Posts Tagged ‘child porn’

FINAL DEFENDANT SENTENCED TO 7 YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON FOR PARTICIPATING IN CHILD PORNOGRAPHY DISTRIBUTION RING

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

LOS ANGELES – The fifth defendant charged in relation to an Internet-based child pornography trafficking ring that specialized in images depicting the sexual abuse of young girls was sentenced today to seven years in federal prison.

Kevin Kaller Wright, 44, of Santa Monica, received the 84-month sentence from United States District Judge Margaret M. Morrow.

Wright and four other people pleaded guilty over the past year to being members of the Quest4More Internet bulletin board, whose members “advocated the sexual torture of children,” according to court documents. Quest4More, which was investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), was a secret bulletin board that allowed members to post and view pictures and videos, which often depicted very young children, sometimes being tortured or in bondage.

The defendants previously sentenced in this case are:

Michael Pharis, 51, of Las Vegas, Nevada, who was sentenced in December to 15 years in prison;

Daniel Murphy, 53, of Millville, New Jersey, who was sentenced in March to 151 months in prison;

Paul Challender, 54 of Big Rapids, Michigan, who was sentenced in March to 151 months in prison; and

William Ho, 39, of Hacienda Heights, California, who was sentenced in March to 135 months in prison.

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CHILD MOLESTER WHO PHOTOGRAPHED HIS SEXUAL ASSAULTS SENTENCED TO 30 YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON

Friday, July 1st, 2011

LOS ANGELES – An El Monte man who sexually molested a 5-year-old child for at least a year and admitted taking pictures of the attacks – images that were discovered when he applied to be an officer with the California Highway Patrol – was sentenced today to 30 years in federal prison.

Christian Hernandez, 31, received the maximum sentence of 360 months in prison after pleading guilty in 2009 to one count of production of child pornography.

United States District Judge Otis D. Wright II sentenced Hernandez and ordered that the defendant, once he is released from prison, be on supervised release for the rest of his life. In addition to the prison term, Judge Wright ordered Hernandez to pay more than $71,000 for counseling for the victim until the victim turns 18.

Hernandez has been in custody for the past three years after being arrested by the SAFE Team (Sexual Assault Felony Enforcement), a multi-agency task force coordinated by the FBI. The investigation began when Hernandez applied to the CHP and admitted in a background questionnaire that he had recently viewed child pornography. The CHP, which provides a full-time officer on the SAFE Team, immediately initiated an investigation and searched the El Monte residence where Hernandez had been living. Investigators found a collection of child pornography on Hernandez’s computer, including photos depicting Hernandez molesting a girl in the bedroom of the house.

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Ninth Circuit Opinions 04-13-11

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

1. US vs. Apodaca, No. 09-50372 (4-12-11)(Cudahy [7th Cir.] with Wardlaw; concurrence by W. Fletcher). Lifetime supervision on one count of possession of child pornography was affirmed. However, it was affirmed grudgingly. The opinion rejects the substantive unreasonableness arguments put forth by defendant . The court did consider mitigation (indeed, the sentence of two years was a downward variance); and the court did consider distinctions between sex offenders. The 9th, and especially the concurrence by W. Fletcher, express uneasiness with the Guidelines for possession of child porn and the supervised release terms. It is simply too long and shows little distinctions between types of offenders. The opinion and concurrence provide arguments why lifetime supervised release terms may be inappropriate. However, the imposition here was not an abuse of discretion.

2. Roberts vs. Hartley, No. 10-15760 (Wallace with Kozinski and Silverman). In light of Swarthout vs. Cooke, 131 S. Ct. 859 (2011), the 9th reverses the granting of a habeas relief for misapplication of California’s “some evidence” standard for parole determinations. The Supremes in Swarthout made clear that the liberty interest created by state parole is determined by the state courts. A state liberty interest does not a federal liberty interest make. Federal review of due process is limited to procedural fairness. Here, the petitioner had procedural fairness. Federal courts can not decide whether there was a misapplication of state parole laws in order to grant habeas relief.

Ninth Circuit Opinions 02-23-11

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

US v. Watson, No. 09-50666 (2-23-11)(M. Smith with Rawlinson and Jones, D.J., D, Nev.) It is well settled that if a defendant on SR takes off, the SR violation petition is tolled. This is the fugitive status tolling of the term. However, if the federal authorities get wind of his whereabouts, then the term starts to run again. Here, the defendant disappeared in 1995 to the wilds of Minnesota and eventually was arrested in Texas in 2009. Did his eleven (11) state arrests in Minnesota alert the feds? No, said the district court, and the 9th agreed. The arrests were all for state charges, and the federal law enforcement or federal courts had no constructive or imputed knowledge. The arrest or knowledge had to be traced to the federal authorities.

