent
    that, however, child pornography does not customarily bear a label
    identifying the state in which it was produced.             For that reason,
    Congress could rationally determine that banning purely local
    possession was a necessary adjunct to its effort to ban interstate
    traffic.    Congress can rationally decide that failing to reach to
    the fountainheads will impede its regulation of the interstate
    stream.
    This is the rationale supporting the federal laws prohibiting
    11
    possession of certain controlled substances29 and firearms.30   We
    explained its limits upon the commerce power in a dissenting
    opinion in United States v. Hickman,31 and earlier in United States
    v. Bird.32    As we observed in Bird:
    [O]ur inquiry must determine not simply whether section
    29
    See United States v. Lopez, 
    459 F.2d 949
    , 951 (5th Cir.
    1972) (upholding federal drug laws, stating “where it is apparent
    that an attempt to separate interstate activities from intrastate
    activities would be a futile exercise substantially interfering
    with and obstructing the exercise of the granted power of Congress
    to regulate interstate commerce, that attempt is not required”).
    Although this case was decided before the Supreme Court's 1995
    Lopez decision, courts addressing Commerce Clause challenges to 
    18 U.S.C. § 841
     since that decision have found it constitutional. See
    United States v. Edwards, 
    98 F.3d 1364
    , 1369 (D.C. Cir. 1996);
    United States v. Kim, 
    94 F.3d 1247
    , 1249-50 (9th Cir. 1996); United
    States v. Bell, 
    90 F.3d 318
    , 321 (8th Cir. 1996); United States v.
    Lerebours, 
    87 F.3d 582
    , 584-85 (1st Cir. 1996).
    30
    The Supreme Court in Lopez refused to decide the broader
    question of whether Congress could forbid the "mere possession" of
    firearms.   See Lopez, 404 U.S. at 339 n.4.      Since the Supreme
    Court's Lopez decision, this Court has held that Congress could
    forbid the possession of a firearm by a person subject to a
    protective order prohibiting domestic violence. See United States
    v. Pierson, 
    139 F.3d 501
     (5th Cir. 1998); 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(8).
    In Pierson, this Court found the presence of a jurisdictional hook
    a dispositive basis for distinguishing the Supreme Court's Lopez
    decision. See Pierson, 
    139 F.3d at 503
    . See also United States v.
    Knutson, 
    113 F.3d 27
     (5th Cir. 1997) (upholding 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (o),
    which criminalizes possession of a machine gun, against a Commerce
    Clause challenge); United States v. Kirk, 
    105 F.3d 997
    , 999-1005
    (5th Cir. 1997) (en banc) (opinion of Higginbotham, J.) (same).
    The dissent's arguments in this case contradict the clear import of
    this Court's decisions in the drug and firearms contexts. The logic
    underlying the dissent would require a reversal of these decisions,
    thereby overturning a vital and established body of federal
    protections against criminal conduct.
    31
    179 F.3d at 232-33.
    32
    
    124 F.3d at 667
    .
    12
    248(a)(1) proscribes intrastate activity that has (or
    might have) a substantial affect on interstate commerce,
    but rather whether there is a national commercial market
    in abortion-related services such that the regulated
    conduct – considered in light of the size and scope of
    the benchmark market – substantially affects interstate
    commerce.33
    Bird holds, as we again insist today, that in the absence of a
    jurisdictional hook itself sufficient to sustain its regulation,
    Congress must have as its purpose the regulation of a national
    market and a rational basis for concluding that permitting the
    proscribed conduct would impair Congress’s ability to regulate that
    market.
    A true market is inevitably commercial, and is pushed by
    supply and demand, whether manifested in swaps or purchase and
    sale.      The Congress, supported by the findings of the Meese
    Commission, found such a market in child pornography.           With such a
    market we have little hesitation in concluding that where the
    product is fungible, such that it is difficult if not impossible to
    trace, Congress can prohibit local possession in an effort to
    regulate product supply and demand and thereby halt interstate
    trade.
    IV
    In sum, acting pursuant to its commerce power, Congress may
    reach intrastate possession in an effort it may rationally conclude
    is   necessary    to   control   this    interstate   market.   It   is   not
    irrational for Congress to conclude that to regulate a national
    commercial market for a fungible good, it must as a practical
    33
    
