Gary Jackson was indicted for violating 18 U.S.C. § 2423(c), 1 which punishes any United States citizen “who travels in foreign commerce, and engages in any illicit sexual conduct with another person.” The district court held that application of this statute to Jackson’s conduct might well violate the Ex Post Facto Clause of the Constitution, and interpreted the statute narrowly to avoid any constitutional infirmity. We concentrate on the statutory interpretation question and approach it somewhat differently: Using any reasonable definition of the word “travel,” we conclude, Jackson’s actions fell outside the conduct that Congress prosсribed. We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to dismiss the indictment.
I.
Factual Background
The factual circumstances of this case are undisputed and quite disturbing.
The defendant, Gary Jackson, is a United States citizen and retired marine carpenter. In November 2001, Jackson and his longtime domestic partner, James Eleven, left the United States to relocate permanently to Cambodia. They sold their home and shipped or sold their remaining property. The couple sent money to a friend in Cambodia, who purchased a home for them. 2 Before their departure, Jackson and Eleven opened a joint bank account in the United States for the purpose of maintaining a depository for Jackson’s monthly pension check. Funds from this account were then wired to a joint account Jackson and Eleven opened in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
After their departure from the United States, Jackson and Eleven traveled in Thailand for two months, eventually settling in their new home in Cambodia in January 2002. Both Jackson and Eleven obtained jobs in Cambodia. According to a declaration filed by Eleven, both men intended to apply for Cambodian citizenship after satisfying that country’s five-year residency requirement. Although Jackson continued to use his United States passрort to visit other Southeast Asian countries, he never returned to the United
Jackson admits that he met a young Cambodian boy selling newspapers at a café in Phnom Penh on June 27, 2003 and “asked [the boy] if he would sleep with him.” Jackson then asked the boy to locate two other young boys to join them at a guesthouse well-known for catering to sexual rendezvouses. The three boys were between the ages of ten and fifteen. Jackson performed oral sex on each of the three boys one at a time, while the others took phоtographs. After the encounter Jackson gave the boys $21 to split.
Cambodian authorities learned about the incident through an international children’s rights group and arrested Jackson on charges of debauchery. While the Cambodian charge was pending, the United States revoked Jackson’s passport and agreed to take jurisdiction over the crime. Jackson was thereupon expelled from Cambodia, flown to the United States, and indicted by a grand jury on three counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2423(c), a statute enacted on April 30, 2003 — well after Jackson left the United States for the last time.
Following his indictment Jackson entered intо a plea agreement, admitting that he had committed the acts alleged but reserving the right to challenge the indictment on constitutional, jurisdictional, and statutory grounds. Jackson then filed a motion in the district court seeking to dismiss the indictment on eight different grounds, including violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause and charging conduct not within the scope of the statute. Granting the motion, the district court dismissed the indictment on the ground “that Congress intended only to prohibit both travel and conduct occurring after the statute’s effective date.” The district court reasoned that the plain language of the statute evidenced Congress’s intent to mеld the statutory terms “travels in foreign commerce” and “engages in illicit sexual conduct” into one substantive element. Because Jackson’s travel in foreign commerce was complete in 2001, the district court held, the statute did not apply to Jackson’s conduct. Although the district court also suggested that applying the statute to Jackson would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause, the court rested its holding on its statutory interpretation.
The government timely appealed the order of the district court. We review de novo a district court’s decision to dismiss an indictment.
See United States v. Marks,
II.
Statutory Background
International child-sex tourism is a growing problem. Seeking tо aid foreign countries that lack effective domestic legal means to prosecute American sex tourists and to deflect foreign criticism that United States citizens are fueling the international sex tourism industry, Congress has sought in recent years to strengthen this country’s laws prohibiting illicit sexual activity by Americans traveling abroad.
See
H.R. REP. 107-525, at 2-3 (2002). A statute enacted in 1994 prohibited international travel by American citizens “for the purpose of engaging” in sex with minors.
