Affirmed by published opinion. Judge DUNCAN wrote the opinion, in which Judge CONRAD and Judge SCHROEDER joined.
OPINION
Appellant Michael Malloy challenges his conviction and sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) for producing a videotape of himself and another adult having sex with a 14 year-old girl (“S.G.”). Among other issues, Malloy contends that the statute is constitutionally infirm unless we interpret it to incorporate a reasonable mistake of age defense. For the reasons that follow, we affirm Malloy’s conviction and sentence.
I.
In October 2005, Malloy’s friend, Aaron Burroughs, brought S.G. to Malloy’s home for the purpose of engaging in sex with the two men. Petr.’s Br. at 4; J.A. 197-98. Burroughs coached a junior varsity high school football team of which S.G. was the manager. Malloy was a 33 year-old United States Capital Police Officer. At the time, S.G. was a 14 year-old girl, born on November 6, 1990, who had recently started tenth grade. Burroughs and Malloy videotaped each other having sex with S.G. Later in the fall of 2005, Burroughs again brought S.G. to Malloy’s home to engage in sex with the two men. On this second occasion, S.G. was either 14 or had just turned 15 years of age.
The FBI began investigating in the summer of 2006. After speaking with S.G. and Burroughs, FBI agents interviewed Malloy and also executed a search warrant at his residence. Malloy admitted to the agents that he had had sex with S.G. on two occasions and had videotaped one encounter with his Sony camcorder. Malloy also admitted that he thought S.G. “looked young” when he first met her. J.A. 60, 266, 275. Other than asking her how old she was, however, he did not further investigate S.G.’s age. At Malloy’s residence, FBI agents recovered the Sony camcorder and the videotape of the sexual encounter.
Malloy was chаrged with sexual exploitation of a minor for the purpose of producing a visual depiction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). This charge contains three essential elements: (1) the victim was less than 18 years old; (2) the defendant used, employed, persuaded, induced, enticed, or coerced the minor to take part in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of that conduct; and (3) the visual depiction was produced using materials that had been transported in interstate or foreign commerce.
Malloy filed pretrial motions, including a motion to dismiss the indictment as exceeding Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause. The government filed a motion in limine to preclude Malloy from offering a defense of reasonable mistake of age. At а pretrial motions hearing on September 11, 2007, the district court denied Malloy’s motions. The court held that under Supreme Court and Fourth Circuit precedent, “the commerce clause does empower Congress to regulate purely local intrastate activities ... so long as *170 they are part of an economic class of activities that have a substantial effect on interstate commerce.” J.A. 82. The court granted the government’s motion to disallow a mistake of age defense, reasoning that
this statute is very, very similar to statutory rape kinds of cases. Most jurisdictions in this country simply will not allow reasonable mistake-of-fact defenses for these type[s] of crimes for the reasons that the legislature made it a crime and they proscribed this when you’re dealing with minors to protect minors. And so ... if she’s under 18, she was the type of person that Congress intended to protect. 1
J.A. 111.
At trial, Malloy stipulated that the videotape at issue was “a visual depiction showing the defendant engaging in genital and oral sexual intercourse with S.G.,” and that it “proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant used S.G. to take part in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of that conduct.” J.A. 185, 403. The government established that S.G. was born in November 1990 through S.G.’s testimony and through a certified true copy of her birth certificate. She was therefore 14 years old when Malloy videotaped her having sex with him in October 2005. The government also produced uncontested evidence that the Sony video camera Malloy used was manufactured in Japan and that the videotapе cassette at issue was manufactured in Mexico.
At the close of the government’s evidence, Malloy moved for a judgment of acquittal. He argued that there had been an impermissible constructive amendment to the indictment because it incorrectly required that the prohibited act be done “knowingly.” J.A. 321. The court denied the motion, ruling that the term “knowingly” in the indictment was merely “superfluous” and that no constructive amendment had occurred. J.A. 328, 330-31. On September 20, 2007, the jury returned a verdict of guilty.
Although Malloy’s advisory sentencing guidelines range was 324 to 360 months, *171 the court sentenced him to the statutory mandatory minimum of 15 years (180 months). In doing so, the court rejected Malloy’s argument that the mandatory minimum was grossly disproportionate to the crime committed in violation of the Eighth Amendment. This appeal followed.
Malloy presents four issues on appeal: (1) that the district court erred by refusing to allow a reasonable mistake of age defense; (2) that that there was a constructive amendment to the indictment under which he was charged; (3) that § 2251(a) as applied to him was not a valid exercise of Congress’s Commerce Clause power; and (4) that his 15-year mandatory minimum sentence violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. We consider each in turn.
