Following a jury trial, Alvaun Thompson was convicted in 2015 on nine counts related to his prostitution of two minor victims in New York City in 2013 and 2014. On appeal from the judgment entered in the Eastern District of New York (Glasser, J. ), Thompson challenges his convictions for violating
In relevant part, section 1591 proscribes "harbor[ing] ... or maintain[ing]" a person under the age of 18, knowing that the person "will be caused to engage in a commercial sex act."
*159Such prosecutions, he argues, would violate those entities' or individuals' First Amendment expressive associational and intimate associational rights. We decide that, even assuming that the statute could reasonably be construed to permit such prosecutions as he hypothesizes, Thompson has demonstrated neither that section 1591 substantially burdens First Amendment rights in an "absolute sense," United States v. Williams ,
Thompson also fails to persuade us that, because the indictment did not allege that he knew that one minor victim was under 14 years of age, his conviction under subsections (a) and (b)(1) of section 1591 must be reversed. Rather, we conclude that the statutory language requires that the defendant know or recklessly disregard the fact that a minor was younger than 18 years old. It does not mandate, to support the increased punishment in subsection (b), that the government prove that a defendant knew or recklessly disregarded that a minor was under the age of fourteen.
Finally, Thompson's venue challenge to his conviction under section 2251 after a jury trial in the Eastern District of New York is also unavailing. As relevant here, section 2251 criminalizes the production of child pornography. Although Thompson physically produced the pornographic video at issue in the Southern District of New York, the government presented ample evidence that elements of Thompson's criminal conduct-his persuasion, inducement, enticement, or coercion of the minor victim, leading her to engage in the sex acts depicted in the video-occurred in the Eastern District. Based on this evidence, the jury was entitled to find that venue for prosecution lay in the Eastern District of New York.
We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
BACKGROUND
Because Thompson appeals from a judgment of conviction entered after a jury trial, we "draw the facts from the evidence presented at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the government." United States v. Allen ,
Thompson began his relationship with the two minor female victims of concern here-identified as M1 and M2-in early 2013, when he was twenty-six years old and they were thirteen and fifteen years old, respectively. Thompson soon began directing the minors to engage in prostitution: he instructed them to offer their prostitution services on the "Penn Track"-a notorious area in Brooklyn's East New York neighborhood-and he advertised their services as prostitutes on the now-defunct website www.backpage.com ("Backpage"). Thompson's Backpage postings displayed the minors semi-nude and in sexually suggestive poses, and offered to sell the prostitution services of each. On several occasions from March through November 2013, the girls were each arrested on the Penn Track for prostitution.
From those early 2013 encounters through the 2015 arrest of Thompson that led to the convictions he now appeals, Thompson employed a variety of methods to gain and maintain control over the girls. He shared an address in Brooklyn with them for at least some of the time during which he sold their prostitution services, and he exercised stringent control over the girls' finances. He professed affection for them and, at the same time, threatened them *160with violence and cursed at them.
The control that Thompson exercised over the girls was powerful. In September 2013, Thompson was arrested for a robbery that had occurred a month earlier and was incarcerated on Rikers Island from then until July 2014, when, after being convicted of petit larceny and sentenced to time served, he was released. Nonetheless, from his first day on Rikers Island until the end of his confinement there eleven months later, he continued to manage and prostitute the girls, directing their activities through phone calls to his confederates and to the girls themselves. Even from the remove of that jail, he was able to dictate where the girls would live, what rooms they would rent for their prostitution activities, and what prostitution services they would offer to customers. He also continued to collect his portion of the proceeds of their prostitution, successfully demanding that the girls place his claimed share in his commissary account at the jail. His threats, harassment, and emotional abuse of the girls also persisted during this period.
In July 2014, soon after his release from jail, Thompson rejoined M1 and M2. Over the next six months, he posted dozens of advertisements for their prostitution services on Backpage. Thompson also transported M1 and M2 to Maryland and Pennsylvania, advertising their services in those states. During this time, he sent the girls semi-nude photos of each other and of other prostitutes who were working for him.