    Id. at 677
    .
    13
    matter be able to regulate the possession of that type of good –
    possession that in a real economic sense is never wholly “local.”
    Local inventories become the source of trading and selling as
    familiarity dulls the utility of the pictures.
    Congress could reach Filburn’s wheat because the federal
    government legitimately sought to support the price of wheat on the
    interstate market. Congress had little concern for the few bushels
    of wheat in Wickard grown for home consumption.      Its intent was
    plainly to regulate the national market.      That its goal was to
    support wheat prices is of no moment.   Its means, by necessity, was
    control of supply.     Our analysis would not differ if Congress’s
    regulatory objective had been to end all production of wheat.   For
    like reasons, Congress can reach Kallestad’s pornography because it
    legitimately seeks to eliminate the interstate market for child
    pornography.     And it is rational to conclude that reaching local
    possession is a necessary incident to that objective.
    V
    We hold that section 2252(a)(4)(B) is facially valid and that
    its application to Kallestad in this case falls within Congress’s
    power under the Commerce Clause.
    AFFIRMED.
    14
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent.        For whatever else it may be cited,
    United States v. Lopez at least stands for the proposition that
    purely intrastate, non-commercial possession of a non-fungible good
    “is in no sense an economic activity that might, through repetition
    elsewhere, substantially affect any sort of interstate commerce.”
    
    514 U.S. 549
    , 567, 
    115 S.Ct. 1624
     (1995).             In the light of this
    understanding, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(4) cannot constitutionally be
    applied to this defendant’s conduct–-the simple local possession of
    self-generated child pornography in which there is no suggestion of
    commercial activity.
    The Supreme Court recently reiterated in United States v.
    Morrison   that    “Lopez’s     review   of   Commerce    Clause       case    law
    demonstrates that in those cases where we have sustained federal
    regulation    of   intrastate    activity     based   upon    the    activity’s
    substantial   effects    on   interstate      commerce,      the    activity   in
    question has been some sort of economic endeavor.”                 
    529 U.S. 598
    ,
    
    120 S.Ct. 1740
    , 1750 (2000).       Like here, the activity in question
    there was no “economic endeavor.”             The challenged statute in
    Morrison was the Violence Against Women Act, which criminalized
    even intrastate, local acts of violence. The Court struck down the
    statute, stating that “[w]e accordingly reject the argument that
    Congress may regulate non-economic, violent criminal conduct based
    solely on that conduct’s aggregate effect on interstate commerce.
    The Constitution requires a distinction between what is truly
    national and what is truly local.”     
    Id. at 1754
    .
    Today, the majority has embraced logic the Morrison Court
    eschewed.     The majority holds that Congress can indeed regulate
    non-economic, intrastate criminal conduct (possession of child
    pornography), simply because “this reach into local intrastate
    conduct was a necessary incident of a congressional effort to
    regulate a national market.”     It so holds, despite the Morrison
    Court’s observation that “thus far in our Nation’s history our
    cases have upheld Commerce Clause regulation of intrastate activity
    only where that activity is economic in nature.”      
    Id. at 1751
    .
    The majority never asserts that simple possession of self-
    generated child pornography is an economic activity.          Indeed,
    simple possession for personal purposes cannot possibly be so
    classified.    Instead, the majority’s opinion relies on the fall-
    back principle of Wickard v. Filburn to establish that Congress can
    reach even non-economic intrastate activity.    See 
    317 U.S. 111
    , 
    63 S.Ct. 82
     (1942).    The majority undertakes such an application of
    Wickard, even though Morrison explicitly reminds us that “in every
    case where we have sustained federal regulation under Wickard’s
    aggregation principle, the regulated activity was of an apparent
    commercial character.”   Morrison, 
    120 S.Ct. at 1750, n.4
    .    Because
    I can think of no activity less commercial than the simple local
    -16-
    16
    possession of a good produced for personal use only, I believe that
    section 2252(a)(4) is unconstitutional as applied to Kallestad’s
    conduct.
    Neither does the majority persuade me that the requisite
    connection to interstate commerce exists in this case because
    outlawing local possession of visual depictions curbs interstate
    demand    for   those   pictures,   thus,   according   to   the   majority,
    discouraging individuals from entering the interstate market for
    child pornography.       The majority relies in substantial part on
    Wickard for this conclusion.           However, the persuasiveness of
    Wickard34 in the wake of Lopez and Morrison is questionable in the
    analysis of the criminal statute we consider today.35 Moreover, the
    facts before this court are distinguishable from those in Wickard.
    The Lopez Court noted that Wickard “involved economic activity in
    34
    We surely do not suggest that Wickard has been overruled by
    the Supreme Court since only the Supreme Court can overrule its own
    decisions. It cannot be denied, however, that some cases reach a
    zenith before fading, sometimes to be reignited at a later date.
    35
    The Lopez Court noted that while the “broad language” in
    Wickard, which the court called “the most far reaching example of
    Commerce Clause authority over intrastate activity,” may have
    “suggested the possibility of additional expansion, . . . we
    decline here to proceed any further.”       
    514 U.S. at 560, 567
    .
    Rather than expressly reaffirming the decision in Wickard, Lopez
    reconsidered that and other prior decisions to conclude that the
    regulation of noncommercial intrastate conduct must be “an
    essential part of a larger regulation of economic activity, in
    which the regulatory scheme would be undercut unless the intrastate
    activity were regulated.” 
    Id. at 561
    .
    -17-
    17
    a way that the possession of a gun in a school zone does not.”             
    Id. at 560
    .     In the same way, simple possession of child pornography
    does not interact with interstate commerce like the possession and
    consumption of wheat did in Wickard.            In Wickard, the act of
    possessing and consuming wheat directly affected the price of wheat
    on the national market, and it was Congress’ interest in regulating
    the price on that market that constitutionally justified the
    regulation of private wheat consumption:
    It can hardly be denied that a factor of such volume and
    variability as home-consumed wheat would have a
    substantial influence on price and market conditions.
    This may arise because being in marketable condition such
    wheat overhangs the market and, if induced by rising
    prices, tends to flow into the market and check price
    increases. . . . Home-grown wheat in this sense competes
    with wheat in commerce.
    
