Lead Opinion
After a jury convicted A.J. Kelly of being a felon in possession of a firearm, the district court
On April 21, 2008, police officers executed a search warrant on Kelly’s home in Omaha, Nebraska. During the search, officers discovered a .22 caliber firearm and ammunition. Kelly was charged with and found guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The district court sentenced Kelly to 115 months’ imprisonment and 86 months’ supervised release. The district court imposed several special conditions that governed Kelly’s supervised release.
Sрecial condition fifteen provided, “The Defendant shall neither possess nor have under his/her control any material, legal or illegal, that contains nudity or that depicts or alludes to sexual activity or depicts sexually arousing material.” Kelly challenged this special condition, and a panel from this circuit vacated and remanded for re-sentencing. Kelly,
On remand, the district court re-sentenced Kelly and amended special condition fifteen. The amended condition provided, “The Defendant shall neither possess nor have under his control any material, legal or illegal, that contains child pornography, or photographic depictions of child nudity or of children engaged in any sexual activity.” To support this condition, the district court made the following individualized findings:
Well, and I will find for the record based upon the defendant’s criminal history, that he is a sexual predator, that he is predisposed to explоiting children sexually, and that if he is in possession of materials that contain photographic depictions of nude children or children engaged in sexual activity, that would be contrary to his rehabilitation. And it would also be indicative that he is pursuing a course of predatory activity again and would be cause for the probation office to be concerned, take action and perhaps get him either into counseling or some kind of programming to deal with this issue. So, that’s the amendment we’ll do. And we will see how that works.
So this defendant has an issue where he is not only a danger to society and a danger to children, but he is in need of rehabilitation. And I think it is in his best interests in terms of his rehabilitation that he not be viewing photographs of nude children and that he not be viewing depictions of children engaged in sexual activity. So, it is the rehabilitation aspect that I think is important in supervised release that warrants a condition like this.
In its findings, the court referenced a prior offense where Kelly was convicted of first-degree sexual assault of a child. The district court highlighted the basic facts of the underlying offense at the sentencing hearing: “The defendant does have a history of sexual assault, sexual abuse, particularly abuse of his 12-year-old stepdaughter or daughter of a girlfriend ... who was impregnated.” Accordingly, over Kelly’s objection, the district court imposed special condition fifteen as amended. Kelly now appeals special condition fifteen.
II. DISCUSSION
The sole issue on this appeal is whether special condition fifteen is unconstitutionally overbroad.
According to Kelly, special condition fifteen is overbroad and thus violates his First Amendment rights. Specifically, Kelly asserts that the special condition violates the First Amendment because it goes beyond prohibiting unprotected speech, such as child pornography, and also prohibits him from possessing legal photographic depictions of child nudity, such as Raphael’s “Madonna with the Christ Child.” We disagree and find the special condition supported by individualized findings and sufficiently narrow in light of those findings.
For the sake of argument, we begin with the assumption that Kelly has a “First Amendment interest in viewing and possessing” photographic depictions of child nudity. Osborne v. Ohio,
To avoid “sweеping restrictions on important constitutional rights[,]” statutory mandates guide district courts when imposing special conditions. United States v. Mayo,
Although we have expressed concerns about imposing broad prohibitions, special conditions that prohibit the possession of pornography — even legal pornographic materials — are not unusual. See United States v. Wiedower,
Yet, we have rejected prohibitions that “could apply to any art form that employs nudity.” Kelly,
The present case lies somewhere between the pornography and nudity lines of authority. On one hand, although the definition of pornography is elusive, it seems to represent something more than mere child nudity. See Simons,
Not only is the present condition less restrictive than the conditions we have rejected in the past, “[o]ur prior case law limits the district court’s discretion only insofar as the court imposes limitations on the basis of pure speculation оr assumptions unrelated to the rehabilitative process.” United States v. Kreitinger,
Here, the district court made a specific finding that Kelly is predisposed to exploiting children sexually and that viewing photographic depictions of child nudity would undermine his rehabilitative process. Given the district court’s individual findings concerning Kеlly’s relatively recent predatory behavior and focus on rehabilitation, we do not view the district court’s decision to ban photographic depictions of child nudity as being based on “pure speculation or assumptions unrelated to the rehabilitative process.” Kreitinger,
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the sentence of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Laurie Smith Camp, who became Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Nebraska on December 1, 2011.