In December 2014, following a vice-unit investigation that lasted eighteen months, New York City police officers arrested Thompson in a Bronx motel, where they found him with M1 and M2. Although, notwithstanding their lengthy investigation, they soon released Thompson, the officers seized his mobile phone in connection with the arrest. On that phone, they found a video made earlier in December and later ascertained to have been made in the Bronx of M1 performing oral sex on Thompson. In January 2015, the FBI arrested Thompson on the federal charges that led to the convictions he now contests.
After a four-day trial in November 2015, a jury found Thompson guilty on nine counts. Eight counts were related to his prostitution of the girls: three counts of sex trafficking of minors in violation of
In preparation for sentencing and in response to the presentence report, the District Court conducted a hearing under United States v. Fatico ,
Thompson timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
As noted above, Thompson raises three challenges to his convictions. He argues, first, that section 1591 (outlawing certain acts in connection with sex trafficking
I. Overbreadth challenge
Thompson first contends that section 1591 violates the First Amendment because it is facially overbroad, therefore requiring reversal of his convictions under that statute. We review de novo a district court's analysis of an overbreadth challenge. United States v. Farhane ,
When Thompson was convicted of violating section 1591, the statute provided in relevant part:
Whoever knowingly-
(1) ... recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, obtains, or maintains by any means a person; or
(2) benefits, financially or by receiving anything of value, from participation in a venture which has engaged in an act described in violation of paragraph (1),
knowing, or in reckless disregard of the fact, ... that the person has not attained the age of 18 years and will be caused to engage in a commercial sex act, shall be punished ....
*162Two different types of improper prosecution could occur under this statute, according to Thompson, and each of these would violate the relevant defendant's First Amendment associational rights. First, he urges that under a plain reading of this statute, and particularly in view of its use of the phrase "maintains by any means," prosecutors could charge charities and religious organizations for providing assistance to child prostitutes. Punishing these entities and those who work for them for providing such assistance, Thompson suggests, interferes unlawfully with the entities' expressive associational rights. Second, Thompson argues that family members of minors engaging in commercial sex are vulnerable to prosecution under the statute if they provide care for those minors, and that the exposure intrudes unlawfully on the family members' intimate associational rights. According to Thompson, these First Amendment intrusions are so substantial that the minor victim trafficking provision must be struck down as unconstitutionally overbroad.
The District Court rejected Thompson's overbreadth challenges, concluding that the intrusive prosecutions posited by Thompson were "absurd[ ]" and "unrealistic" in light of the statute's text and legislative history. United States v. Thompson ,
Premised on a concern that "enforcement of an overbroad law may deter or 'chill' constitutionally protected [First Amendment activity]," Virginia v. Hicks ,
Notably, overbreadth doctrine has developed primarily in the context of laws that include within their ambit a substantial amount of speech protected by the First Amendment. See, e.g. , Williams ,
As set forth below, we ultimately agree with the District Court, and the other courts within our Circuit to consider the question,
A. Expressive associational rights: charitable and religious organizations
First, in our view, the expressive associational rights of the types of organizations *164to which Thompson refers are simply not implicated by the statute.
The Supreme Court has "long understood as implicit in the right to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment a corresponding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political, social, economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends." Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees ,
Thompson argues that limiting the activities (such as providing support services to young trafficking victims) in which charitable and religious groups may engage "is plainly a substantial 'intrusion into the internal structure or affairs of [the] association.' " Appellant's Br. at 11 (alteration in original) (quoting Boy Scouts of America v. Dale ,
But Dale is inapt. Even under Thompson's broad reading of the statute, section 1591(a) does not require any organization to admit as members individuals like the minor victims (the issue in Dale ), prohibit it from doing so, or prevent such a group from advocating on behalf of minor victims. Cf.
*165Johanns v. Livestock Mktg. Ass'n ,
To the extent that the minor victim trafficking provision restricts the activities of charitable or religious groups, it places limits on the non-expressive conduct in which they may engage, rather than on their right to associate for the purpose of expressing their views. See Appellant's Br. at 13 (expressing concern that statute makes criminals of documentary "filmmakers who buy meals for the minors they follow" and "journalists and social scientists who compensate trafficked minors for interviews"). Whether section 1591 restricts the universe of activities these organizations may pursue-and whether section 1591 might incidentally curb their ability to help minors involved in the sex trade to find food and shelter-they have no First Amendment right to engage in much of the conduct Thompson references.
