UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Daniel APODACA, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 09-50372.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Oct. 5, 2010. Filed April 12, 2011.
1077
AFFIRMED.
Andre Birotte Jr., United States Attorney, Christine C. Ewell, Assistant United States Attorney, and Stephanie S. Christensen, Assistant United States Attorney, Los Angeles, CA, for the appellee.
Before: RICHARD D. CUDAHY,* KIM MCLANE WARDLAW and WILLIAM A. FLETCHER, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
CUDAHY, Circuit Judge:
Daniel Apodaca pleaded guilty to one count of possession of child pornography in violation of
I.
A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
We review the length of a term of supervised release for reasonableness. United States v. Daniels, 541 F.3d 915, 921 (9th Cir.2008). When reviewing a sentence for reasonableness, we “merely ask[] whether the trial court abused its discretion.” Rita v. United States, 551 U.S. 338, 351, 127 S.Ct. 2456, 168 L.Ed.2d 203 (2007). Similarly, this court reviews “a district court‘s determination of the appropriate supervised release conditions for abuse of discretion.” United States v. Weber, 451 F.3d 552, 557 (9th Cir.2006). We have jurisdiction under
B. Factual and Procedural Background
In January 2008, the Los Angeles Police Department conducted an undercover, online investigation of individuals sharing child pornography over the internet. During the course of this investigation, a detective discovered that a computer owned by Daniel Apodaca contained a sizeable library of child pornography. On March 6, 2008, officers executed a federal search warrant at Apodaca‘s apartment. These officers seized Apodaca‘s laptop, which contained the pornographic materials the police had discovered earlier, and several compact discs, which contained further
On July 23, 2008, Apodaca was arrested and charged with one count of violating
On December 12, 2008, Apodaca appeared before the district court and pleaded guilty. He acknowledged that he had knowingly possessed child pornography, that he knew that the persons depicted in the pornography were minors and that some of the pornography depicted children engaged in sadistic or masochistic acts. At the plea hearing, the court ensured that Apodaca knew that the maximum penalty for his offense included a lifetime period of supervised release.
On July 10, 2009, the district court conducted Apodaca‘s sentencing hearing. The court began by making sure that it had received and reviewed all of the sentencing documents that the parties had filed. It went on to hear arguments from both parties concerning what punishment the court should impose on Apodaca. The court also heard Apodaca‘s allocution.
After acknowledging all of the information the parties had submitted, the court calculated an advisory offense level of 28 for Apodaca‘s conduct and a Criminal History Category of I. It went on to sentence Apodaca to 24 months imprisonment, a multiple-year downward deviation from the Guidelines-recommended sentence of 78 to 97 months. In deciding to depart downward, the court found that Apodaca‘s behavior fell on the low end of the spectrum of relevant criminal conduct and that he presented a low risk of recidivism.
The district court further ordered that, upon release from imprisonment, Apodaca would be placed on supervised release for the Guidelines-recommended term of life. While on supervised release, the court stated that Apodaca would have to comply with fifteen specific terms and conditions. Fourteen of these conditions were taken directly from the initial Presentence Report filed by Apodaca‘s Probation Officer, with minor modifications being incorporated to accommodate objections raised by Apodaca‘s counsel at the sentencing hearing. The fifteenth condition was first proposed in the United States’ response to Apodaca‘s sentencing position and was adopted by the Probation Officer in her second addendum to her Presentence Report. This provision prohibited Apodaca from “associat[ing] or hav[ing] verbal, written, telephonic, or electronic communication with any person under the age of 18,” with limited exceptions. Finally, in response to Apodaca‘s concerns about the length of his term of supervised release, the sentencing judge indicated that he would not necessarily be opposed at a later time to shortening Apodaca‘s term of supervised release and included a statement in the sentencing order permitting Apodaca to request such relief later.
Apodaca appeals from the district court‘s sentencing order on two grounds. First, he claims that the imposition of lifetime supervised release was unreasonable. Second, he claims that the fifteenth supervised release condition violates his constitutional rights. For the reasons articulated below, we reject both arguments.
II.
We conduct a two-step analysis when reviewing the reasonableness of a sentence: “we first consider whether the district court committed significant procedural error, then we consider the substantive reasonableness of the sentence.”