. In a pro se letter that appears in the appelíale record, Kelly also seeks review of his
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I write separately in support of the sentencing judge’s thoughtful and well-reasoned “special condition of supervised release” at issue in this appeal and to respectfully, but firmly, reject the dissent’s critical analysis of the sentencing court’s judgment in that regard. A single phrase within the district сourt’s work product is ultimately involved.
I commence with a diagram highlighting the substantive portions of the wordage at issue — “The Defendant shall neither possess nor have under his control any material, legal or illegal, that contains [ (1) ] child pornography, or [ (2) ] photographic depictions of [ (a) ] child nudity or of [ (b) ] children engaged in any sexual activity.” Because the dissent purports to be “trouble[d] ... on so m'any levels” by the district court’s ruling, it is not easy to identify the depth and breadth of its trepidation. Commonsense and the dissent’s extensive emanations seem tо indicate, however, that the source of the dissent’s angst is found among only a few words within the special condition — The Defendant shall neither possess nor have under his control any legal material that contains photographic depictions of child nudity.
By way of example, the dissent refers specifically to Raphael’s “Madonna with the Christ Child,” Raphael’s “Saint John the Baptist,” Bouguereau’s “Birth of Venus,” and the vintage Coppertone baby ad. My conclusion as to source emerges from the belief that the dissent does not (or at least should not) object to this convicted felon and acknowledged sexual predator being prohibited from receipt and possession of illegal material of any kind or of “child pornography.” See 18 U.S.C. § 2256(1), (8)(A), (C) (defining child pornography as enumerated materials containing minors under the age of eighteen years); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1279 (9th ed. 2009) (defining child pornography as “[mjaterial depicting a person under the age of 18 engaged in sexual activity”). Indeed, such pornography pos
Thus, I turn to the single limiting phrase presumably at issue. To begin, I find no precedent, and the dissenting judge cites none, that supports the dissent’s argument, post at 381-82, that because a limitation focuses upon only one aspect of an issue, all limitations on the issue must be banned. Such an idea is particularly pernicious when child nudity and sexual predation directed at pre-pubescent or barely post-pubescent children may be intertwined in a given situation. The dissent’s approach would apparently permit a pedophile to view photographic depictions of child nudity without restraint because limitations on viewing “a toddler” bathing and other similar non-photographic exposure to child nudity are not also prohibited.
Next, and of even more importance, the dissent’s evaluation of the harmlessness of the possession of legal photographic depictions of child
Finally, as with all portions of the sentencing exercise, a sentencing court that operates within the sentencing guidelines
The district court was well within its ample discretion in fashioning this particular requirement.
. "At common law, [a child is] a person who has not reached the age of 14.” Black’s Law Dictionary 271 (9th ed. 2009); see also United States v. Freeman,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Before imposing a special condition of supervised release, a district court must ensure the special condition “ ‘involve[s] no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary’ to advance deterrence, the protection of the public from future crimes of the defendant, and the defendant’s correctional needs.” United States v. Crume,
The district court’s prohibition on legal material protected by the First Amendment, and our approval of the district court’s action, troubles me on so many levels it becomes difficult to knоw where to begin. Let me start by diffusing what I believe may be a thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to a prohibition on material depicting “child nudity” without full consideration of how vastly different in scope and kind the prohibition becomes when one adds the single word “legal” to the prohibition — the only aspect of the special condition Kelly challenges.
Legal photographic depictions of child nudity include the photographs of prepubescent children enjoying a bath undoubtedly taped to grandparents’ refrigerators throughout this country, photographs of newborn infants proudly displayed by parents on office desks or included in Christmas cards and birth announcements to friends and relatives, photographs of classical works of art such as Raphael’s “Madonna with the Christ Child,” Raphael’s “Saint John the Baptist,” or Bouguereau’s “Birth of Venus,” as well as photographs of images such as the vintage Coppertone baby ad.
