Opinion by Judge REINHARDT; Concurrence by Judge T.G. NELSON.
Daniel Zane Mohrbacher appeals two counts of conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(1) for transporting visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. He does not challenge his other two counts of conviction, one for receiving visual depictions of minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2) and the other for possession of three or more items containing such depictions under § 2252(a)(4)(b). Mohrbacher’s illegal conduct consisted of downloading images of child pornography from a foreign-based electronic bulletin board. As to the challenged counts, he argues that he was charged and convicted under the wrong section of the statute because while he may have received these images in violation of § 2252(a)(2) he did not transport or ship them in violation of § 2252(a)(1). We agree with his reading of the statute, and accordingly reverse these two counts of conviction. However, we reject Mohrbacher’s second contention on appeal, and hold that the district court did not clearly err by denying him credit for acceptance of responsibility.
*1044 I.
BACKGROUND
In March 1992, Danish police seized the business records of BAMSE, a computer bulletin board system based in Denmark that sold child pornography over the Internet. The records included information that Mohrbacher, who lived in Paradise, California, had downloaded two graphic interface format (GIF) images from BAMSE in January 1992.
In March 1993, police executed a search warrant at Mohrbacher’s workplace and found, among other images, two files that had been downloaded from BAMSE, one of a nude girl and one of a girl engaged in a sex act with an adult; both girls were under twelve. During the execution of the warrant, Mohrbacher was cooperative, confessing that he had downloaded the two images from BAMSE, showing police where they could find the images that they were looking for on his computer, and providing telephone records that confirmed the dates of his Internet activity. Mohrbacher subsequently cooperated with the government’s investigation of child pornography. He made monitored telephone calls to a number of electronic bulletin boards, provided the name of one bulletin board operator, and testified at a grand jury hearing. At that hearing, Mohrbacher again admitted that he had downloaded at least one of the two images.
In May 1996, Mohrbacher was indicted for one count of transporting visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(1) and one count of possession of three or more items depicting sexually explicit conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B). Pursuant to a plea agreement, Mohrbacher entered a guilty plea to count two in February 1997. In September 1997, however, with the consent of the government and the district court, this guilty plea was withdrawn because the factual basis that had been established no longer constituted a crime under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B).
See United States v. Lacy,
The grand jury then reindicted Mohrb-acher under a superseding indictment for two counts of transporting visual depictions of minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(1), one count of receipt of visual depictions of minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2), and one count of possession of three or more items depicting sexually explicit conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B). The government represents that on a number of subsequent occasions it approached Mohrbacher in order *1045 to negotiate a plea agreement. 2 No plea agreement was reached, and the case proceeded to trial. -
Mohrbacher’s trial began on September 30, 1997. On October 3, he made a Rule 29 motion for acquittal on the transporting counts, arguing that downloading images constituted receiving, rather than transporting or shipping, within the common sense meaning of the statute. The district court denied the motion, reasoning that downloading from a computer bulletin board was analogous to “the seller putting [an item] on his shelf and the buyer being the person who takes it off the shelf. Here, it was Mr. Mohrbacher who pushed the right buttons that caused the images to be sent from Denmark to California.” The court also stated that Mohrbacher could be criminally liable for causing the images to be transported under 18 U.S.C. § 2, 3 commenting that “[i]t was Mr. Mohrbacher who caused the images or visual depiction to be transported in foreign commerce.”
At the trial, in addition to the witnesses who linked Mohrbacher directly to the images that were the subject of the criminal charges, the prosecution presented expert testimony about the operation of the bulletin board. The expert witness testified that “[a] computer bulletin board system is kind of like a store of sorts. There’s the capability of sending and receiving files and sending and receiving messages.” Having studied BAMSE for two years, he provided the following description of it:
BAMSE was a computerized bulletin board system. The bulletin board system is an automated system that runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week. That’s a computer system that allows people to connect to it via computer and telephone modem. Once users connect to the BBS, they log in as a user name, they provide a password, and the BBS has a list of images available for download, Individuals would select pictures, then download them to their computer.... The image files on the BAMSE BBS were GIF files, which stands for graphic interchange files. It’s just a binary string of information. It’s the computer’s way of representing a visual image.