A. Procedural Error
When determining whether a district court committed a reversible procedural error during sentencing, we consider whether the court “(1) correctly calculate[d] the Sentencing Guidelines range; (2) treat[ed] the Guidelines as Advisory; (3) consider[ed] the
Apodaca‘s allegations of procedural error are limited to claims concerning the adequacy of the district court‘s explanation of why it was imposing a lifetime term of supervised release. The sentencing statutes require district courts to “state in open court the reasons [supporting] imposition of a particular sentence.”
A review of the sentencing hearing transcript establishes that the district court provided an adequate explanation for the sentence it imposed on Apodaca. The court engaged in an extensive colloquy with the parties prior to sentencing, acknowledging what it felt were the strongest and weakest aspects of Apodaca‘s case. The sentencing judge also explicitly stated that he had considered all of the parties’ and the probation officer‘s submissions—documents that contained the probation officer‘s recommendation of lifetime supervised release, Apodaca‘s objections and the United States’ reply. Further, the district court properly determined that a lifetime term of supervised release is recommended by the Guidelines for his crime and that, while it was not compelled to sentence Apodaca to this term, the facts of Apodaca‘s case warranted a sentence that included lifetime supervised release. See
B. Substantive Reasonableness
Having determined that the district court did not commit a procedural error when sentencing Apodaca, we turn to considering the sentence‘s substantive reasonableness. Blinkinsop, 606 F.3d at 1116. When reviewing the substantive reasonableness of a sentence, we look at the reasonableness of the sentence “in light of all the
Apodaca claims that the district court‘s decision to sentence him to a lifetime term of supervised release was unreasonable on two grounds. First, he contends that the district court did not consider all of the mitigating facts present in his case and that the court‘s sentence contradicted its own findings concerning Apodaca‘s character and likelihood of committing future crimes. Second, he argues that the court failed to recognize important differences between individuals who have been convicted of possession-only child pornography crimes and violent sexual predators, leading it to enter an unduly severe sentence.
Although a district court‘s failure to properly consider the
Apodaca‘s stronger argument is that imposition of lifetime supervised release constitutes a disproportionately severe punishment for his crime. In this connection, several of our sister circuits have criticized the Guidelines-recommended sentence for possession-only offenders like Apodaca as
These decisions have identified several problems with the Guidelines’ treatment of individuals such as Apodaca. First, a review of the history behind the sentencing provisions for child pornography establishes that they were not developed pursuant to the Sentencing Commission‘s normal processes and were not based on empirical data and expertise. Grober, 624 F.3d at 611; Dorvee, 616 F.3d at 184-85. Second, the Guidelines provide a large number of sentence enhancements, which apply in nearly every case and cause routine offenses to generate sentence recommendations approaching (or exceeding) statutory maximums. Grober, 624 F.3d at 611; Dorvee, 616 F.3d at 186. Concentrating offenders at the top of the sentencing spectrum in this manner has been described as “fundamentally incompatible with
It is certainly true that most of the decisions criticizing this area of the Guidelines have focused on the severity of its imprisonment recommendations. But there are plausible reasons to question whether the supervised release provisions are similarly skewed. Under
Because we have rejected both of Apodaca‘s substantive unreasonableness arguments, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion when sentencing Apodaca to lifetime supervised release. This finding places today‘s holding in line with our decisions in similar cases. See Cope, 527 F.3d at 951-52; Daniels, 541 F.3d at 922.
III.
Apodaca argues that the fifteenth condition of his supervised release violates his constitutional rights. The provision in question provides:
The defendant shall not associate or have verbal, written, telephonic, or electronic communication with any person under the age of 18, except: a) in the presence of the parent or legal guardian of said minor; and b) on the condition that the defendant notify said parent or legal guardian of his/her conviction in the instant offense/prior offense. This provision does not encompass persons under the age of 18, such as waiters, cashiers, ticket vendors, etc., with whom the defendant must deal with in order to obtain ordinary and usual commercial services.
Apodaca contends that this condition would preclude him from having contact with a child of his own, thereby restricting his right to procreate and raise a family, a fundamental interest guaranteed him under the Constitution.
This provision of the sentencing order does not violate Apodaca‘s constitutional rights. The plain language of the condition distinctly allows Apodaca to have contact with children in the presence of their duly notified parent or legal guardian. Were Apodaca to have children, he would be able to associate with his own children because he would be their parent and, as
IV.
For the reasons set forth above, the district court‘s sentence is AFFIRMED.
