OPINION
Thomas Varkonyi appeals his conviction of obscenity. Appellant, acting pro se, waived his right to a jury trial and tried the case to the court. The trial court found him guilty of promotion of or possession with intent to promote obscene material. The court assessed punishment at confinement in the El Paso County Jail for a term of twenty days. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Appellant and the State waived their respective rights to a jury trial, and the trial court heard Appellant’s motion to suppress evidence at the same time it heard the case on the merits. The following facts were developed during this combination hearing.
In July 2004, David Bazan and John Robert Armendariz, El Paso police officers, participated in an undercover operation involving Appellant. The investigation began when the police department received information that a female student at El Paso Community College had applied for a job offered by Appellant but when she went to his home, he solicited her to provide sex for money and to be featured on a pornographic website. Bazan participated in the undercover operation using the name “Daniel Hernandez” and Armen-dariz used the name “Maurizio Payan.” They contacted Appellant and pretended to be customers who wanted assistance in developing a website involving cameras and pictures. They went to Appellant’s home, spoke with him about launching the website, and explained that they wanted him to work as a consultant in setting up the computers and cameras. They also asked Appellant to show them how to operate the computer and the cameras. Ap
One week after this conversation, Ar-mendariz, using an address he set up as part of his undercover identity, sent the following e-mail to the address Appellant had given him:
I’m just keeping in touch with you. We’re still working out the financial situation with the equipment, but we are still moving forward with the plan. I’m still looking at an all Latina site with member wish list on videos and pics that are wanted to be seen. Also I’ve been looking at several sites to get ideas. By the way I’ve been searching for the horse movie you showed us and wondering where you found it or if you can send me files. I have a girl I’d like to introduce you to later on and we’ll talk some trade offs at a later time. Can you give me a quote on a website construction base on the information I gave to you? And can we [illegible] another meeting at your best chance to talk some more ideas? If [illegible] would like we can meet at a club and get some drinks and see some ladies and get some more contacts.
Armendariz received the following reply from Appellant’s e-mail address:
I can’t really quote you on the cost of designing your website without more specific info on what exactly you wish to show on each page, how different links/ pages to determine bandwidth and space required number of DNS (Domain Names) you will want to use. Each name will have [illegible] registered and renewed yearly about $20/name. Monthly fees for [illegible] hosting and upkeep can be $S0-$100/months plus shopping cart fees, depending on what you will choose to host. I attached one clip of the Pony enjoying himself, on good faith, [illegible] can have more when I get to enjoy one of the ladies you offered to introduce to me. You can call me anytime for more info or to set-up another meeting.
A video was attached to the e-mail — the same bestiality video viewed by the officers at Appellant’s home. Armendariz specifically testified that he did not alter, change, fabricate, or reword the e-mail and that a printout of the e-mail was a true and correct copy of the e-mail he received from Appellant. When the State offered into evidence the bestiality video (State’s Exhibit 1) and the print-out of the e-mail (State’s Exhibit 2), Appellant objected that they were untrue and unsubstantiated. In support of his argument, Appellant introduced evidence showing that it is easy to create an e-mail address using someone else’s name. 1 The trial court overruled those objections and admitted the exhibits into evidence.
Appellant’s twenty-four-year-old son, Miguel Varkonyi, testified that he and his brothers had downloaded pornographic material onto his father’s computer and he recalled the “donkey and a woman” video as one of those videos. He had seen this
ENTRAPMENT
In Issue One, Appellant contends that his prosecution should have been dismissed because it was the result of illegal entrapment. 2 Appellant did not file a written motion to dismiss asserting entrapment as a matter of law but Appellant raised the issue at the pretrial hearing 3 with the consent of the trial court. At that hearing, he argued that the trial court should dismiss the case against him because he was entrapped. The trial court denied Appellant’s motion after the trial on the merits had concluded.
Entrapment is a defense to prosecution requiring the defendant to show that he engaged in the conduct charged because he was induced to do so by a law enforcement agent using persuasion or other means likely to cause persons to commit the offense. See Tex.Pen.Codb Ann. § 8.06(a) (Vernon 2003). Conduct merely affording a person an opportunity to commit an offense does not constitute entrapment. Tex.Pen.Code Ann. § 8.06(a).
Normally, a defense such as entrapment is a question for the fact finder to decide unless as a matter of law the accused has established beyond a reasonable doubt that he was entrapped.