The expert described the process of downloading GIF image files, explaining that the bulletin board user selects an image and uses his own computer modem to download the image file through telephone lines. Once downloading has been completed, the image is contained in the user’s own computer system. No human conduct is required at the bulletin board site in order to facilitate this file transfer. When asked whether a “store” analogy was appropriate, the expert agreed but then described one difference: when a customer purchases an item on the bulletin board, the supply is not depleted — rather, a copy of the original product is generated and sent. On cross-examination, he agreed that defense counsel’s analogy to a mail order catalogue was fair, and the following exchange ensued in which Mohrbacher’s attorney attempted to demonstrate how downloading would compare to calling in a mail order:
Q. I would call them on their catalog order number.
A. Okay.
Q. And I would either be connected with a human being or with, in your world—
A. Computer.
Q. some computer. So the computer’s just a substitute for the human being who initially we used to contact; isn’t that right?
A. Sure.
*1046 Q. Just a way of doing business. Instead of the human being responding, the computer responds?
A. Sure. A lot of the sites have that with the Internet access right now.
Q. Sure. So what we’re doing as the businessman that runs Penney’s, I’ve substituted my computer system, which guys like you developed, for the human being I used to have to pay too much money?
A. Okay.
Q. Now the BBS is the same program; is it not?
Q. Same idea we’re going with, yeah.
A. A systems operator is like a storekeeper or shopkeeper. He buys computer hardware, he buys BBS software, and he has his goods that he wants to sell. And he has to customize the BBS software to reflect what merchandise he wants to sell. He needs to create his . catalog, if you will.
Q. Sure. So if he didn’t have all this computer stuff, what he’d have is a room with a bunch of — like a wall with little compartments in it?
A. Sure.
Q. And you’d call him up, and he’d walk over, and he’d pull it out of the compartment, and he’d send it to you if you paid him for it?
A. Sure.
Q. So instead of having the sysop [systems operator] do the shipping, you’ve got the computer doing the shipping? A. Correct.
During the presentation of the prosecution’s case, Mohrbacher’s attorney challenged and attempted to impeach some of the witnesses. However, after the government rested, Mohrbacher presented no witnesses, evidence or defense. His attorney’s closing argument suggested the possibility that Mohrbacher might not have known the nature of the images that he was downloading or that someone else could have been responsible for downloading and storing the illegal material. The attorney also argued that downloading an image could constitute “receiving” but not “transporting” or “shipping.” At the end of the trial, Mohrbacher renewed his Rule 29 motion and the district court again denied it. The jury convicted Mohrbacher on all counts.
Given Mohrbacher’s lack of criminal history,. the sentencing range for the offense was 37 to 46 months. The government filed a 5K1.1 motion for downward departure based on substantial assistance, and the district court departed even farther than the government had recommended. At the sentencing hearing, Mohrbacher continued to maintain that he had not known the nature of the images that he was downloading and that he therefore could not have pled guilty to the charged offenses while maintaining his honesty. The district court rejected Mohrbacher’s argument that he was entitled to a three-level adjustment for acceptance of responsibility and sentenced Mohrbacher to nine months for each count of conviction, sentences to be served concurrently, and three years of supervised release.
Mohrbacher filed a timely notice of appeal and a motion to be released on bail pending appeal. In denying the motion for bail, the district court once again commented on the merits of the Rule 29 motion, stating that by downloading the images, “[w]hat he basically did was reach onto the bulletin board and get his own information. They didn’t have to send it to him. They post it in their bulletin board, and he’s the one that does all of the conduct on his computer which results in his downloading the information from their bulletin board into his computer.”
By the time we heard his appeal, Mohrbacher had finished serving his period of incarceration, but he remains on supervised release.
*1047 II.
MOTION FOR ACQUITTAL
The facts relevant to Mohrbacher’s motion for acquittal are not disputed. We therefore confront directly the legal question whether downloading images from a computer bulletin board constitutes shipping or transporting within the meaning of the terms as used in 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(1), a question of first impression. Mohrbacher argues that downloading is properly characterized as receiving images by computer, which is proscribed by § 2252(a)(2), rather than transporting or shipping images by computer as prohibited by § 2252(a)(1). If Mohrbacher is right, then with respect to the two challenged counts he was charged and convicted under the wrong statutory provision, and those convictions must be reversed.