W. FLETCHER, J., concurring:
Because the district court committed no procedural error and sentenced Apodaca to the lifetime term of supervised release recommended by the Guidelines, our precedents require us to affirm Apodaca‘s sentence. See, e.g., United States v. Carty, 520 F.3d 984, 993-94 (9th Cir.2008) (en banc). I therefore concur in the judgment and almost all of the opinion.
I write separately to state my view that the applicable statute,
A lifetime term of supervised release is extremely rare. Less than one percent of the federal defendants sentenced between fiscal years 2005-09 received such a term. U.S. SENT‘G COMM‘N, FEDERAL OFFENDERS SENTENCED TO SUPERVISED RELEASE 58-60 & nn. 252-55 (2010), available at http://www.ussc.gov/Research/Research_Publications/Supervised_Release/20100722_Supervised_Release.pdf. Congress has provided for lifetime supervision for defendants convicted of drug trafficking offenses, see
When Congress enacted
The legislative history of a bill passed by the House in the previous Congress, which was the genesis of
Current empirical literature casts serious doubt on the existence of a substantial relationship between the consumption of child pornography and the likelihood of a contact sexual offense against a child. For example, one recent study that followed 231 child pornography offenders for six years after their initial offenses found that only nine persons, or 3.9 percent of the sample, committed even a non-contact sexual offense; only two persons, or 0.8 percent of the sample, committed a contact offense. Jérôme Endrass et al., The Consumption of Internet Child Pornography and Violent Sex Offending, 9 BMC PSYCHIATRY 43 (2009), available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716325/pdf/1471-244X-9-43.pdf. Endrass et al. concluded that “the consumption of child pornography alone does not seem to represent a risk factor for committing hands-on sex offenses at least not in those subjects without prior convictions for hands-on sex offenses.” Id. See also Michael C. Seto & Angela W. Eke, The Criminal Histories and Later Offending of Child Pornography Offenders, 17 SEXUAL ABUSE 201, 208 (2005) (“[O]ur finding does contradict the assumption that all child pornography offenders are at very high risk to commit contact sexual offenses involving children.“).
Other studies reinforce the conclusion that individuals who have only possessed and/or viewed child pornography present substantially lower risks of harm than do individuals who have committed contact sex offenses. See, e.g., L. Webb, J. Craissati & S. Keen, Characteristics of Internet Child Pornography Offenders: A Comparison with Child Molesters, 19 SEXUAL ABUSE 449, 463 (2007) (finding Internet-only offenders “significantly less likely to fail in the community than child molesters,” and concluding that “by far the largest subgroup of internet offenders would appear to pose a very low risk of sexual recidivism“), available at http://sax.sagepub.com/content/19/4/449.full.pdf+html; Seto & Eke, supra, at 207 & tbl.3 (finding that only 1.3 percent of Internet-only offenders in the sample recidivated with contact sex offenses, in contrast to 9.2 percent of persons with prior Internet and contact sex offenses).
A growing body of literature suggests that the Internet—by rendering child pornography more accessible, affordable, and anonymously obtainable than in the past—has “facilitate[d].. a new kind of crime.” Andreas Frei et al., Paedophilia on the Internet—A Study of 33 Convicted Offenders in the Canton of Lucerne, 135 SWISS MED. WEEKLY 488, 492 (2005), available at http://www.smw.ch/docs/pdf200x/2005/33/smw-11095.pdf. See also Endrass et al., supra, at 44; Webb, Craissati, & Keen, supra, at 450. There is no evidence that Congress or the Commission considered empirical evidence relevant to Internet-only offenders when they aggregated such offenders with contact sexual offenders under
Congress has directed that, in setting a term of supervised release, a sentencing court must select a term “sufficient, but not greater than necessary, to,” inter alia, “protect the public from further crimes of the defendant.”
The policy statement at
The Commission has declared that a reassessment of the risk of recidivism posed by child pornography offenders is a priority in the coming year. See Notice of Final Priorities, 75 Fed. Reg. 54,699, 54,699-700 (Sept. 8, 2010). Cf. Kimbrough, 552 U.S. at 99-100, 128 S.Ct. 558 (discussing Commission‘s proposed amendments to the 100:1 crack/powder sentencing ratio). As the law now stands, Congress has permitted and the Sentencing Commission has recommended a lifetime term of supervised release for every child pornography offender. The evidence demonstrates that in many cases, such a sentence is not justifiable on the grounds that the defendant poses an elevated risk of committing contact sex offenses. I hope that Congress or the Commission will address the undifferentiated treatment of the dissimilar groups of sex offenders covered by
RICHARD D. CUDAHY
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
