State v. Higgins

2024 N.H. 24, 321 A.3d 279
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 14, 2024
Docket2023-0258
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 N.H. 24 (State v. Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Higgins, 2024 N.H. 24, 321 A.3d 279 (N.H. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for rehearing under Rule 22 as well as formal revision before publication in the New Hampshire Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, One Charles Doe Drive, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, of any editorial errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion goes to press. Errors may be reported by email at the following address: reporter@courts.state.nh.us. Opinions are available on the Internet by 9:00 a.m. on the morning of their release. The direct address of the court’s home page is: https://www.courts.nh.gov/our-courts/supreme-court

THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

___________________________

Grafton Case No. 2023-0258 Citation: State v. Higgins, 2024 N.H. 24

THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

v.

ROLAND HIGGINS

Argued: February 13, 2024 Opinion Issued: May 14, 2024

John M. Formella, attorney general, and Anthony J. Galdieri, solicitor general (Audriana Mekula, assistant attorney general, on the brief and orally), for the State.

Desmeules Olmstead & Ostler, of Norwich, Vermont (Cabot Teachout on the brief and orally), for the defendant.

DONOVAN, J.

[¶1] The defendant, Roland Higgins, appeals his convictions, following a bench trial in the Superior Court (MacLeod, J.), on sixteen counts of possession and six counts of distribution of child sexual abuse images. See RSA 649-A:3, I(a) (2016); RSA 649-A:3-a, I(a) (2016). The defendant argues that the trial court erred in finding the evidence sufficient to prove that he knowingly possessed and distributed the files specified in the indictments. We conclude that there was sufficient evidence to support the defendant’s convictions beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Facts

[¶2] The trial court could have found, or the record otherwise establishes, the following facts. Beginning in July 2017, Lieutenant James from the Grafton County Sheriff’s Office used investigative software to download child sexual abuse images from a BitTorrent account on an internet protocol (IP) address associated with the defendant’s residence. In November 2017, after downloading “multiple images of child sexual abuse and child erotica over multiple dates,” James identified the defendant as the subscriber of the IP address. James continued to observe both child erotica and child sexual abuse images downloaded from the defendant’s IP address from December 2017 to February 2018.

[¶3] In March 2018, law enforcement executed a search warrant at the defendant’s residence, where they seized approximately sixty devices including computers, memory cards, flash drives, and hard drives. During the execution of the search warrant, law enforcement contacted the defendant at his workplace and interviewed him at a nearby police station.

[¶4] During the interview, the defendant stated that he is “a little bit of a risk-taker” but denied having an interest in child pornography. The defendant explained that he was interested in images of teenage models and described his interests as “paraphilia,” which he defined as an attraction to “the beauty the loveliness the purity,” but he claimed that he “never went into pedophilia.” The defendant admitted that he had viewed child pornography in the past both on the internet and by using a BitTorrent file-sharing network. Nonetheless, the defendant claimed that he deleted any illicit and unwanted images from his computers. The defendant discussed his use of BitTorrent and conveyed his understanding that BitTorrent was a peer-to-peer file-sharing network that takes pieces of files from various users’ computers and reassembles those pieces into a complete download. However, he denied sharing files from his computer through BitTorrent and claimed he was unaware that he could do so. The defendant maintained that, if he had inadvertently viewed and downloaded child pornography in the past, he did so unintentionally, and he denied that law enforcement would find child pornography on his computers.

[¶5] During the subsequent forensic examination of the devices seized from the defendant’s residence, investigators determined that the defendant’s devices collectively contained approximately twenty-four terabytes of memory and that the devices could store “potentially millions of photographs per terabyte.” Investigators identified “several hundred” torrent files on the

2 defendant’s devices with names consistent with child sexual abuse images. Investigators also found files on the defendant’s computers with file names such as “12-year-old” or “15-year-old,” and a “series” of images from a foreign electronic magazine featuring “child erotica.” Based on automated and manual reviews of the files found on the defendant’s devices, law enforcement confirmed that a number of files constituted child sexual abuse images.

[¶6] In November 2018, a grand jury indicted the defendant on sixteen counts of possession and six counts of distribution of child sexual abuse images. The possession charges were based on sixteen files containing child sexual abuse images found on one of the defendant’s computers. The distribution charges were based on six images law enforcement downloaded from the defendant’s computers using investigative software from July 2017 to January 2018.

[¶7] At the two-day bench trial in August 2022, the State presented expert witness testimony to explain BitTorrent and the investigative software used in this case. The expert testified that BitTorrent is a file-sharing network through which users can download files from other BitTorrent users and then become a source for those same files.1 He explained that, for file-sharing networks such as BitTorrent to function, users not only download files, but they share those files with other users in order to facilitate faster download speeds.

[¶8] The expert witness summarized the steps BitTorrent users follow to obtain content through the network. According to the expert, after downloading a peer-to-peer file-sharing program such as BitTorrent, a user must obtain a torrent file, which is generally accomplished by using keywords to search “indexing sites” on the internet. A torrent file, rather than containing content itself, acts as an “instruction set” that defines the content to be downloaded through BitTorrent. Once the user has found a torrent file with a description that matches the user’s search criteria, the user downloads the torrent file and loads it into BitTorrent. After the user loads the torrent file into BitTorrent, BitTorrent obtains the pieces of that torrent file and the files it references from other BitTorrent users to assemble a complete download. The expert also explained that any given torrent file could reference thousands of files and that, “[b]y downloading a single torrent, a user could potentially download any number of different files, and they could be any mix of type, whether it be an image file, a video file, textual documents, and so on.”

1 Numerous federal circuit courts of appeals have discussed BitTorrent and other similar peer-to-

peer, file-sharing networks. For further discussion of BitTorrent, see generally United States v. Clarke, 979 F.3d 82 (2d Cir. 2020); United States v. Fletcher, 946 F.3d 402 (8th Cir. 2019); United States v. Dillingham, 320 F. Supp. 3d 809 (E.D. Va. 2018).

3 [¶9] The State also called James to testify at trial. He testified about investigative software logs documenting files he downloaded from the defendant’s computer.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 N.H. 24, 321 A.3d 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-higgins-nh-2024.