See
18 U.S.C. § 2423(b). Congress went a step further in 2003, adding the offense here at issue. That enactment provides that “[a]ny United States citizen or alien admitted for permanent residence who travels in forеign commerce, and engages in any illicit sexual conduct with another person shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 30 years, or both.” Prosecutorial Remedies and Other
In a recent decision,
United States v. Clark,
The district court held that the statute “clearly melds ‘travel and engages’ into one substantive element.” Such a view, however, is at least in tension with, and probably inconsistent with,
Clark’s
holding that the statute “does not require that the [illicit sex act] occur
while
traveling in foreign commerce.”
5
III.
Temporal Reach of the Statute
When, as here, the retrospective impact of a law is at issue, the initial question is “whether Congress has expressly prescribed the statute’s proper reach.”
Fernandez-Vargas v. Gonzales,
— U.S. -, -,
Although
Landgraf
and
Fernandez-Vargas
involved the possible retrospective application of civil statutes, the same approach to statutory interpretation applies initially to determining the temporal reach of a criminal statute. That is, while “[t]he
Ex Post Facto
Clause raises to the constitutional level one of the most basic presumptions of our law: legislation, especially of the criminal sort, is not to be applied retroactively,” there is an antecedent issue, “[q]uite independent of the question whether the
Ex Post Facto
Clause bars retrospective application” of the statute, namely “whether Congress intended such application.”
Johnson,
Jackson challenges the partially retrospective application of § 2423(c) to him. We therefore follow the Supreme Court’s instructions about the order of our inquiry, and consider first whether Congress has specified the temporal reach of the statute. Doing so, we conclude, using traditional tools of statutory construction, that § 2423(c) applies only if both the travel and the illicit sex act took place after the enactment of the PROTECT Act.
Our conclusion follows largely from the plain language of the statute. Critical to our statutory interpretation is that § 2423(с) specifies, as one of the crime’s two elements, that it covers “[a]ny United States citizen ... who travels in foreign commerce.” 18 U.S.C. § 2423(c) (emphasis added). The use of the present tense suggests that statutory element does not apply to travel that occurred before the statute’s enactment.
As a general matter, “Congress’ use of a verb tense is significant in construing statutes.”
United States v. Wilson,
Further, we need not rely only on our linguistic conventions to understand Congress’s intentions in using the present tense. Congress has specified generically how we are to apply statutes that use the present tense: The Dictionary Act provides that “[i]n determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, unless the context indicates otherwise ... words used in the present tense include the future as well as the present.” 1 U.S.C; § 1 (2000).
8
Congress did
not
sаy that its usage of the present tense applies to past actions, an omission, that, given the precision of the Dictionary Act in this regard, could not have been an oversight.
See United States v. United Mine Workers of Am.,
Any doubt that Congress used the present tense with respect to the travel element in § 2423(c) to refer to present and future but not past travel is dissipated by the use of the present tense in referring to the second element of the crime delineated by § 2423(c). That element applies if the offender
“engages
in any illicit sexual conduct.” 18 U.S.C. § 2423(c) (emphasis added). With respect to this second element, the reference
must
be — as the government agrees
10
— to the period after the enactment of the statute. Otherwise, serious ex post facto issues would arise regarding the validity of the statute, because the Ex Post Facto Clause forbids punishing individuals for acts that were legal at the time they were
completed. See Johnson,
Given that the present tense phrase
“engages
in any illicit sexual conduct” must apply only to acts after April 30, 2003, we cannot comfortably read the present tense phrase
“travels
in foreign commerce” in the same statutory subsection as applying retrospectively. 18 U.S.C. § 2423(c) (emphases added). Rather, because Congress used the
same
tense in both elements, we give both the same temporal reach, absent some reason to do otherwise.