See United States v. Stewart Clinical Laboratory, Inc.,
Mohrbacher reasons that downloading is essentially an electronic request by one computer owner to another computer owner to deliver files or data electronically to the requesting owner’s computer. He presents a definition of downloading in support: “To copy data ... from a main source to a peripheral device .... the process of copying a file from an online service or bulletin board service (BBS) to one’s own computer.” PHILIP E. MAR-GOLIS, RANDOM HOUSE PERSONAL COMPUTER DICTIONARY at 156 (2d ed.1996). This definition is in accord with the expert testimony that was presented by the prosecution at trial. As was discussed in greater detail earlier in this opinion, that expert testified that downloading is analogous to placing an order through a mail order catalogue except that a computer fills the order automatically and the inventory is not depleted because a new copy of the image is generated. 4
The question that we must resolve is whether, given what appears to be a noncontroversial definition of the term, Mohrbacher’s “downloading” of two images constitutes a violation of § 2252(a)(1). Mohrbacher suggests an analogy for our consideration, an analogy that is consistent with that testified to by the government expert. Mohrbacher argues that his conduct was comparable to that of a customer who places a phone order requesting delivery of an item, the only difference being that the entity that was filling the order— the bulletin board — had a completely automated response and did not require any action by an individual at the time the order was filled. The government argues that the automated nature of the bulletin board’s response makes Mohrbacher the one responsible for causing the visual images to move from one location to another and that an individual who causes transporting or shipping is guilty as a principal. At oral argument, when asked to clarify whether a computer bulletin board service operator could be liable for transporting or shipping images under its interpretation of the statute, the government answered in the negative. In the government’s view, it is only the individual who downloads the image who has caused that image to be transported. Mohrbacher responds by pointing out that a request will not be filled unless the operator of the bulletin *1048 board has configured it to accept orders. Thus, he argues, it is the bulletin board operator who has transported or shipped the images, and the downloader has only received them. The disagreement is in essence over whether the government is correct that the automated nature of the process requires the conclusion that downloading is equivalent to transporting.
“In interpreting a statute, we look first to the plain language of the statute, construing the provisions of the entire law, including its object and policy, to ascertain the intent of Congress.”
Northwest Forest Resource Council v. Glickman,
The first definition of “receive” in the Oxford English Dictionary is “[t]o take into one’s hand, or into one’s possession (something held out or offered by another); to take delivery of (a thing) from another, either for oneself or for a third party.” OXFORD’S ENGLISH DICTIONARY 2D 314 (1989). 5 An individual who downloads material takes possession or accepts delivery of the visual image; he has therefore certainly received it. In fact, guides to computer terminology often analogize downloading to receiving information and uploading to transmitting or sending. “To transmit a file from one computer to another. When conducting the session, download means receive, upload means transmit.” ALAN FREEDMAN, COMPUTER WORDS YOU GOTTA KNOW! ESSENTIAL DEFINITIONS FOR SURVIVAL IN A HIGH-TECH WORLD 49 (1993). “To download means to receive information, typically a file, from another computer to yours via your modem.... The opposite term is upload, which means to send a file to another computer.” ROBIN WILLIAMS, JARGON, AN INFORMAL DICTIONARY OF COMPUTER TERMS 170-71 (1993). Even the prosecution’s expert, when asked what happens when an individual downloads an image, responded, “When you download the pictures, you receive an exact copy of the picture that existed in Denmark.” See also Peter Wayner, Plugging In to the Internet: Many Paths, Many Speeds, N.Y. TIMES (Jan. 30, 1999) (“You might be able to download, or receive, large volumes of data quickly, but the time to upload, or send, information could be much slower.”).
However, it is also possible, employing dictionary definitions, to construe the terms “transport” and “ship” in a manner that encompasses a downloader’s acts. “Transport” is defined as “to carry, convey, or remove from one place or person to another; to convey across.” OXFORD’S ENGLISH DICTIONARY 2D, supra, at 423. 6 Shipping is usually defined as one *1049 manner of transporting. See WEBSTER’S THIRD, supra, at 2096 (“to cause to be transported” or “to move (something) from one place or position to another”). 7 An individual who downloads an image to his own computer has indisputably received that image; however, he has also arguably moved that image from one place to another—from the bulletin board to his own computer. 8 Of course, the download-er is only able to accomplish this task because another person has preconfigured the bulletin board to accept his order. 9 Given the role that another individual plays in uploading the images and configuring the bulletin board to send them upon request, and the fact that the process of downloading would seem to correspond much more closely with the term “receiving” than with “transporting” or “shipping,” the dictionary definitions are not dispositive of the issue before us.