II.
A.
Malloy first argues that a mistake of age defense is constitutionally required. Malloy maintains that without such a defense § 2251(a) is unconstitutionally over-broad under the First Amendment because it chills a substantial amount of protected speech. This court reviews a challenge to the constitutionality of a federal statute de novo.
United States v. Buculei,
To comprehensively аddress Malloy’s challenge, we conduct a sequential analysis. We focus first on the statute itself. In doing so, we find that the statutory text, legislative history, and judicial interpretation compel the conclusion that knowledge of the victim’s age is neither an element of the offense nor textually available as an affirmative defense. Informed by this statutory analysis, we then turn to the crux of Malloy’s argument: that in order for the statute to avoid unconstitutional overbreadth we must engraft onto it a reasonable mistake of age defense.
1.
We begin with an analysis of the statute, which provides in pertinent part:
Any person who employs, uses, persuades, induces, entices, or coerces any minor to engage in ... any sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such сonduct ... shall be punished ... if that visual depiction was produced using materials that have been mailed, shipped, or transported in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce by any means....
18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). It is immediately apparent that the statute on its face contains no requirement that the defendant know that the victim is a minor.
In fact, Congress considered and explicitly rejected such a knowledge requirement. The House Conference Report clarified:
The Senate Bill contains an express requirement in proposed section 2251(a) that the crime be committed ‘knowingly.’ The House amendment does not. The Conference substitute accepts the House provision with the intent that it is not a necessary element of a prosecution that the defendant knew the actual age of the child.
H.R.Rep. No. 95-811, at 5 (1977) (Conf. Rep.) (emphasis added); see also; S.Rep. No. 95-601, at 5 (1977).
The Supreme Court, too, has opined that knowledge of the age of the victim is not required to convict a defendant under § 2251(a). In
United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc.,
the Supreme Court considered the interpretation of § 2252, which prohibits the transportation, shipping, reception, or distribution of pornography produced using underage individuals. 513
*172
U.S. 64, 68,
Like the district court here, the Supreme Court drew an analogy between § 2251(a) and traditional statutory rape offenses, stating that the presumption of a mens rea requirement in criminal law “expressly excepted sex offenses, such as [statutory] rape, in which the victim’s actual age was determinative despite defendant’s reasonable belief that the girl had reached [the] age of consent.”
Further, the text of § 2251(a) does not include an affirmative defense for reasonable mistake of age. Evidence of Malloy’s belief regarding S.G.’s age is irrelevant under the statute, where it is the actual age of the victim that controls. When Congress intends a statute to include an affirmative defense, particularly in the context of the laws involving child pornography and sexual exploitation of children, it can and has included the defense in the statute’s text. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 2243(c) (establishing a reasonable mistake of age defense to a charge of sexual abuse of a minor in a prison or institution, or in the special maritime or territorial jurisdiction of the United States); 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(d) (allowing an affirmative defense to possession of child pornography charge if the defendant possessed less than three images and took steps to destroy or report them). It has not done so here.
2.
We now turn to a consideration of Malloy’s constitutional challenge. Apparently recognizing that the statutory text provides no grounds for raising a reasonable mistake of age defense, Malloy contends that one must be judicially engrafted for the statute to avoid reaching too broadly and chilling a substantial amount of protected speech.
We first consider Malloy’s argument in light of the rulings of our sister circuits that have addressed whether a reasonable mistake of age defense is constitutionally necessary for statutes that prohibit the production of child pornography to avoid unconstitutional overbreadth. We then turn to Supreme Court guidance to ana *173 lyze Malloy’s overbreadth argument. Informed by this analysis, we conclude that no reasonable mistake of age defense is constitutionally required.
a.
Malloy’s argument mirrors, and relies heavily upon, a Ninth Circuit decision,
United States v. United States District Court (“District Court
”),
The Eighth and Eleventh Circuits have ruled to the contrary, holding that no mistake of age defense is necessary in statutes prohibiting the production of child pornography. In
Gilmour v. Rogerson,
the Eighth Circuit held that the Constitution does not require a mistake of age defense under a state statute, Iowa Code § 728.12(1),
3
that is very similar to § 2251.
In
United States v. Deverso,
the Eleventh Circuit likewise held that no affirmative defense was constitutionally required under another provision of the same statute at issue here.
b.
We turn now to an analysis of the statute under the over-breadth doctrine, on which Malloy’s First Amendment challenge depends. The Supreme Court has held that “[a]ecording to our First Amendment overbreadth doctrine, a statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. The doctrine seeks to strike a balance between competing social costs.”