See Abdul-Akbar v. McKelvie,
Notably, Congress has used the past tense for certain elements of multiple-element crimes when it wants to specify, as it may, that past conduct suffices to meet some of the elements. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) (2000) (“It shall be unlawful for any person — who has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year ... to ship or transport in interstate or foreign commerce, or possess in or affecting commerce, any firearm or ammunition; or to receive any firearm or ammunition which has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerce.” (emphases added)); id. § 2252(a) (“Any person who — knowingly receives, or distributes, any visual depiction [of child pornography] that has been mailed, or has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerce ... shall be punished .... ” (emphases added)). The statute under which Jackson was convicted contains no such contrast in tenses. We should not read in a temporal distinction Congress failed to make.
When, as here, we find the language of the statute to be clear, “we look no further than that language in determining the statute’s meaning.”
Avendano-Ramirez v. Ashcroft,
Finally, our plain words reading of § 2423(c) does not create absurd or impractical consequences that must be avoided.
See Avendano-Ramirez,
For all these reasons, we conclude that Congress intended to cover only travel that occurred after the statute’s enactment. This determination ends the inquiry demanded by Landgraf and its progeny and makes it unnecessary for us to decide whether Jackson’s prosecution would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. Instead, as a matter of statutory interpretation, Jackson’s indictment must be dismissed unless he was traveling in foreign commerce on or after April 30, 2003. We now move to the question of whether Jackson was still traveling in foreign commerce on April 30, 2003, or whether his travel ceased before then.
The Completion of Jackson’s Travels
The parties’ positions concerning when an individual ceases to be a “United States citizen[ ] ... who travels in foreign commerce,” as required by § 2423(c), differ. According to the government, such “travel” ends only when a citizen who has gone abroad returns to the United States, regardless of the length of the absence or the degree to which the person has permanently resettled in a new country. Clark maintains, in contrast, that the “travel” ends once the individual reaches hi's or her foreign destination. We reject the government’s position concerning the statutory meaning of “travel” and сonclude that to decide this case we need not determine whether the defendant’s is correct.
The government’s position — -that “travel” can go on infinitely, even if a citizen permanently resettles abroad- — simply does not comport with common usage of the term “travel,” standing alone. When statutes use common words without explicitly defining them, we look to dictionaries to understand the statute’s meaning.
San Jose Christian College v. City of Morgan Hill,
These definitions recognize that a person permanently settled in a location is no longer traveling, even if that place was not his place of origin. Accordingly, although somebody taking a vacation to a foreign country is commonly described as “traveling” the whole time he is away, a typical conversation would not describe somebody who has changed his primary residence to a foreign county as “traveling” the entire time he remains outside the country.
See Ludlam v. Ludlam,
Clark
reinforces our conclusion that the meaning of travel in § 2423(c) is not so broad as the government suggests. In upholding Congress’s power under the Foreign Commerce Clause to regulate the defendant’s conduct in that case, we relied on “[t]he combination of Clark’s
travel in foreign commerce
and his conduct of an illicit commercial sex act in Cambodia
shortly thereafter.” Clark,
Moreover, this latter holding in Clark undermines the government’s explanation of why a broad interpretation of “travel” is necessary: The government suggests that its limitless interpretation of the term “travel” is necessary to avoid the absurdity of requiring that the illicit sex act take place while the offender is in transit — on the airplane or boat carrying him to his destination, for example. As Clark indicates, the illicit sex act does not need to take place during the course of travel, but can occur thereafter. The government’s expansive interpretation of “travel” is thus not necessary to effectuate Congress’s intent broadly to cover illicit sex by Americans “while in a foreign country.” H.R. REP. NO. 108-66, at 51 (2003) (Conf.Rep.), as reprinted in 2003 U.S.C.C.A.N. 683, 686. We therefore reject the government’s travel-goes-on-infinitely position.
That determination leaves two alternate meanings of the term “travel”: Travel could end when the citizen arrives in a foreign country, or travel could end only once the citizen resettles in or takes up residence in a foreign country. Under the latter understanding of “travel,” a pеrson who is temporarily in France or Thailand — on vacation, for example, or on a business trip — but fully intends to return to a permanent residence in the United States is “traveling” as long as he remains in the foreign city, even if he never leaves Paris or Bangkok to tour the foreign country.