Thompson paints with far too broad a brush when he implies that an organization's activities of this sort would be protected by the First Amendment simply because the organization earnestly believes those activities are important.
*166Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project ,
Thompson also mentions that some of the organizations he identifies are religious and thus, he briefly suggests, their activities are entitled to "special solicitude." See Appellant's Br. at 12 (quoting Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & Sch. v. E.E.O.C. ,
In sum, therefore, section 1591 does not impose a substantial burden on the expressive associational rights of charitable and religious organizations because it affects, if anything, those organizations' non-expressive conduct only.
B. Intimate associational rights: minor victims' family members
Second, Thompson fails to persuade us that the statute substantially infringes families' intimate associational rights.
Ordinarily, the first step in an overbreadth analysis is to "construe the challenged statute." Williams ,
The statute's legitimate sweep is apparent: it allows conviction of individuals like Thompson, who has forced minors into prostitution and maintained them through varied means. In enacting the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, in which section 1591(a) first appeared, Congress sought to allow prosecution of those responsible for trafficking in the United States and made specific findings about the extent of this scourge at the time of the bill's enactment. See Pub L. No. 106-386, § 102(b)(1),
Absent from the record, on the other hand, is evidence showing circumstances that would justify a substantial number of prosecutions under Thompson's proposed reading of the statute that might infringe the rights to intimate association of minor prostitutes' family members. As Congress observed in connection with the Act's passage, many minors engaging in prostitution have been purposefully removed from, or themselves have taken leave of, the support structure of their families, making *168the unlawful provision of sustenance by their families, while possible, unlikely in fact. See Pub. L. No. 106-386, § 102(b)(5), 114 Stat. at 1466 ("Traffickers often transport victims from their home communities to unfamiliar destinations, including foreign countries away from family and friends, religious institutions, and other sources of protection and support, leaving the victims defenseless and vulnerable.").
Further, even were we to assume that many minors engaging in prostitution have available to them supportive family members with whom they often interact, the record provides no basis to expect that these family members would have the mens rea required to support conviction under Thompson's construction of section 1591 : for the government to obtain a conviction, the family member would need to be providing support "knowing, or in reckless disregard of the fact, that" the minor will, at a later time, "be caused to engage in a commercial sex act."
Thompson has thus failed to "demonstrate from the text of [the law] and from actual fact that a substantial number of instances exist in which the [l]aw cannot be applied constitutionally." N.Y. State Club Ass'n, Inc. ,
II. Adequacy of the indictment
Thompson next argues for reversal of his conviction under section 1591(a) and (b)(1) for sex trafficking of a child under the age of fourteen, contending that the indictment failed to allege that he knew M1 was under age 14, a mens rea element that he claims was required to support conviction. The District Court rejected this contention. See Thompson ,
As relevant here, section 1591(a) -set forth more fully above, see supra Discussion Part I-establishes criminal liability for a person who "knowingly ... recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, obtains, or maintains by any means a person" (the first mens rea requirement) "knowing, or in reckless disregard of the fact ... that the person has not attained the age of *16918 years" (the second mens rea requirement) "and will be caused to engage in a commercial sex act" (the third mens rea requirement).
(1) if the offense was effected by means of force, threats of force, fraud, or coercion ..., or by any combination of such means, or if the person recruited, enticed, harbored, transported, provided, or obtained had not attained the age of 14 years at the time of such offense , by a fine under this title and imprisonment for any term of years not less than 15 or for life ; or
(2) if the offense was not so effected, and the person recruited, enticed, harbored, transported, provided, or obtained had attained the age of 14 years but had not attained the age of 18 years at the time of such offense, by a fine under this title and imprisonment for not less than 10 years or for life .