United States v. Williams,
- U.S. -,
In
Ferber,
the Supreme Court comprehensively considered child pornography in the context of an overbreadth challenge under the First Amendment. In weighing the government’s interest as required by the overbreadth analysis, the Court found that “the exploitive use of children in the production of pornography has become a serious national problem” and that “[t]he prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse of children constitutes a government objective of surpassing importance.”
Ferber,
Because of the surpassing importance of the government’s interest in safeguarding the physical and psychological wellbeing of children,
5
the government has greater leeway to regulate child pornography than it does other areas.
See Ferber,
Having considered the strong government interest identified by the Supreme Court in suppressing the production of child pornography, we now assess whether § 2251(a) as written poses a threat of chilling a substantial amount of protected expressive activity. The protected expression the Ninth Circuit found to be threatened by the statute was the production of adult pornography. Malloy’s argument echoes the Ninth Circuit’s analysis. See Petr.’s Br. at 14. We are persuaded by neither.
We note as a practical matter that little legitimate pornography would be chilled because producers of pornography are
already
required to authenticate actors’ ages.
6
See
18 U.S.C. § 2257(b)(1) (requiring that anyone who produces pornography shall “ascertain, by examination of an identificatiоn document containing such information, the performer’s name and date of birth”). There are, moreover, other reasons why § 2251(a) does not pose a substantial risk of chilling protected expression. First, only a subset of adult pornography is at issue-namely, pornogra
*176
phy made by producers who seek to use “youthful — looking” actors or actresses. Second, because the children depicted in child pornography frequently cannot be found, the prosecutor must show that the subject is a minor solely from the pictures. Consequently, most prosecutions for child pornography involve a subject that is not simply “youthful-looking” but unmistakably a child.
7
H.R.Rep. No. 98-536, at 3, 7-8 (1984). Statutes like § 2251(a) will not inhibit producers of adult pornography from using youthful-looking subjects who are not unmistakably children because prosecution in such cases is rare.
See District Court,
Because the government interest at stake is significant and § 2251(a) does not substantially chill protected speech (esрecially relative to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep), we decline to engraft onto it a reasonable mistake of age defense that is neither grounded in the statutory text nor mandated by the Constitution.
B.
Malloy also argues that his constitutional due process rights were violated because an “accused criminal has a fundamental due process right to present a defense.” Petr.’s Br. at 12. We review a properly preserved constitutional claim de novo.
United States v. Hall,
Contrary to Malloy’s assertion, the record before us indicates that he was *177 afforded ample opportunity to defend himself. For instance, as we have noted, he was able to present evidence intended to undermine the government’s claim that S.G. was a minor. See supra note 1. As a constitutional challenge, Malloy’s argumеnt therefore fails.
While Malloy’s argument is couched in terms of his due process right to defend himself, the crux of his complaint is that he was not allowed to present a particular defense. As such, it is better framed as an evidentiary argument. We review a district court’s refusal to admit defense evidence under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Uzenski,
Malloy’s argument is without merit because “a defendant’s right to present a defense is not absolute: criminal defendants do not have a right to present evidence that the district court, in its discretion, deems irrelevant or immaterial.”
United States v. Prince-Oyibo,
III.
Malloy next argues that the government and district court constructively amended his indictment. The indictment charged that Malloy
did knowingly employ, use, entice and coerce a minor female to engage in sexually explicit conduct, to wit, graphic sexual intercourse, for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of such conduct, and said depiction was produced using materials that have been mailed, shipped, and transported in interstate and foreign commerce by any means.
J.A. 10 (emphasis added). Malloy argues that since the government was not required to prove that he
knew
the age of S.G. and the jury instructions stated that he was not so required, the government’s burden was impermissibly lowered, constructively amending his indictment. This court reviews de novo a claim of constructive amendment to an indictment.
See United States v. Floresca,
A constructive amendment occurs where “the indictment is altered to
*178
change the elements of the offense charged, such that the defendant is actually convicted of a crime other than that charged in the indictment.”
United States v. Randall,
Malloy claims that the indictment against him was constructively amended because the indictment included the word “knowingly” even though the elements of the offense charged in the indictment do not contain a knowledge element. He argues that, despite the inclusion of the word “knowingly,” the government was not required to prove that his actions were “knowing” in order to obtain a conviction; he was prevented from showing that his actions were not “knowing” (i.e., he could not raise the reasonable mistake of age defense); and the jury was instructed that what Malloy knew or believed about S.G.’s age was irrelevant. Petr.’s Br. at 20; J.A. 321-31, 367.