The former interpretation has somewhat more support in the common definitions of the term “travel,” discussed above, that refer to active motion between places. But the latter interpretation at least contemplates future active motion — returning to one’s home country. And it comports with colloquial usage: We might say thаt someone on vacation in France for three weeks is “traveling” during that time she is out of the United States whether that person stays in one hotel in Paris or goes to a different city each day.
The first interpretation — that travels ends upon arrival- — would be further bolstered if one understood Congress’s intent in including the “travels in foreign commerce” element of § 2423(c) to refer to its constitutional authority to regulate the channels of foreign commerce.
See United States v. Clark,
On the other hand, an understanding that travel ends only upon permanent resettlement in a foreign country is supported by courts’ regular use of a distinction between individuals who are
We need not chose between these two alternate definitions. Under either interpretation, Jackson’s travel had ended by April 30, 2003. As of that date, it had been nearly eighteen months since his last airplane flight from the United States, and almost sixteen months since he had begun residing in a Phnom Penh home purchased for him. As of April 30, 2003, Jackson had given up his residence in the United States, begun fulfilling Cambodia’s five-year residency requirement, and intended then to apply for Cambodian citizenship. The government does not dispute those facts. Instead, it admits in its brief that Jackson “took up residence in Cambodia.”
It is thus evident that Jackson had both arrived in Cambodia and resettled in that country beforе § 2423(c) was passed. His travel had ended on either plausible interpretation of the term “travel” as used in § 2423(c). As Congress did not intend to cover those whose travel ended before that date, he could not be charged under § 2423(c).
We note that this analysis is entirely consistent with Clark’s holding that a lapse in time between a defendant’s travel and his sex act will ordinarily not preclude prosecution under the statute. Under our analysis, there was a significant lapse in time between the end of travel and the sex act on either of the two plausible interpretations of the term “travel” we posit. The reason the statute does not apply is not because of that laрse, however, but because both the travel and the sex act must be completed — separately—after the enactment of the 2003 act under which Jackson was prosecuted.
V.
Conclusion
Gary Jackson admits to committing despicable sexual acts with children — acts that led to Jackson’s arrest by the Cambodian police. Yet his abhorrent conduct does not give us license to ignore the elements of the criminal statutes that Congress has established. As we have explained, the text of § 2423(c) only proscribes the conduct of an individual “who travels in foreign commerce” after the enactment of the statute. Becausе Jackson’s travel had ended by April 30, 2003, he is not covered by the provision. The district court was therefore correct to dismiss the indictment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise noted, all subsequent statutory references are to the 2003 Supplement of the 2000 edition of Title 18 of the United States Code.
. Cambodian law restricts property ownership to Cambodian citizens.
. Jackson's admitted conduct — giving money to teenage boys for performing oral sex on them — clearly brings his sex acts within the definition of "illicit sexual conduct.”
See United States v. Clark,
. The Ex Post Facto Clause provides that "No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed." U.S. CONST, art. I, § 9, cl. 3.
. The district court did not have the benefit of this court’s ruling in Clark when it reviewed the statute.
.Clark
leaves unresolved the question of “[wjhether a longer gap between the travel and the ... sex act” than existed in that case (less than two months) would "raise constitutional or other concerns.”
. In
Wilson,
the Supreme Court interpreted a federal statute that credits certain time spent
. This language of the dictionary act was op- . erative at the time Congress enacted § 2423(c) and rеmains unaltered.
. We have in one context, without noting the Dictionary Act definition but consistent with its directive to take context into account, read present tense prohibitory language as covering past actions: When a new statute prescribes the consequences for actions that were prohibited at the time they occurred.
See Coal. for Clean Air
v.
U.S. EPA,
. The government acknowledges in its brief that the illicit sexual conduct “must occur after April 30, 2003, for the statute to be charged.”
. In citing these out-of-circuit cases, we do not endorse their ultimate interpretations of the statutes they examined; we merely provide support for our position that the conjoined use of present tense verbs informs statutory interpretation.