Count One of the indictment charged a violation of section 1591(a) and (b)(1). It alleged three mens rea elements: first, that Thompson "did knowingly and intentionally recruit, entice, harbor, transport, provide, obtain and maintain by any means" a minor victim, M1 (the first section 1591(a)mens rea element); second, that he "engaged in such acts, knowing, and in reckless disregard of the fact, that [M1] had not attained the age of 18 years" (the second section 1591(a)mens rea element); and third, that he "engaged in such acts, knowing, and in reckless disregard of the fact, that [M1] ... would be caused to engage in one or more commercial sex acts" (the third section 1591(a)mens rea element). Appellant's App. at 18-19. It further alleged, with reference to section 1591(b)(1), that M1 "had not yet attained the age of 14 years," but did not allege any mental state as to that fact.
Thompson argues that imposition of the enhanced penalty established by section 1591(b)(1) requires proof that the defendant knew not only that the victim was under 18 years of age, as required for conviction under section 1591(a), but also that the defendant knew or recklessly disregarded that the minor victim was under fourteen years of age. We are not persuaded.
Read literally, the statute defining the crime, section 1591(a), contains a single mens rea requirement regarding the age of the victim: "know[ledge], or ... reckless disregard of the fact ... that the person has not attained the age of 18 years." The text demands no additional mens rea to support the increased punishment imposed *170in section 1591(b)(1) for "an offense under subsection (a)" concerning a victim under age 14. The indictment in this case alleged that one of the two minor victims was in fact under the age of 14 and that Thompson knew she was under 18; by the literal language of the statute, this charge is sufficient. See United States v. Bout ,
Thompson observes that courts have on occasion engrafted additional mens rea requirements onto a criminal statute notwithstanding congressional silence and urges us to do so here. By way of illustration, he correctly cites several cases in which we and the Supreme Court have applied mens rea requirements that appear in one part of a criminal statute to other elements of the offense of conviction. But the circumstances present in those cases are not here. For example, in Flores-Figueroa v. United States ,
Although courts are generally "reluctan[t] to simply follow the most grammatical reading of the statute" where general principles of Anglo-American criminal law would suggest that a mens rea requirement ought to attach to certain elements of a crime, United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc. ,
We are mindful that criminal statutes are generally construed to include mens rea requirements. But that presumption does not apply to sex crimes against minors, at least when the perpetrator confronts the underage victim personally. Moreover, the presumption applies when someone engages in otherwise innocent conduct, including constitutionally protected conduct, and thus has little purchase for [defendant], who was engaged in sex trafficking.
Because it alleged the mens rea necessary for conviction under section 1591(a) and (b)(1), the indictment adequately charged a violation of those provisions.
III. Venue
Finally, Thompson contends that the government offered insufficient evidence to support the jury's determination that venue properly lay in the Eastern District of New York for his trial on charges of sexual exploitation of a child through the production of child pornography, in violation of
Any person who employs, uses, persuades, induces, entices, or coerces any minor to engage in, or who has a minor assist any other person to engage in, ... with the intent that such minor engage in, any sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such conduct or for the purpose of transmitting a live visual depiction of such conduct, shall be punished ....
For each count of an indictment, the government bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that venue is proper. United States v. Tzolov ,
The Constitution requires that "[t]he Trial of all Crimes ... be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed ...." U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 3. In Rule 18, the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure echo that directive: "Unless a statute or these rules permit otherwise, the government must prosecute an offense in a district where the offense was committed." Congress has further effected the constitutional requirement by statute, permitting "offense[s] ... begun in one district and completed in another ... [to] be inquired of and prosecuted in any district in which such offense was begun, continued, or completed."
In support of its prosecution of Thompson under section 2251(a), the government offered evidence that Thompson filmed *172himself engaging in sex acts with the younger of the minor victims on December 14, 2014, in the Bronx, a part of New York's Southern District, where venue of a prosecution based on those acts would plainly have been proper. The government maintained, however, that venue for this prosecution properly lay also in the Eastern District of New York, where Thompson was tried for the other crimes that we have described, related to the prostitution of M1 and M2. The government argued to the jury that venue in the Eastern District was proper based on evidence that at least part of the actus reus of the crime-the persuasion, inducement, enticement, or coercion of the minor victim who appeared in the video-occurred in Brooklyn, within the Eastern District of New York. The government responds to Thompson's challenge to venue on appeal by arguing that the jury reasonably could have relied on Thompson's earlier enticement or inducement of M1 in the Eastern District to conclude that venue there was proper.