Hernandez v. State,
In reviewing a trial court’s denial of a defendant’s pretrial motion to dismiss based on entrapment “as a matter of law,” an appellate court determines de novo whether any rational trier of fact could conclude that the undisputed facts failed to establish all of the elements of entrapment. Id. Our review must take into ae-count that the trier of fact was free to accept or reject all or any portion of any witness’s testimony. Id.
Appellant did not testify at trial. Instead, he sought to establish his entrapment defense through his cross-examination of Officers Bazan and Armendariz. Appellant complains that it was the undercover officers who urged him to “promote the video by asking him to email it to them; that is, the criminal design originated in the mind of the police, not Varkonyi’s mind, and induced him to commit a crime.”
The State argues that the offense was complete before Appellant e-mailed the video to the police. The information alleged that Appellant, knowing the content and character of the obscene material, promoted or possessed with intent to promote obscene material, to wit: material depicting sexual bestiality. Promotion of obscene material includes its presentation and exhibition. See Tex.Pen.Code Ann. § 43.21(a)(5)(Vernon 2003). The officers testified that they did not ask Appellant for any pornographic material when they were at his home in early July 2004. Instead, Appellant, having been asked by Armendariz whether he had a problem with pornography, presented and exhibited the video to them. The offense was complete at that point, and thus, Officer Ar-mendariz’s subsequent e-mail request for the video could not have entrapped Appellant into committing the already-complete offense. Because Appellant failed to prove his entrapment defense as a matter of law, the trial court did not err by denying his motion to dismiss the prosecution. We overrule Issue One.
AUTHENTICATION
In Issue Two, Appellant contends that the evidence was legally and
Preservation of Error
To preserve an issue for review, a party must timely object and state the grounds for the ruling sought from the trial court with sufficient specificity to make the trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were apparent from the context of the objection. Tex.R.App.P. 33.1(a)(1)(A). On appeal, Appellant argues that State’s Exhibits land 2 are inadmissible because they were not properly authenticated and the State did not produce the originals in court as required by Rules 1001 and 1002 of the Texas Rules of Evidence. The only objections made by Appellant at trial to the two exhibits is that they were untrue and unsubstantiated. Appellant’s objection that the evidence is “untrue” does not state a legal ground for exclusion of the evidence. His objection that the evidence is “unsubstantiated” is sufficient to preserve a complaint that the evidence was not properly authenticated. But his objection is insufficient to preserve the argument made on appeal that the copies of the e-mail and video are inadmissible under Tex.R.Evid. 1001 and 1002 because the State failed to produce the originals in court, the admission of a duplicate is unfair, and the State had failed to show that the copies accurately reflected the data contained in a computer.
Authentication of State’s Exhibits 1 and 2
We review a trial court’s ruling on the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of discretion.
Moses v. State,
(4) Distinctive characteristics and the like. Appearance, contents, substance, internal patterns, or other distinctive characteristics, taken in conjunction with circumstances.
Tex.R.Evid. 901(b)(4). Thus, a letter is properly authenticated under Rule 901(b)(4) if its appearance, contents, substance, or other distinctive characteristics,
Armendariz testified at trial that he received the e-mail and attached video from Appellant in direct response to an email sent by Armendariz to Appellant inquiring whether Appellant would send him the “horse movie” file. Under the reply letter doctrine, the e-mail is authenticated. The e-mail is also authenticated under Rule 901(b)(4). The evidence at trial established that Appellant showed the bestiality video to the officers in his home. In his e-mail sent to Appellant’s e-mail address, Armendariz stated that he had been searching for the horse movie “you showed us” and asked whether Appellant would either tell him where he found it or send him the file. In direct response to this email, Appellant replied, “I attached one clip of the Pony enjoying himself_” Ar-mendariz expressly testified that he received the e-mail with the attached video and the officers identified the video attached to the e-mail as the same one shown to them in Appellant’s home. Appellant was in a unique position of knowing that Armendariz’s inquiry about the “horse movie” concerned the bestiality video seen when the officers were at Appellant’s home. Given the distinctive content of the e-mail and the attached video and the circumstances under which it was received by Armendariz, we cannot conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in deciding that the evidence was authenticated under Rule 901(b)(4).
See Shea v. State,
In his third issue, Appellant challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence to prove that the bestiality video is obscene. 5 Pointing to evidence that the video is considered a “viral video,” Appellant argues that its popularity indicates that the community embraces rather than rejects it.