This argument is unavailing. For the variance to be fatal, Malloy must show that it prejudiced his defense. The record reveals an absence of prejudice here. Approximately two months before trial, the government filed a motion in limine that set forth the language of § 2251(a) as well as the voluminous case law supporting the proposition that “knowingly” is not an element of the charge and that the government did not have to prove that Malloy knew that S.G. was a minor. Indeed, Malloy filed a responsive brief — again, well before trial — in which he agreed with the government that it did not have to put on any proof with respect to Malloy’s knowledge of S.G.’s age. As such, Malloy cannot reasonably claim that the word “knowingly” in the indictment resulted in actual prejudice. Nor, given the pre-trial pleadings, can he claim that he was convicted of “a distinct, unindicted offense” from that set forth in the indictment.
Floresca,
*179 Here, the crime charged in the indictment — the sexual exploitation of S.G. for the purpose of producing a visuаl depiction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) — was the charge on which Malloy was tried. There was no surprise, no hindrance in trial preparation, and no prejudice. Malloy knew that the word “knowingly” was not in the statute, and he knew that no knowledge element was included in the standard jury instructions. Malloy suffered no prejudice; he was not convicted of a distinct, unindicted offense; and there is no danger that he will be re-prosecuted for the same offense. Consequently, there was no constructive amendment.
IV.
Malloy next argues that § 2251(a) as applied to his case exceeds Congress’s authority under the Commerce Clause. We review de novo a challenge to the constitutionality of a federal statute.
United States v. Buculei
In
United States v. Forrest,
this court upheld a defendant’s convictions for production and possession of child pornography which itself had never crossed state lines, but which was produced using cameras that were manufactured outside the state.
Our sister circuits to have considered such a Commerce Clause challenge in light of
Raich
have similarly upheld the constitutionality of federal child pornography statutes in cases of purely intrastate possession or production.
See, e.g., United States v. McCalla,
Despite this well-settled federal law, Malloy argues that because he allegedly did not know that he was producing child pornоgraphy at the time he videotaped himself and his Mend having sex with 14 year-old S.G., “he was neither a consumer nor supplier of child pornography” and therefore his production of child pornography had a “null effect” on the “national market for child pornography.” Petr.’s Br. at 28. But that is not the test. 12 This court need not examine the specific effect on commerce of this defendant’s child pornography activities. 13
Here, there was unquestionably “local” production of child pornography with a video camera and videotape that had traveled in foreign commerce. Congress has concluded, and this court has upheld Congress’s conclusion, that such production is “part of an ‘economic class of activities that have a substantial effect on interstate commerce.’”
Forrest,
V.
Finally, Malloy challenges the 15-year sentence imposed by the district court pursuant to the statutory mandatory minimum under 18 U.S.C. § 2251(e) as a violation of the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Again, claims of constitutional error are reviewed de novo.
United States v. Myers,
This court has held that “proportionality review [under the Eighth Amendment’s cruel and unusual punishment clause] is not available for any sentence less than life imprisonment without thе possibility of parole.”
United States v. Ming Hong,
*181 VI.
For the aforementioned reasons, Malloy’s conviction and sentence are
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court carefully and repeatedly considered Malloy's reasonable mistake of age defense. After initially granting the government's motion to preclude the defense, for example, the court allowed Malloy's counsel to "proffer the circumstances that reflects high care, high standard, almost a faultless situation where there's no way that your client was able to determine that she was under 18.” J.A. 110. After hearing the evidence counsel proposed, the court refused to reversе its earlier ruling because "[tjhere was no proffer that the defendant, Mr. Malloy, investigated her age or saw any documents that she provided that showed that she was over 18.” J.A. 154.
Moreover, Malloy’s counsel was allowed to present much of the evidence that would have supported a reasonable mistake of age defense in the context of a challenge to the government's proof on the essential element of the victim’s actual age. The court allowed counsel to ask S.G. such questions as what Burroughs instructed her to tell anyone who asked about her age; whether she told the defendant her age; and whether she posted misleading information about her age on the internet. Further, Malloy repeatedly attacked the victim’s credibility by impeaching her with her allegedly рrior inconsistent statements regarding her age. The court allowed Malloy to testify that he was told that the victim was a 19 year-old college student who had just entered her sophomore year at Bowie State. The court admitted such evidence despite subsequently concluding that it "had very little relevance at all and it got very close to the prohibition that the court gave from the inception, that reasonable mistake of age just isn't a defense under these facts.” J.A. 337. Indeed, the court commented that "[i]n retrospect I probably shouldn't have allowed any of it because it really is not relevant. The defense really just had speculation.” J.A. 338.
