The defendant pleaded guilty to attempting to transport a minor (a girl of 15) across state lines to engage in illegal sexual conduct, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2423(a), (e), and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. But he reserved the right to appeal the district court’s refusal to dismiss the indictment. The ground of his appeal is that the person he thought was a minor was neither a minor nor a law enforcement officer posing as one but was instead a private citizen. His lawyer has filed an
Anders
brief asking us to let him withdraw from representing the defendant because neither that nor any other ground of appeal is nonfrivolous.
Anders v. California,
In October of 2007 the defendant attempted to contact a minor at the minor’s MySpace page. The minor’s mother, Mrs. Runningwolf, responded to this unwelcome development by creating her own MySpace *550 page, in which she pretended to be a 15 year old named “Kandice” (not her daughter’s name). On October 22, the defendant began emailing “Kandice” and they began chatting online on almost a daily basis. He asked her to have sex with him, and she agreed. On November 2, Mrs. Run-ningwolf reported him to the FBI. Two days later he bought a bus ticket for “Kandice” to travel to meet him, and mailed it to her. The FBI picked up the ticket and assumed “Kandice’s” identity and continued the online chats. On November 19 or thereabouts, the Bureau arrested the defendant.
The case law uniformly holds that the fact that a defendant is mistaken in thinking that the person he is trying to entice is underage is not a defense to a charge of attempted illegal sexual contact with a minor. E.g.,
United States v. Coté,
The purpose of the law of attempt is to nail a person who by his conduct has shown that had the attempt not been interrupted he would very likely have completed the crime that he attempted. As we explained recently in
United States v. Gladish,
There is, we grant, a legitimate concern with vigilantism — with private citizens conducting stings without the knowledge or authorization of the authorities. The vigilantes’ aim might be to blackmail
*551
any offender whom they detect rather than to turn him over to the law enforcement authorities for prosecution. Cf.
United States v. Nardello,
There is no defense of private entrapment,
United States v. Manzella,
A private stinger can find himself accused of committing a crime in his attempt
*552
to catch others. There have been child pornography cases in which the defendant argued (unsuccessfully, however) that he possessed pornography only in order to help the police catch the real pornographer. See, e.g.,
United States v. O’Keefe,
But if the law wants to deter private sting operations, real or phony, the way to do that is “by imposing criminal liability on private parties who encourage crimes (via solicitation, conspiracy, and complicity),” Richard H. McAdams, “The Political Economy of Entrapment,” 96
J.Crim. L. & Criminology
107, 166 (2005), rather than by letting another guilty person — the object of the successful sting— get away with his crime. Just as there is no defense of private entrapment, so there is no exclusionary rule applicable to evidence obtained improperly by private persons.
United States v. Hall,
This case is particularly remote from the concerns with Internet vigilantism, since the “vigilante” was a mother seeking to protect her daughter from a sexual predator. It might have been prudent for her to have notified the FBI as soon as she learned that a 48-year-old stranger was trying to contact her daughter, rather than to conduct her own investigation, which because she was an amateur at investigation might have scared off the defendant before there was enough evidence to prosecute him. But even if she was imprudent or precipitate, that cannot provide him with a defense.
The motion is granted and the appeal dismissed.
