UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Eric SCHUSTER, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 11-3338.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 14, 2012. Decided Feb. 4, 2013.
706 F.3d 800
Diaz-Rios‘s sentence is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Mark A. Eisenberg (argued), Attorney, Madison, WI, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, BAUER, Circuit Judge, and CHANG, District Judge.*
CHANG, District Judge.
Eric Schuster pleaded guilty to knowingly using a minor to produce child pornography.
I.
In December 2010, law enforcement agents in the Netherlands arrested a prolific manufacturer of child pornography, Roberts Mikelsons. Mikelsons cooperated with the authorities and provided leads against other individuals who exchanged child pornography with Mikelsons. Eventually, Department of Homeland Security agents in the United States identified Eric Schuster as one of Mikelsons‘s trading partners. The agents obtained a search warrant for Schuster‘s home, and the search yielded his computers, digital cameras, and a variety of storage devices and media, including SD memory cards for the cameras. Among other images, the SD cards contained three series of digital photographs that are directly relevant to the appeal.
The first series shows a small prepubescent boy lying on his back on a blue sheet on a bed. The boy is wearing a white shirt and red shorts with the word “lifeguard” printed on the shorts. A note card lies on the boy‘s stomach; the card says, “Hello Alex” (Alex is not the name of the victim, but is instead the name of the person to whom Schuster, the district court held, distributed the photos). Additional images show the boy‘s shorts pulled down, exposing his penis and testicles. Other images in this “Hello Alex” series show a note card on the boy‘s leg, and this card says, “Alex do you like my cock?”
The second series shows three minor boys in a bathtub. In one of the images, a two-year-old boy is squatting in the tub, and the image shows him from the chest-down to his knees (his head is not shown in the photo). The photo is taken on a downward angle, and shows the two-year-old boy‘s genitalia.
The third series shows three young boys sleeping on a bed. Four photos in this series show Schuster‘s hand exposing the penis of one of the boys. The boy was six years old at the time. In the series, the penis becomes erect, and in one the later images, the boy‘s erect penis is wet.
A few weeks after the search warrant‘s execution, a grand jury indicted Schuster on two counts. The first count charged Schuster for using a minor to produce child pornography, specifically, for using the boy in the “Hello Alex” series to create the images.
II.
A. Use of Schuster‘s Statement to Prove Distribution
Schuster‘s first challenge to the sentence is that the district court erred in finding that Schuster distributed the “Hello Alex” series of photos; the finding increased his Sentencing Guidelines offense level. Specifically, Sentencing Guideline
During the sentencing hearing, Schuster argued that there was insufficient evidence that he had distributed the “Hello Alex” series. But the most damning evidence of distribution was Schuster‘s own statement that he did so. The day before sentencing, Schuster filed a hand-written letter addressed to the District Judge. USDC 11-cr-00045, Docket Entry 36. The letter was in the nature of a pre-sentencing written allocution, wherein Schuster discussed the crime and his personal reactions to what he had done. The letter stated that an internet chat acquaintance asked Schuster to take the “Hello Alex” series of photos, and although he initially refused the request, after more requests from the same person, Schuster did take the photos. Id. In the letter, Schuster claimed to be “physically ill about doing this after sending the pictures to the requesting person.” Id. (emphasis added). Not surprisingly, the district court relied on that admission in finding that Schuster distributed the series. Sentencing Tr. 17-18. The district court also relied on the fact that the content of the photos themselves showed that Schuster prepared the photos for distribution. Id. at 18. Remember that some of the photos contain note cards laid on the boy‘s body, and the cards bore messages to the intended recipient of the series. Not only were there greetings (“Hello Alex“), but also one of the cards specifically linked the sexual nature of the series with the intended recipient (“Alex do you like my cock?“).
Against all this, Schuster argues that the letter to the District Judge was inadmissible because the letter was covered by a proffer agreement between Schuster and the government. It is true that Schuster and the government did enter into a proffer agreement on August 22, 2011. Broadly stated, under the proffer agreement, Schuster agreed to provide (that is, “to proffer“) information concerning the ongoing child pornography investigation in exchange for the government‘s agreement not to use the proffer statements against him in any trial and not to use the statements in aggravation of his sentence. That latter aspect of the proffer agreement is based on Sentencing Guideline
In this case, the government did not breach its proffer agreement with Schuster. We know this for two reasons. First, although Schuster did sit for a lengthy proffer interview with agents from the Netherlands (with a Homeland Security agent in attendance), Schuster does not cite to record evidence that Schuster ever said, during the proffer, that he distributed the “Hello Alex” series. At most, Schuster cites to his sentencing memorandum in the district court, but that memo did not say that Schuster made a proffer-protected statement that he distributed the series. See Appellant Br. at 10-11 (citing R. 29 at 21-22). So to the extent that Schuster is arguing that the letter to the District Judge merely repeated what had been said during a proffer session, the record does not support the premise of the argument.2
The second reason Schuster‘s argument fails is more fundamental than the first: in the letter to the District Judge, it was Schuster, not the government, who sought to make affirmative use of the information that he distributed the “Hello Alex” series. In the letter, Schuster did not merely refer to information that he provided during a proffer interview with the government (even assuming he provided information about the distribution, which the record does not support). Instead, Schuster admitted that he had distributed the series in order to explain purported mitigation for his conduct, specifically, how awful he felt after sending it. He thus was not using the proffer agreement to shield himself from the use of proffer-protected information against him; he instead directly introduced the concession to the District Judge in order to affirmatively present his own mitigation argument. Faced with these circumstances, the district court correctly concluded that Schuster “admitted it [the distribution] outside the proffer.” Sentencing Tr. at 17.3
We note too our agreement with the district court that the content of the photos themselves showed that Schuster
B. Distribution as Relevant Conduct
Schuster‘s next argument is that, if we were to overturn the finding of distribution on the “Hello Alex” series, then Schuster‘s other distributions of other child pornography did not qualify as “relevant conduct,” for Sentencing Guidelines purposes, to the offense of conviction (the distribution of the “Hello Alex” series).