We next look to other principles of statutory interpretation. In determining the meaning of a statutory provision, a court may consider the purpose of the statute “in its entirety,”
see Alarcon v. Keller Industries, Inc.,
*1050
For further interpretive guidance, a court may examine the particular statutory language to be construed in relation to the other parts of the statute.
S.ee United States v. DeLaCorte,
On the basis of our analysis of the nature of the process of downloading, the dictionary definitions of the terms included in the statute, the statute’s purpose, and the structure of the statutory provisions, we conclude that Mohrbacher’s interpretation of the statute is correct. An individual who downloads images from a computer bulletin board takes an action that is more analogous to ordering materials over the phone and receiving materials through the mail than to sending or shipping such materials. Those who are responsible for providing the images to a customer, by making them available on a computer bulletin board or by sending them via electronic mail, are properly charged with and convicted of shipping or transporting images under § 2252(a)(1). A customer who is simply on the receiving end—who downloads an image that has been made available through an automated, preconfigured process or that has been sent by another computer user—is guilty of receiving or possessing such materials under § 2252(a)(2) but not of shipping or transporting them.
We reject the argument that even if downloading itself is more analogous to receiving, Mohrbacher, by ordering the pornographic images, caused them to be transported and is therefore nonetheless criminally liable under § 2252(a)(1). Acceptance of this reasoning would allow any act of ordering, requesting, or indicating an interest in contraband to provide a basis for conviction of transporting or shipping such material, and would eliminate the distinction between purchasers and sellers or shippers and receivers. Because a request for drugs could be viewed as causing a drug sale to occur, any purchaser or receiver could be charged as a buyer or distributor at the prosecutor’s discretion. For the reasons explained above, the distinctions between downloading an image and ordering an item from a human supplier—i.e., the facts that the response is automatic (because an individual has programmed it to be so) and that filling the order does not deplete the supply—provide no logical reason to limit the principle that would be established: any customer who requests or orders a product could be held liable for causing that product to be sent or sold.
The government’s reliance upon 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) does not change our analysis. That provision does not eliminate, the distinction between buyers and sellers, or between shippers and receivers. It serves a different purpose: it insures that an offender who utilizes an innocent agent to carry out a criminal act but may not be charged as a principal under § 2(a), the aiding and abetting provision, is not insulated from criminal liability.
See United States v. Causey,
A review of the published cases involving shipping or transporting child pornography via computer reveals that prosecutions are conducted in the manner that we have concluded is required by the statute: in each case, individuals convicted under § 2252(a)(1) had either sent the material electronically to another computer user or had made the material available to others through an electronic bulletin board or news group.
See United States v. Hibbler,
For the above reasons, the district court’s denial of Mohrbacher’s motion for acquittal on counts one and two was in error, and we reverse as to those counts.
*1052 III.
ACCEPTANCE OF RESPONSIBILITY
Because two of Mohrbacher’s counts of conviction are not challenged and will remain in effect, we also consider whether the district court’s denial of a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility constituted an abuse of discretion. Mohrbacher argues both that the district court improperly punished him for exercising his right to trial and that the court insufficiently explained the grounds upon which it relied. In support of his argument that he was entitled to an acceptance of responsibility adjustment, Mohrbacher cites his immediate and extensive cooperation with government investigative efforts, his willingness to enter a plea agreement, his failure to present any defense or contest any facts at trial, and his contention that he only refused the offered plea agreements because he could not admit to an untrue factual allegation.
It is clear that a judge cannot rely upon the fact that a defendant refuses to plead guilty and insists on his right to trial as the basis for denying an acceptance of responsibility adjustment.
See United States v. Vance,
The district court, however, denied an acceptance of responsibility adjustment to Mohrbacher because he refused to admit to the intent element of the offense. While Mohrbacher did not testify at trial, at his sentencing hearing he made numerous statements denying that he had realized that he was downloading images of child pornography, statements that manifested a continuing denial of the requisite criminal intent. Such a refusal to admit one’s guilt of the elements of an offense permits a district court to exercise its discretion to deny an acceptance of responsibility adjustment.
See United States v. Burrows,
Next, as long as we can determine that the district court considered the defendant’s objections and did not rest its decision on impermissible factors, no specific explanation of reasons is required for denying a defendant a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility.
