On Dеcember 10, 2008, staff of the Fayetteville, Arkansas, public library called the Fayetteville police after observing Robert Demers access and view child pornography on one of the library’s public-access computers. When the staff approached Demers to have him move away from the computer until the police arrived, he discarded a piece of paper containing twelve images of child pornography he had printed from the computer. After arrest and indictment, Demers pled guilty to possession of child pornography, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4), (b)(1). Dеmers was a registered sex offender at the time of the arrest, and he had compiled an extensive criminal history, which includes a conviction for sexual abuse and several convictions for domestic violence, as well as two prior arrests for possession of child pornography. Thе district court 1 sentenced Demers to 150 months’ imprisonment and a lifetime of supervised release, subject to thirteen standard and seven special conditions. On appeal, Demers challenges four of these special conditions of supervised release.
Ordinarily, “[tjerms and conditions of supervised release are reviewed for abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Bender,
Demers first challenges special condition 5, which forbids him to “hаve access to an internet-connected computer” or to “access the internet from any location without pri- or approval by the probation office and for a justified reason.” Title 18 U.S.C. § 3583 grants a sentencing court authority to “in-
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elude as a part of the sentence a rеquirement that the defendant be placed on a term of supervised release after imprisonment,” § 3583(a), and also to impose, in addition to several mandatory conditions, “any other condition it considers to be appropriate,” § 3583(d). However, such a special condition can оnly be imposed to the extent that it “is reasonably related to the sentencing factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), involves no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary for the purposes set forth in § 3553(a), and is consistent with any pertinent policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission.”
United States v. Mark,
Demers argues that a ban on his access to the internet is not reasonably related to the § 3553(a) factors. We have repeatedly rejected this argument.
See United States v. Durham,
Next, Demers argues that this condition “represents a greater deprivation of his First Amendment rights than is reasonably necessary.” Since
United States v. Crume,
we have generally maintainеd that a complete bar to internet access constitutes a greater deprivation of liberty than necessary if “the record is devoid of evidence that [the defendant] has ever used his computer for anything beyond simply possessing child pornography.”
Crume
raises rather than decides the question of how much beyond mere possession of child pornography is necessary to justify a complete ban. In
United States v. Boston,
however, we upheld a restriction on internet access equally as broad in scope as the one at issue here.
Second, Demers challenges special condition 7, which prohibits him from possessing “pornographic materials of any type.” Demers first contends that the court’s imposition of this condition was nоt based on a sufficiently individualized determination, citing
United States v. Bender. See also United States v. Curry,
Demers also argues that special condition 7 is overbroad and a greater-than-necessary restriction of his First Amendment rights. In
Boston,
we upheld an equally-extensive condition against a claim that it was overbroad, noting that “[gjiven [the defendant’s] history of sexual оffenses and the desire to deter him from this conduct in the future, the condition in prohibiting his access to sexually explicit material involving adults is not overly broad.”
Boston,
To be surе, we have struck down as overbroad conditions that restrict access to “any material ... that ... alludes to sexual activity,”
United States v. Kelly,
Third, Demers challenges special condition 2, which orders him to “submit to any means utilized by the probation office to track his whereabouts or location at any time,” arguing that it is a greater dеprivation of liberty than reasonably necessary. We have previously upheld an identical condition against a challenge that it constituted a greater-than-necessary restriction of liberty.
Durham,
Finally, Demers challenges special condition 3, which provides that he “shall have no unsupervisеd contact with minors.” Demers argues that this condition represents a greater-than-necessary restriction of his liberty. He points out that although we have upheld conditions restricting contact with minors in the past, those restrictions all contained an exception for contact with minors that is aрproved in advance by a probation officer.
See, e.g., United States v. Koch,
In
United States v. Bender,
we vacated a condition that barred the defendant from “frequenting] places where minors are known to frequent without the prior approval of the Probation Officer
and then only in the presence and supervision of a responsible adult.” Bender,
In
United States v. Davis,
we found plainly erroneous a condition, similar to condition 3 here, that barred unsupervised contact with minors without a pre-approval exception.
We also note that unlike the defendants in
Crume,
We need not decide today whether Demers would prevail under an abuse-of-discretion standard. Because Demers did not object to thе challenged condition before the district court, he must not only demonstrate the existence of an error; he must also show that it is plain.
See United States v. Pirani,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Demers’s sentence.
Notes
. The Honorable Jimm Larry Hendren, Chief Judge, United States District Court for thе Western District of Arkansas.
. Demers concedes that he failed to object to the challenged conditions before the district court but urges us to adopt the Second Circuit’s approach and “relax the otherwise rigorous standards of plain error review to correct sentencing errоrs.”
United States v. Sofsky,
. Demers asserts that Ristine’s denial of plain error relief was based on the existence of an inter-circuit split over this issue, meaning that any error could not be clear under then-current law, and that developments in the law since
Ristine
have clarified the law in his favor. The court in
Ristine
did rely on this argument to dispose of a vagueness claim that a prohibition on possessing pornography "leaves [the defendant] without notice as to what film, prose, and art he may view without violating the challenged condition.”
Ristine,
. Demers also asserts that this condition is "punitive and an alternative form of incarceration,” and, since the condition will be imposed for life, "constitutes cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment.” Demers makes no argument to support this assertion, nor does he cite any law on point. Demers’s Eighth Amendment challenge accordingly fails to show plain error.
See United States v. Fields,
. Although not cited by Demers, our decision in
United States v. Kerr,