The information alleged that Appellant, knowing the content and character of the obscene material, promoted or possessed with intent to promote obscene material, to wit: material depicting sexual bestiality. Promotion of obscene material includes its presentation and exhibition. See Tex.Pen. Code Ann. § 43.21(a)(5). The term “obscene” is statutorily defined:
(1) “Obscene” means material or a performance that:
(A) the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest in sex;
(B) depicts or describes:
(I) patently offensive representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated, including sexual intercourse, sodomy, and sexual bestiality; or
(ii) patently offensive representations or descriptions of masturbation, excretory functions, sadism, masochism, lewd exhibition of the genitals, the male or female genitals in a state of sexual stimulation or arousal, covered male genitals in a discernibly turgid state or a device designed and marketed as useful primarily for stimulation of the human genital organs; and
(C)taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, and scientific value.
TexPen.Code Ann. § 43.21(a).
Section 43.21(a)’s definition of obscene comports with the test set forth in
Miller v. California,
In determining whether material is “constitutionally obscene,” appellate courts are obligated to independently review and evaluate the material in accordance with the three-part test set out in
Miller. Castillo v. State,
Appellant introduced evidence at trial that the bestiality video is considered a “viral video,” a description given to a video when it receives an unspecified number of “hits” on the internet. He reasons that because the video is so popular in the internet community, community standards embrace rather than reject the video. Appellant’s reliance on the alleged popularity of the video in the world-wide internet community is misplaced. If the appropriate community standard is not a national one, it is certainly not a world-wide internet standard.
See Miller,
CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE
In his final issue, Appellant brings for the first time on appeal a facial challenge to the constitutionality of the Texas obscenity statute because it criminalizes, through its definition of “promote,” the transfer of material which can lawfully be used or viewed in private. Appellant bases his constitutional challenge on the right of privacy under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The State responds that Appellant’s conduct of exhibiting the obscene bestiality video to police in his home and transmitting the video by e-mail are not constitutionally protected activities, and therefore, Section 43.23(c)(1) of the Penal Code was constitutionally applied to him and his conduct.
A facial challenge to a statute is the most difficult because the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the statute will be valid.
Santikos v. State,
State statutes designed to regulate obscene material must be carefully limited, because the First and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit making an individu
Appellant argues that the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Lawrence v. Texas,
Although
Lawrence
does not involve the Texas obscenity statute, the Fifth Circuit relied heavily on
Lawrence
in finding a portion of the Texas obscenity statute to be unconstitutional because it criminalized the selling, advertising, giving, or lending of any device designed or marketed for sexual stimulation unless the defendant could prove that the device was sold, advertised, given, or lent for a statutorily-approved purpose.
Reliable Consultants, Inc. v. Earle,
The evidence admitted at trial established that Appellant committed two offenses of promotion of obscene material, the first occurring when he presented or exhibited the material to the officers in his home, and the second occurring when he emailed the video to Armendariz. Because Appellant did not move for the State to elect upon which of those incidents it sought a conviction, the conviction is supportable under either of the two theories. Appellant’s conviction under either theory does not criminalize constitutionally protected conduct. While Appellant’s viewing of the material in the privacy of his own home is protected conduct, his exhibition of the material to the undercover police officers in the context of a business transaction involving the employment of Appellant to set up a pornographic website is not.
See Adams v. State,
Notes
. In an effort to prove his point, Appellant created an e-mail address using the prosecutor's name and sent an obscene picture, purportedly from the prosecutor, to Appellant's email address.
. Appellant has not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the fact finder’s rejection of his entrapment defense. Appellant’s first issue states: "Was the arrest and prosecution of Varkonyi the result of an attempted illegal entrapment?” In footnote 5 of his brief, Appellant argues: “In entrapment cases, the trial court, as the trier of fact, must weigh the evidence and determine whether the defendant was entrapped as a matter of law.
Soto v. State,
. Because the trial court did not conduct a distinct hearing on the pretrial motions but instead melded the suppression hearing and the trial on the merits, it is difficult to discern where the pretrial hearing ended and the trial on the merits began. Nevertheless, we will address Appellant's entrapment issue as one which was raised and heard pretrial.
. Although Article 28.01 allows the presentation of the entrapment defense in a pretrial motion to dismiss, it is not required.
Hernandez,
. The third issue alleges that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to prove that the material is obscene. The discussion under Issue Three does not include an argument demonstrating how the evidence is factually insufficient. Further, in his prayer, Appellant only requests that we reverse the judgment of the trial court and render a judgment of acquittal. Therefore, we construe his brief as raising only a legal sufficiency argument.
.