See United States v. Marquardt,
In sum, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mohrbacher an adjustment for acceptance of responsibility.
IV.
CONCLUSION
We therefore REVERSE Mohrbacher’s conviction on counts one and two but AFFIRM the district court’s denial of an adjustment for acceptance of responsibility.
REVERSED in part, AFFIRMED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
T.G. NELSON, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
The Government charged Mohrbacher under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(1), which governs transporting or shipping sexually explicit materials rather than § 2252(a)(2), relating to receiving or distributing those materials. The argument is now made, as it was in the district court, that downloading of the images constituted “transporting” the illicit materials.
While it is possible to make a strained argument to that effect, and it would be possible to write an equally strained opinion affirming on the basis of the aiding and abetting provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 2, I see no reason to encourage the Government to prosecute people under the wrong statute. This is particularly true when, as here, there is a perfectly clear statutory provision which applies to the defendant’s conduct without the necessity of any interpretation. Therefore, I fully concur in our decision.
Notes
. Mohrbacher’s wife had recently died, and Mohrbacher told the court that he felt that his involvement in this criminal case had caused her death from a botched intubation procedure. Mohrbacher, a paramedic, would have been able to perform the procedure had he not been away from home, at a court appearance. Furthermore, during the week before the change of plea hearing, Mohrbacher’s daughter had attempted suicide.
. In support of its contention, the government has presented two letters that were sent to Mohrbacher which set forth its understanding that he was not interested in negotiating and offered to engage in further discussions in the event that it was mistaken about his position.
. 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) provides: "whoever willfully causes an act lo be done which if directly performed by him or another would be an offense against the United States, is punishable as a principal.”
. Other sources describe the act in similar terms. See Bob Cotton & Richard Oliver, The Cyberspace Lexicon 66 (1994) ("Originally used to describe the movement of information from a large computer to a smaller one. Now used to describe the process of transferring data from one computer system to another, or from a network or bulletin board to a personal computer, or from a computer to an archiving storage device"); International Business Machines Corp., IBM Dictionary of Computing 217 (1994) ("To transfer programs or data from a computer to a connected device, typically a personal computer ... To transfer data from a computer to a connected device, such as a workstation or microcomputer.”); David Morse, Cyber Dictionary (1996) (“To copy a file from a host system (such as America Online or CompuServe) onto your computer, via telephone lines and a modem.”).
. See also Webster’s Third New International Dictionary Unabridged 1894 (1986) ("To lake back, take, accept, receive ... to take possession or delivery of ... to knowingly accept ... to take in: act as a receptacle or container for ... to come into possession of: acquire”); Black’s Law Dictionary 1268 (6th ed.1990) ("To take into possession and control; accept custody of; collect.”).
. See also Webster's Third, supra, AT 2430 ("To transfer or convey from one person or place to another: carry, move”); Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 1499 ("To carry or convey from one place to another.”).
. See also Oxford English Dictionary 2d, supra, at 276 ("To send or transport by ship.... to export ... to transport (goods) by fail or other means of conveyance”); Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 1377 ("to transport; to deliver to a carrier (public or private) for transportation. To send away, to get rid of. To send by established mode of transportation, as to ‘carry,’ ‘convey,’ or ‘transport,’ which are synonymous and defined, respectively, as ‘to bear or cause to be borne as from one place to another,' and 'to carry or convey from one place to another.' ”).
. The statute does not appear to require that the defendant ship or transport the image to a third person.
See United States v. Kemmish,
. The action of the bulletin board operator, on the other hand, cannot be properly characterized as receiving images but only as transporting or shipping—unless the operator's conduct does not violate any provision of the statute, as the government rather oddly suggested at oral argument. While of course more than one individual could be held responsible for transporting a given image, it is more difficult to claim that Mohrbacher himself caused the images to be transported when one considers that the bulletin board operator is in reality the individual who is primarily responsible for the images moving from the bulletin board to individuals’ computers.
.An examination of the legislative history of the statute does not provide any additional information. Congressional reports regarding the enactment of § 2252 and subsequent amendments have also defined the statutory purposes broadly and in general terms. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 95-948 *1 (1977); H. Rep. No. 98-292 (1983); Conf. Rep. No. 104-863 * 70-72 (1996).