    317 U.S. 111
    , 128.
    Congress’ authority to regulate intrastate possession and
    consumption of wheat in Wickard derived only from the direct
    economic interaction between consumption of home-grown wheat and
    the market price of wheat.     However, the local possession of self-
    generated    child   pornography   does   not   have   such   a   direct   and
    substantial affect on an interstate market.36          In the facts before
    36
    The majority asserts that Wickard stands for the principle
    that “when a person produces for their own consumption a product
    that is traded in an interstate market,” Congress can regulate
    local possession of that product. This expansive interpretation of
    Congress’ commerce power has no limit. An interstate market exists
    for virtually any product one might possess.           Under this
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    us,   Kallestad’s      non-commercial,      local   possession      of    child
    pornography,   where    no    interstate    transportation    or    commercial
    transacting occurred, had at most an insubstantial affect on the
    interstate market for child pornography.
    Nevertheless,     the    majority     attempts   to    connect     simple
    possession of pornography with interstate commerce by asserting
    that such possession is “never wholly local” because “[l]ocal
    inventories become the source of trading and selling as familiarity
    dulls the utility of the pictures.”           I do not think the majority
    can so blithely assume this critical connection to interstate
    commerce   that   provides     the   essential   authority    for   Congress’
    regulation of intrastate conduct, especially when the evidence
    shows that no such connection existed in the facts of this case.
    Indeed, the evidence shows that Kallestad did not purchase, trade,
    sell, or barter the pornography he possessed.                 Nor does the
    evidence show that he had any intention to ever do so.                 Whatever
    weight Wickard should be given after Lopez and Morrison, it cannot
    be read to authorize congressional regulation of any intrastate
    possession of pornography on the theory that, in some cases, the
    possessed material eventually flows in interstate commerce.
    formulation, one would be “hard pressed to posit any activity by an
    individual that Congress is without power to regulate.” Lopez, 
    514 U.S. at 564
    .
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    Therefore, in accordance with Lopez and Morrison, we should
    hold         that   this   simple   local     possession      of    self-generated
    pornographic material, where no commercial activity was involved,
    no interstate transportation took place, and no congressional
    findings support the necessity of such regulation in the framework
    of   a       broader   regulatory   scheme,     is   beyond   the   reach    of   any
    reasonable interpretation of Congress’ Commerce Clause power.
    I     respectfully    dissent      from     the   majority’s       contrary
    conclusion.
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