. The majority noted that the defense was very narrow: “A defendant may avoid conviction only by showing, by clear and convincing evidence, that he did not know, and could not reasonably have learned, that the actor or actress was under 18 years of age.” Id. at 543. As such, it does not appear that District Court helps Malloy. Beyond asking S.G. her age, he did not conduct any investigation or view any documentary evidence. As the district court here suggested, it is unlikely that such cursory questioning would meet the "clear and convincing evidence” standard. Implicitly acknowledging these evidentiary deficiencies, at oral argument Malloy's counsel requested that this court engraft the reasonable mistake of age defense with a lower "preponderance of the evidence” standard. However, for the reasons that follow, we reject the argument that § 2251(a) requires any affirmative defense.
. Iowa Code § 728.12(1), titled "Sexual Exploitation of a Minor,” provides:
It shall be unlawful to employ, use, persuade, induce, entice, coerce, solicit, knowingly permit, or otherwise cause or attempt to cause a minor to engage in a prohibited sexual act or the simulation of a prohibited sexual act. A person must know, or have reason to know, or intend that the act or simulated act may be photographed, filmed, or otherwise preserved in a negative, slide, book, magazine, computer, computer disk, or other print or visual medium ... or in any other type of storage system.”
Iowa Code § 728.12(1);
see Gilmour,
. Similarly, the dissenting judge in District Court reasoned that
Congress intended to protect children ... who try to pass as adults to appear in pornography. Such children are in grave danger of sacrificing their physiological, emotional, and mental health.... These children are inexperienced and uneducated; most important, they lack the foresight we attribute only to adults. Congress has chosen to protect such children against their own immaturity, against the unreasoned, desperate choices children are wont to make.
. In arguing that the government’s interest in preventing child pornography is of overriding importance, the Supreme Court has maintained that such regulation is critical because ”[a] democratic society rests, for its continuance, upon the healthy, well-rounded growth of young people into full maturity as citizens.”
Ferber,
. While it is certainly true, as the majority in
District Court
notes, that documents can be forged,
District Court,
. It was precisely this problem that prompted Congress to raise the age of minority for the purpose of §§ 2251 & 2252 from 16 to 18 years. H.R.Rep. No. 98-536, at 3, 7-8. As the Committee Report explains, the amendment “changes the definition of minors protected by this chapter from a person under the age of 16 years, to a person under the age 18 years.... Usually the child who is depicted in child pornography cannot be located. Proof of the child’s age has therefore been by circumstantial evidence____ By raising the age to 18, if the child depicted does not look like an adult, a conviction can be obtained.” Id. The report added, "[r]aising the age ... would facilitate the prosecution of child pornography cases and raise the effective age of protection of children from these practices, probably not to 18 years of age, but perhaps to 16.” Id. at 3.
. See, e.g., Beth Barrett, Porn is $12 Billion Industry, but Profits Leave Valley, Daily News, June 5, 2007 (explaining that, in 2006, pornography was a $12 billion industry and that it had quadrupled from 1991 to 2006); Porn Profits: Corporate America’s Secret, ABCnews.com, Jan. 28, 2003, available at http:// abcnews.go.com/Primetime/Story?id= 132001&page=1 (last accessed on April 6, 2009) (explaining that, in 2002, pornography was a $10 billion industry — bigger than the NFL, the NBA, and Major League Baseball combined — and that some of the nation’s best-known corporations are quietly sharing in its significant growth and profits).
. As the Supreme Court noted in
X-Citement Video,
"the perpetrator confronts the underage victim personally and may reasonably be required to ascertain that victim’s age,” and the opportunity for a reasonable mistake of age is extremely low when there is such direct contact.
. As noted, the Supreme Court analogized § 2251(a) to statutory rape
laws-see
X-
Citement Video,
. Although not controlling, we note that the Eleventh Circuit addressed this issue as well in
Deverso,
. We note, as well, that this construction is merely an attempt by Malloy to hang his reasonable mistake of age defense on another constitutional hook.
. Again, as we noted in
Forrest,
"[b]ecause Congress possessed a rational basis for concluding that the local production and possession of child pornography substantially affect interstate commerce,
‘the de minimis character of individual instances arising under the statute is of no consequence.' ”
. Even if proportionality review were available, however, it likely would not change the result here. The Supreme Court has explained that "[s]evere, mandatory penalties may be cruel, but they are not unusual in the constitutional sense, having been employed in various forms throughout our Nation’s history.”
Harmelin v. Michigan,