US v. Hernandez-Guerrero, No. 10-50096 (2-23-11)(Clifton with McKeown and W. Fletcher). This concerns “dates” and when a 1326 starts counting. The defendant here was convicted of a state crime and deported on June 7,1995. Upon his arrest in 2009, he said that he reentered on June 29, 1995. Should his offense start running when he reentered in 1995, or when he was “found in” in 2009? The difference is that the first (1995) would mean his state conviction counted for criminal history; while the 2009 date would mean that it was stale. The district court used the earlier date. The 9th decides to clarify its precedent on the operative date. The 9th looks at 1326 and notes that it has both reenter and found in language. The two do not have to be exclusive. The reentry starts the offense; the found in means that each day can be a new offense (which matters if the law changes and the penalties increase). The 9th makes this distinction, and then says that the context of each case will determine relevancy. As for the date in question, it was the result of the defendant’s statement to the immigration officer. It was used in the PSR. Since it was not challenged, the court could rely on it for calculations purposes.

US v. Lynn, No. 09-10242 (2-23-11)(Gould with Schroeder and Thomas). Another child porn case presents two interesting issues. First, arising in a sufficiency of evidence challenge, is whether interstate transportation is satisfied solely if the photos or video could be proved to have been shot in a different state. Second, whether there was double jeopardy here for receipt and possession of the same contraband, This case arose from a Limewire investigation, involving file sharing and swapping. The photos/video were found in the defendant’s laptop, having been downloaded into a folder and moved to a “saved” folder. The evidence was that one victim was videoed in Georgia and the other in Washington. The argument, aside from lack of knowledge or intent, was that the video was originally produced on one media (say VHS) and then changed to digital. The transformation had to be proved to have crossed state lines. The 9th rejected this argument, holding that the statute, and congressional intent, was that interstate commenced from point of origin, and that the list of types of media were examples and not limited. As for double jeopardy, the gov’t can charge receipt and possession as two distinct crimes, but the gov’t has to show the factual basis, and the change, or use made of the contraband once it was received, and then possession was of a different nature or media. Getting the contraband and keeping it in a file won’t cut it. The leading case is Schales, 546 F.3d at 978. Lastly, the vulnerable victim adjustment was not error given the age of some of the victims (infants and toddlers).

Ninth Circuit Opinions week of 02-09-11

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

US v. Krupa, No. 09-10396 (2-7-11)

(Callahan with Wolle, Sr. D.J., S.D. Iowa; dissent by Berzon). Does a single photo of a nude teenager from ” www.nude-teens.com” on a computer give rise to probable cause to search a computer? The 9th finds it would, when taken in context of the surroundings — a distraught mother wondering where her kids were, a house on a military base where the father of the kids is abroad, and the kids in the care of another male adult, with the house in disarray and 15 computers. These factors gave rise to a suspicion that justified a search warrant, which found more minor pornography. Dissenting, Berzon takes the majority to task for affirming the search warrant. Probable cause, Berzon notes, is not some “cloud” that follows a person around, and a person’s idiosyncrasies, or quirks, should not trigger a search. Here, the single photo of a teen that might have been around 17, and the name of a web site, The other factors such as the messiness, absence of father (although a note stating that the kids were in the care of the defendant, and the number of computers does not lead to a conclusion that porn was contained in the computers. Berzon would also find that Leon’s good-faith exception also did not apply as the affidavit was extremely bare-bones.

US v. Fox, No. 08-30445 (2-7-11)

(O’Scannlain with Tallman and Moskowitz, D.J., S.D. Ca). In Dillon, the Supremes overruled the 9th’s decision in US v. Hicks, 472 F.3d 1167 (9th Cir. 2007), which allowed a court to treat the Guidelines as advisory in a retroactive sentence modification proceeding. Dillon held that the court in resentencing was bound by the Sentencing Comm’n’s Policy Statement which mandated that a sentence modification proceeding may not reduce the sentence below the amended Guideline range. This case had reduced the sentence below the retroactive amendmended Guideline range, and the 9th had taken it en banc. In light of Dillon, however, it was sent back to a three judge panel for consideration of the challenges to the policy statement. The defendant argued that the policy statement failed to comply with the procedural requirements for a Guideline amendment. In other words, since the policy statement was like a Guideline, operated like a Guideline, and had the force of a Guideline (cf “walk like a duck…..”), it was a de facto Guidelines, and so it had to follow certain procedural steps for notice and comment. The 9th rejected this, finding that the Supremes had pretty much foreclosed the argument, and that the Guideline-light argument failed because policy statements were meant to interpret, which is what 1B1.10 did here.

Framed for child porn by a PC virus

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Of all the sinister things that Internet viruses do, this might be the worst: They can make you an unsuspecting collector of child pornography.

Heinous pictures and videos can be deposited on computers by viruses — the malicious programs better known for swiping your credit card numbers. In this twist, it’s your reputation that’s stolen.

Pedophiles can exploit virus-infected PCs to remotely store and view their stash without fear they’ll get caught. Pranksters or someone trying to frame you can tap viruses to make it appear that you surf illegal Web sites.

Whatever the motivation, you get child porn on your computer — and might not realize it until police knock at your door.

An  investigation found cases in which innocent people have been branded as pedophiles after their co-workers or loved ones stumbled upon child porn placed on a PC through a virus. It can cost victims hundreds of thousands of dollars to prove their innocence.

Their situations are complicated by the fact that actual pedophiles often blame viruses — a defense rightfully viewed with skepticism by law enforcement.

“It’s an example of the old `dog ate my homework’ excuse,” says Phil Malone, director of the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society. “The problem is, sometimes the dog does eat your homework.” (more…)