Thompson does not dispute that he violated section 2251(a) when, in the Southern District, he created a video of himself engaging in sexual acts with the younger of the minor victims. Nor does he contend that the jury was incorrectly instructed as to venue.
Two other circuit courts have recently encountered similar facts and rejected similar arguments. In United States v. Sullivan ,
Similarly, in United States v. Engle ,
We find the reasoning of these courts persuasive. Although the video in question here was created in the Southern District of New York, the government offered evidence that, over a lengthy period-from early 2013 until December 2014, when the video was made-Thompson enticed and groomed M1 in the Eastern District of New York, training this teenager to do his bidding. The grooming involved M1's prostitution in the Eastern District of New York at his behest, and Thompson's sending lewd photographs of other minors to M1 while both he and M1 were in Brooklyn.
And the jury heard ample evidence from which it could reasonably find-particularly given that it was required to make the finding only by a preponderance of the evidence-that these actions had precisely the effect that Thompson intended and the government described: namely, that they "entice[d]" or "induce[d],"
Thus, the jury could reasonably have determined Thompson enticed M1 in Brooklyn, and that his acts in the Eastern District over the previous 20 months laid the groundwork for the video made in the Bronx, in the Southern District. The jury could reasonably rely on this determination to conclude that the government established venue for the crime. See Sullivan ,
Thompson resists this conclusion, contending that it relies on too sweeping a conception of "enticement" to support venue. Our precedent, however, supports applying a broad definition of enticement in this context: that definition would reasonably include Thompson's grooming of the minor victims to act as he desired with regard to many matters over the months before he made the video. See United States v. Dorvee ,
Thompson cites principally to two cases in support of his contrary position. Both are readily distinguishable. First, in United States v. Broxmeyer ,
Because the government offered sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that venue properly lay in the Eastern District of New York, we reject Thompson's challenge to his conviction under
CONCLUSION
We have considered Thompson's remaining arguments and find them to be without merit. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
Compare Government Trial Ex. 2L ("[Y]ou my mirror image. You the reflection of me because you know how I think."), with Government Trial Ex. 2H ("[T]ell [M1] to get her f***ing a** back on the f***ing phone right now or it's a bigger problem than she f***ing got right now.").
On June 3, 2014, for example, as a recording played at trial showed, Thompson called M1 and rebuked her for her interest in a boyfriend other than himself. He warned, "At the end of the day, like you dead ass is mine," adding that if she "wanna have sex or some s**t, go for it, but do it for f***ing dollars, don't do it for f***ing nothing." Government Trial Ex. 2V. He continued, "[I]f it ain't about money, it's cheating on me," but then added that he loved her.
In addition to prohibiting sex trafficking of individuals under the age of 18, section 1591 criminalizes sex trafficking of any person by "means of force, threats of force, fraud, coercion ..., or any combination of such means."
In his opening brief on appeal, Thompson also argued that his concurrent convictions under each of
In May 2015, Congress amended section 1591 to criminalize three additional acts in furtherance of the other enumerated elements of the crime: "advertis[ing]," "patroniz[ing]," and "solicit[ing]." See Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act of 2015, Pub L. No. 114-22, §§ 108, 118,
In an effort to increase the number of constitutionally questionable applications to which section 1591 could be put, Thompson gives the statute an extremely broad reading, under which just about any helping hand extended to someone a person knows is an underage prostitute would violate the statute, regardless of the actor's purpose. We share the District Court's doubts about that construction, particularly in light of the legislative history, which amply demonstrates that the law was targeted at human traffickers, not organizations and families working to wean minors away from such traffickers. See Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-386, § 102(a),
See United States v. Estrada-Tepal ,
In Roberts v. United States Jaycees ,
Our decisions have referred to constitutionally protected "freedom of association" in two distinct senses. In one line of decisions, the Court has concluded that choices to enter into and maintain certain intimate human relationships must be secured against undue intrusion by the State because of the role of such relationships in safeguarding the individual freedom that is central to our constitutional scheme. In this respect, freedom of association receives protection as a fundamental element of personal liberty . In another set of decisions, the Court has recognized a right to associate for the purpose of engaging in those activities protected by the First Amendment-speech, assembly, petition for the redress of grievances, and the exercise of religion. The Constitution guarantees freedom of association of this kind as an indispensable means of preserving other individual liberties .