The class of material depicting “legal” child nudity must, by necessity, be completely innocuous and wholly lacking in any prurient interest for it to be considered “legal,” оtherwise it would inevitably fall into the category of illegal child pornography. I dare say the class of material depicting legal child nudity necessarily excludes most (if not all) photographic depictions of nude post-pubescent females.
A district court may not categorically impose particular spеcial conditions on certain types of offenders, such as sexual offenders. Kelly,
Kelly’s criminal history shows his sexual predatory tendencies are limited to post-pubescent females. When he was nineteen years old, he sexually assaulted a former girlfriend who was eighteen years old. Presentence Investigation Report (PSR) at ¶ 40. When he was thirty years old, he was charged with sexually assaulting his girlfriend’s post-pubescent daughter, a charge proven by the fact that Kelly impregnated the girl (the same fact which also clearly establishes she was post-pubescent). Id. at ¶ 44. There is nothing in Kelly’s criminal history, or in the district court record, which shows Kelly has any sexual interest whatsoever in pre-pubesсent children, or that his sexual interest in females mature enough to be menstruating will somehow be triggered by the photograph of a newborn male or a classical work of art depicting nude cherubs.
While I can acknowledge some defendants’ aberrant sexual proclivities may be triggered by the sight of a newborn’s birth announcement, the district court’s ban on Kelly’s right to possess such a photograph is based on “pure speculation or assumptions unrelated to the rehabilitative process.” United States v. Kreitinger,
To make matters worse, the majority defends this special condition by relying upon one of the condition’s arbitrary shortcomings, the fact that Kelly is only prohibited from possessing photographic depictions of legal child nudity. Assuming for a moment common sense alone was enough for us to divine the inner workings of Kelly’s mind, and we knew without the assistance of a psychologist that viewing the image of a toddler in a bathtub would trigger in Kelly the urge to sexually molest a seventeen year-old post-pubescent female, I do not see how limiting the prohibition to photographic depictions wоuld advance the goal of deterrence or serve Kelly’s correctional needs. For if Kelly’s aberrance is truly triggered by such images, the prohibition should include his possession of any form of such an image, including print materials, videotapes, or digital images found on the internet.
Under the district court’s condition, Kelly can watch the birth of a newborn infant on a television show such as Grey’s Anatomy, but he is subject to revocation of his supervised release if he takes a photograph of the same image while watching the show. He can possess a рoster of the Coppertone baby ad, but he cannot possess a photograph of the same poster. Kelly can possess a DVD of the motion picture “Three Men and a Baby” starring Tom Selleck, but be sent back to prison for taking a photo of the DVD cover. He can find digital images of Raphael’s “Madonna with the Christ Child” on the internet and view them on his cell phone, but he cannot carry a photograph of the same image in his wallet. Kelly can possess a print copy of a diaper advertisement depicting а topless female toddler in a parenting magazine, but cannot possess a photograph of the same image. How do we explain such irrational and bizarre distinctions to a discerning and skeptical public?
The majority’s decision to affirm the district court not only erodes our applicable criminal and constitutional precedents, but it further exposes our court to the just criticism of a public which already is skeptical of the judicial system. Criminal defendants, as well as the general public, expect that “[t]he punishment should fit the crime.” DuBose v. State of Minn.,
I, for one, expect more. I expect probation officers in the federal systеm to consider carefully the special conditions of supervised release they recommend and ensure such conditions are rationally connected and narrowly tailored to a defendant’s specific correctional needs, without creating absurd and illogical pitfalls and traps for defendants on supervised release. I expect the same of district courts when they consider whether to adopt those recommendations. I expect the same of the lawyers employed by the Department of Justice when defending such conditions in our courts. I also expect our appellate courts to apply the law rationally and even-handedly, and with the exercise of common sense, when determining whether such conditions comport with constitutional limits.
The majority’s decision to affirm the district court reflects a failure of our justice system on all of these levels. Because I cannot sit idly by and remain silent in
. Because the single phrase of the district court’s special condition prohibiting Kelly from possessing legal child nudity is the only issue before us, the concurrence’s discussion of other aspects of the special condition is wholly irrelevant.
