Scott Michael Horseman v. Jamie Miller

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedFebruary 9, 2026
Docket2:23-cv-01453
StatusUnknown

This text of Scott Michael Horseman v. Jamie Miller (Scott Michael Horseman v. Jamie Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott Michael Horseman v. Jamie Miller, (D. Or. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

SCOTT MICHAEL HORSEMAN, Case No. 2:23-cv-01453-HZ Petitioner, OPINION AND ORDER v.

JAMIE MILLER,

Respondent.

Susan F. Wilk Assistant Federal Public Defender 101 S.W. Main Street, Suite 1700 Portland, Oregon 97204

Attorney for Petitioner

Dan Rayfield, Attorney General Daniel T. Toulson, Assistant Attorney General Department of Justice 1162 Court Street NE Salem, Oregon 97310

Attorneys for Respondent HERNANDEZ, District Judge. Petitioner brings this habeas corpus case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 challenging the legality of several of his Washington County convictions dated August 12, 2014. For the reasons that follow, the Second Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus (#43) is denied.

BACKGROUND Petitioner came upon his 16-year-old male victim, G, at a church-associated café that provided food to individuals facing homelessness. Despite G telling Petitioner that he faced alcohol and drug addiction issues, the second time Petitioner encountered G, he offered to buy him alcohol. Even though G was “creeped out” by Petitioner, he nevertheless ultimately allowed him to purchase alcohol for him, and the two ended up behind a building where they engaged in sexual activity. Respondent’s Exhibit 112, p. 34. This led to a pattern of sorts where Petitioner would provide G with alcohol or food, and the two would engage in sexual activity. As the Oregon Court of Appeals would later find, Petitioner typically “induced G to masturbate in front of him as a prelude to, and in facilitation of, the physical sexual abuse that at

least sometimes followed.” Respondent’s Exhibit 118, p. 15. “G described [Petitioner’s] ‘usual’ conduct as . . . defendant started masturbating and asked G to do the same; he then watched G masturbating.” Id. at 5. Petitioner would then proceed to sexually abuse the boy. As the Oregon Court of Appeals would later find, Petitioner “induced G to masturbate while he watched, often after giving G alcohol or bribing him with other items. Although G’s acts were witnessed only by [Petitioner], the child still was subjected to the experience of being ‘purchased’ for the purpose of exposing his most intimate sexual activity to a much older man.” Respondent’s Exhibit 118, p. 15. Based on the foregoing, the Washington County Grand Jury charged Petitioner with two counts of Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree, three counts of Sexual Abuse in the Second Degree, and five counts of Using a Child in a Display of Sexually Explicit Conduct pursuant to ORS 163.670. Respondent’s Exhibit 102. In the same Indictment, Petitioner was also charged with two additional counts of sexual abuse crimes involving another minor victim, T. Respondent’s Exhibit 102. He was convicted of both charges involving T, Respondent’s Exhibit 101, but does not

challenge those convictions here. This case centers around the reach and applicability of ORS 163.670 to Petitioner’s conduct involving G. ORS 163.670 provides as follows: (1) A person commits the crime of using a child in a display of sexually explicit conduct if the person employs, authorizes, permits, compels or induces a child to participate or engage in sexually explicit conduct for any person to observe or to record in a visual recording.

(2) Using a child in a display of sexually explicit conduct is a Class A felony.

The ORS 163.670 charges posed the greatest sentencing exposure in Petitioner’s case. Pursuant to ORS 137.690, a person who has been convicted of more than one major felony sex crime (a category that includes ORS 163.670 convictions) is subject to a mandatory 300-month prison sentence. Because ORS 137.690 also provides that convictions from the same sentencing proceeding can be stacked upon each other if they arose out of different incidents, a person in Petitioner’s position who is charged with five different counts of ORS 137.670 stemming from five different incidents will face a mandatory minimum 300-month sentence if he is convicted of at least two of those offenses. See ORS 137.690(c). At the close of the State’s case, defense counsel moved for judgment of acquittal as to the first ORS 163.670 charge (Count 1): Through my recollection and belief, I tried to keep this all straight, so my recollection may not be the best. But it seemed to me that the testimony that we have about that incident was that Mr. Horseman was masturbating and that . . . he was finished masturbating before there was any display of sexually lewd conduct by [G]. Or that there was never a time where he wasn’t actively engaged and touching [G] while he was having – while he was masturbating.

So this kind of gets into the jury instruction area I guess. The law albeit it is confusing, but I think there is a very important distinction that makes it so that every instance of sexual conduct between an adult and a minor doesn’t become Unlawful Display of a Child in a Display of Sexually Explicit Conduct.

And that is that when you’re engaged in a sexual act with the child, even though you may be watching and observing them, that that’s not the crime. It’s actually this crime where they’re separate [] from this person and they’re exhibiting lewd conduct or showing their privates or masturbation and you are also observing it.

And so I think the evidence from Count 1 is any time that [G] was exhibiting any masturbation or lewd conduct, Mr. Horseman was actually touching him at that point. So they’re involved in a sexual act. And so I don’t think under the definition it qualifies there. It does qualify as Sex Abuse in the Third Degree, but I don’t think it qualifies as Using a Child in a Display of Sexual Conduct.

Respondent’s Exhibit 112, pp. 140-41. Counsel did, however, concede that because the other events showed that Petitioner was masturbating at the same time G was masturbating, a motion for judgment of acquittal was not warranted. Id. at 140. The trial court denied the motion because, with respect to Ground I, “there was mutual masturbation on that count.” Id. at 143. The judge then clarified that he meant “that they were both masturbating contemporaneously – that not being touched, but just they both were masturbating at the same time.” Id. During defense counsel’s closing argument, he asked the jury to hold Petitioner accountable for what he did, but only what he did, “Nothing more. Nothing less.” Respondent’s Exhibit 113, p. 18. He posed the issue this way: Now, my client, Scott Horseman, is guilty of sexual abuse. I don’t think there is any dispute about that. There’s – there’s no denying that. But what he’s not guilty of is Using a Child in a Display of Sexual Conduct.

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Scott Michael Horseman v. Jamie Miller, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-michael-horseman-v-jamie-miller-ord-2026.