Unlike most of the prosecutions Thompson envisions-which, as discussed above, penalize non-expressive conduct that is outside the scope of the First Amendment-he also submits that section 1591 might be invoked to prosecute "therapist[s] who counsel[ ] a trafficked minor or coerced person" and "lawyer[s] who advocate[ ] in court to get the person out of jail or into child-protective custody." Appellant's Reply Br. at 6. According to Thompson, such prosecutions violate the First Amendment because they "criminalize[ ] speech."
For example, Thompson's conception of the First Amendment would shield from prosecution marijuana advocacy groups that distribute that substance to people with a perceived medical need for it, so long as the groups strongly believed that marijuana should be fully legal. This broad interpretation of associational rights derives no support from Supreme Court precedent. Cf. Emp't Div., Dep't of Human Res. of Or. v. Smith ,
Regardless, Thompson has hardly demonstrated that the burden that the minor victim trafficking provision imposes on religious organizations' activity is substantial "in an absolute sense" or "relative to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep." See United States v. Williams ,
Our Court has not determined whether the right to intimate association finds its roots in the First Amendment or in the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. See Matusick v. Erie Cty. Water Auth. ,
See supra n.6.
Thompson cites to statistics from the Sentencing Commission regarding the relatively low number of convictions obtained under section 1591 in the government's fiscal year 2015. See Appellant's Reply Br. at 14. These data do not reveal how many trafficked minors' family members could be or actually were prosecuted. Nor does the low number of convictions suggest, as Thompson posits without support, that the number of sex "traffickers [is] few ... compared to the scores of law-abiding people who 'maintain' the trafficked in the course of exercising First Amendment rights," id. : unfortunately, many people who engage in sex trafficking go unpunished.
In support of his argument that section 1591 imposes a substantial burden on intimate associational rights, Thompson cites one academic article that reported "25% (224) of [child prostitution] cases [in a sample of 901] occurred while the child was living at home." Appellant's Br. at 19 (quoting Rowena Fong & Jodi Berger Cardoso, Child Human Trafficking Victims: Challenges for the Child Welfare System , 33 Evaluation & Program Plan. 311, 312 (2010)). The cited academic article relied, in turn, on a 1999 survey. See Fong & Cardoso, supra , at 312 (citing Richard J. Estes & Neil Alan Weiner, The Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in the U. S., Canada and Mexico (Sept. 18, 2001, revised Feb. 20, 2002) ). Thompson's invocation of this survey, however, is insufficient to sustain his overbreadth challenge. The survey's dataset is limited-the authors recognized that it did not provide sound ground for extrapolation, see Estes & Weiner, supra , at 130-and, most tellingly, the survey fails to account for situations in which minors' relatives themselves prostitute the minors, a circumstance that the survey authors recognized as realistic, see id. at 69-70.
More completely, Count One of the indictment charged Thompson as follows:
On or about and between April 10, 2013 and July 25, 2013, both dates being approximate and inclusive, within the Eastern District of New York and elsewhere, the defendant ALVAUN THOMPSON, also known as "LP," "Love Pimpin" and "AT," together with others, did knowingly and intentionally recruit, entice, harbor, transport, provide, obtain and maintain by any means a person, to wit: Jane Doe #1, an individual whose identity is known to the Grand Jury, and who had not yet attained the age of 14 years, in and affecting interstate and foreign commerce, and benefit, financially and by receiving things of value, from participation in a venture that engaged in such acts, knowing, and in reckless disregard of the fact, that Jane Doe #1 had not attained the age of 18 years and would be caused to engage in one or more commercial sex acts. (Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1591(a)(1), 1591(a)(2), 1591(b)(1), 2 and 3551 et seq.).
Appellant's App. at 18-19.
The District Court instructed the jury, in relevant part: "[T]o establish venue for Count Five [charging a violation of