C. Finding of Child Pornography
Schuster‘s third argument is that the district court erred in finding that the “bathtub” series of photos included an image of child pornography. This finding had an impact on sentencing because the parties treated the “bathtub” series as the equivalent of a potential separate count of conviction, as dictated by Sentencing Guideline
According to Schuster, the “bathtub” series did not show “sexually explicit conduct,” which is defined in
- (1) whether the focal point of the picture is the minor‘s (or another person‘s) genitalia;
- (2) whether the setting or pose is customarily associated with sexual activity;
- (3) whether the minor‘s pose is unnatural given his or her age;
- (4) whether the minor is fully or partially nude;
- (5) whether sexual coyness or willingness to engage in sexual activity is suggested; and
- (6) whether the visual depiction is intended or designed to elicit a sexual response in the viewer.
We have neither endorsed nor rejected the Dost factors, Russell, 662 F.3d at 843, and in light of the parties’ acceptance of the factors for this appeal, once again we need not decide one way or the other. What is important to this appeal, however, is that “the intent and motive of the photographer can be a relevant consideration in evaluating” images. Id. at 843-44 (citing United States v. Arvin, 900 F.2d 1385, 1391 (9th Cir. 1990), and United States v. Burt, 495 F.3d 733, 741 (7th Cir. 2007)). As we noted in Russell, “although it is the sexually suggestive nature of a photograph of a minor which distinguishes a depiction of simple nudity from a lascivious exhibition of the genitals, children typically are not mature enough to project sexuality consciously; instead, as the Ninth Circuit [in Arvin] has pointed out, it is often the photographer who stages the picture in such a way as to make it sexually suggestive.” 662 F.3d at 843-44 (citation omitted). Thus, in some circumstances, the intent and motive of the photographer, by putting the images in context, place an important gloss on whether the relevant factors point to lasciviousness. Id. at 844.
Here, the district concluded that Schuster‘s intent was to focus on the genitals, thereby creating a sexually suggestive photo. In reaction to the government‘s description of the photo as a “close-up photo of a little boy‘s privates,” the district court agreed, stating that “[i]t looks to me as if that was the whole intention of the picture.” Sentencing Tr. at 21. The district court went on to find that “[i]t‘s definitely a picture focusing on the genitalia,” specifically remarking that “it‘s not the whole body.” Sentencing Tr. at 22 (emphasis added). Schuster does not dispute that the boy‘s genitalia are shown but his head is not, which undermines his argument that the photo is of the same ilk as common photos showing kids playing in a bathtub. This photo did not capture the
As noted, Schuster does argue that the setting—kids playing in the bathtub—points against a finding of lasciviousness. It may be true, as the government concedes, that “[s]tanding alone, the setting [the bathtub] is not commonly associated with sexual activity. But showers and bathtubs are frequent hosts to fantasy sexual encounters as portrayed on television and in film.” United States v. Larkin, 629 F.3d 177, 183 (3d Cir. 2010). So even this factor does not necessarily weigh in Schuster‘s favor.
The district court‘s sensible reliance on the photo‘s failure to show the boy‘s whole body, and the resulting focus on the genitals, would be enough to survive clear error review, but there is more. Above all, Schuster‘s intent and motive in photographing the boy in that specific way also support the district court‘s finding. The evidence was plentiful that Schuster collected child pornography (he called it an “addiction to child pornography“) and had a sexual interest in young boys. That sexual interest sheds light on why Schuster took the photograph of a nude boy‘s genitals, and whether the image is sexually suggestive rather than, as Schuster argues, some sort of innocent mistake. In addition to this sexual interest in young boys generally, the government also presented evidence that Schuster had a sexual interest in this boy specifically. According to the boy, Schuster pulled down the boy‘s pants and asked to touch the boy‘s “privates.” PSR ¶ 30. The boy told Schuster “no,” but Schuster “did it anyway.” Id. The victim went to the bathroom, told Schuster he did not need help, but Schuster rubbed the boy‘s penis with toilet paper when the boy was done using the bathroom. Id. Schuster argues that he was simply trying to help the boy clean up after going to the bathroom, but the boy‘s description of the contact proves otherwise. Schuster‘s intent and motive support the district court‘s finding, and we conclude that the district court did not clearly err in finding that the photo depicted the lascivious exhibition of genitals.
D. Reasonableness of the Sentence
Lastly, Schuster challenges the reasonableness of the sentence. He first launches a broadside attack on the Sentencing Guideline that governs offenses involving the manufacturing of child pornography,
Schuster presents a more case-specific argument, contending that the district court did not adequately consider the controlling sentencing factors in
The district court gave more than meaningful consideration of the
Nor was the sentence substantively unreasonable. Based on the factors relied on by the district court, the sentencing judge acted well within its discretion in choosing the nearly 22-year imprisonment term. We presume the reasonableness of a within-Guideline sentence, including Guidelines ranges generated by the sexual exploitation guidelines. Mantanes, 632 F.3d at 377. Here, the sentence was around eight years under the advisory Guidelines of thirty years (as set by the statutory maximum). Plus, as the district court explained, there were significant aggravating circumstances: a horrific offense, committed thrice over with three different young victims, two of whom were related to Schuster. We cannot say that Schuster has overcome the presumption of reasonableness.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the sentence imposed by the district court.
