Chris A. WEGNER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*437 William D. Sites, Lakeland, for Appellant.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and C. Suzanne Bechard, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
CASANUEVA, Judge.
Chris A. Wegner appeals from his convictions for receiving computer transmissions of descriptive or identifying information about a minor for the purpose of sexual conduct with a child, in violation of section 847.0135(2)(d), Florida Statutes (2000), and for showing obscene material to a minor, in violation of section 847.0133, Florida Statutes (2000). We reject Mr. Wegner's assertion that the trial court committed three reversible errors and affirm. One issue, however, merits discussion. Mr. Wegner contends that section 847.0135(2)(d) is unconstitutional in two primary ways. According to Mr. Wegner's theory, the statute violates the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution because the Florida Legislature failed to include a mens rea element[1] requiring the offender to know that the person from whom computer transmissions have been received is a minor. Mr. Wegner further contends that the statute violates the First Amendment by encompassing protected expression.
The State charged Mr. Wegner by amended information with a violation of a provision of the Computer Pornography and Child Exploitation Prevention Act of 1986, which is codified in section 847.0135. Section 847.0135(2)(d) imposes criminal liability on a person who
*438 [b]uys, sells, receives, exchanges, or disseminates, any notice, statement, or advertisement, or any minor's name, telephone number, place of residence, physical characteristics, or other descriptive or identifying information, for purposes of facilitating, encouraging, offering, or soliciting sexual conduct of or with any minor, or the visual depiction of such conduct.
By statute, the crime is classified as a third-degree felony.
The amended information charged, in pertinent part, that the defendant "did knowingly receive by means of a computer, any statement of a minor's name or other descriptive or other identifying information, for purposes of facilitating sexual conduct of or with a minor, to-wit [the minor victim]." Before trial, Mr. Wegner sought dismissal of this count, asserting that the statute was unconstitutionally defective for failure to include a mens rea requirement. In other words, the statute operated to hold people criminally liable for receiving computer information from someone they did not know was a minor. The trial court reasoned that because the amended information charged that the crime was committed knowingly and the State was obligated to meet that element of proof, there was no constitutional failing.
Statutory interpretation raises an issue of law, and we review the trial court's ruling de novo. Racetrac Petroleum v. Delco Oil, Inc.,
In Giorgetti, the court analyzed whether Florida's sexual offender registration statutes, which criminalize the failure to register, are constitutionally defective because the laws fail to contain a scienter or mens rea requirement and thus act to deprive the accused of due process. In affirming the Fourth District's conclusion that "before an offender may be held criminally liable for failing to register, the State must prove that he was aware of a registration requirement,"
At common law, the general rule was that guilty knowledge or mens rea was a required element in the proof of every crime. It was necessary that the act or omission be joined with the mental intent to commit a crime. United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
*439 The Giorgetti court held that its decision was controlled by the analysis in Lambert v. California,
The Lambert Court noted that the conduct sought to be criminalized by the city ordinance was passivethe failure to register. Accordingly, in that instance, actual knowledge of the registration requirement or, alternatively, proof of the probability that the offender possessed such knowledge, was necessary.[2] "Where a person did not know of the duty to register and where there was no proof of the probability of such knowledge, he may not be convicted consistently with due process." Id. at 229-30,
Section 847.0135(2)(d) lacks an explicitly stated mens rea element. However, as noted, before a court may declare a statute unconstitutional, it is obligated to construe the statute in a manner that avoids a finding of unconstitutionality. The Giorgetti rationale authorizes a court to construe a knowledge or mens rea element into a criminal statute.
We can discern no legislative intent to dispense with a knowledge or mens rea element in section 847.0135(2)(d). Therefore, based upon the offense charged in the information in this case, we construe the statute as requiring knowledge by the accused that the person from whom or about whom he has received the computer transmissions is a minor. Because the State charged Mr. Wegner with knowledge of that fact and the trial court required the State to prove it, we find no due process violation and affirm the conviction on this ground. See Cashatt v. State,
Additionally, a similar concern was addressed in a challenge to section 847.0138, Florida Statutes (2002), in Simmons v. State,
In a second point, Mr. Wegner contends that the statute is unconstitutionally overbroad and violates the First Amendment. Again, however, the thrust of his contention is that because the statute fails to define the requisite guilty knowledge element, it criminalizes expressions protected by the First Amendment. Because we have construed the statute to require mens rea or scienter, this argument also fails.
Affirmed.
DAVIS, J., Concurs.
KELLY, J., Concurs specially.
KELLY, Judge, Specially concurring.
I concur in the majority's result; however, I respectfully disagree with the majority's conclusion that section 847.0135(2)(d) lacks an explicitly stated mens rea element. The statute states that a person who buys, sells, receives, exchanges or disseminates, a minor's name or other identifying information "for purposes of" sexual conduct with any minor commits a third-degree felony. Id. (emphasis added). In discerning the mens rea element of a statute, courts have defined "purpose" to mean "specific intent." See United States v. Bailey,
NOTES
Notes
[1] We note that in footnote 17 to its opinion in Apprendi v. New Jersey,
[2] It is interesting to note that in his dissent in Lambert,
