Wesley Joseph Slanina appeals the district court’s order on remand to consider the impact of
Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition,
Free Speech Coalition
did not establish a broad requirement that the Government must present expert testimony to establish that the unlawful image depicts a real child. Three circuits that have considered this issue take the same position.
See United States v. Kimler,
Slanina argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to correct the written judgment to strike the conditions that the district court did not orally pronounce at sentencing pursuant to Rule 36 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Rule 36 provides that “the court may at any time correct a clerical error in a judgment, order, or other part of the record, or correct an error in the record arising from oversight or omission.” Fed. R.CRIm. P. 36. Slanina has not shown that the discrepancy between the orally imposed sentence and the written judgment is a clerical mistake or oversight *358 which the district court may correct pursuant to Rule 36. See United States v. Steen, 55 F.3d 1022, 1025-26 n. 3 (5th Cir.1995)(clerical error under Rule 36 is limited to “ ‘mindless and mechanistic mistakes’ ” and “ ‘minor shifting of facts.’ ”). Therefore, he has not shown that the district court erred in denying his Rule 36 motion.
Slanina argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress the evidence obtained through a warrantless search of his office computer. Slanina concedes that the issue is foreclosed because it was raised and decided in his original direct appeal, but states that he is raising it to preserve it for possible Supreme Court review. “Under the law of the case doctrine, an issue of law or fact decided on appeal may not be reexamined either by the district court on remand or by the appellate court on a subsequent appeal.”
United States v. Becerra,
AFFIRMED.
