United States v. Archie Whalen

578 F. App'x 533
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2014
Docket12-6619
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 578 F. App'x 533 (United States v. Archie Whalen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Archie Whalen, 578 F. App'x 533 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

A federal jury convicted Archie Whalen of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2423(a), which makes it illegal to transport a minor in interstate commerce with the intent to engage in sexual activity. The district court sentenced Whalen to 360 months of incarceration. In this direct appeal Whalen challenges some of the various evidentiary and procedural rulings that the district court made at trial as well as the procedural reasonableness of the sentence that the court imposed. Whalen also asks this court to hold that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective. We affirm.

I.

The disturbing events that led to this prosecution can be traced back to January 2009, when Tammy Gail Ward and Jonathan Mitchell began to communicate online. They became interested in getting to know one another, and Mitchell, who lived in Massachusetts, visited Ward and her four children at Ward’s house in Kentucky. *537 Mitchell returned to Massachusetts one week later, and the relationship continued to progress. Intent on “making a new life with each other,” said Ward, she and Mitchell agreed to move to Maine, where Mitchell planned to organize a joint trucking venture with his friend, Archie Whalen. Whalen owned a house in Maine and invited Mitchell, Ward, and her four children to stay with him. In early September 2009 Mitchell and Whalen traveled together to Kentucky, where they collected Ward and her children before setting out for Maine.

Soon after their arrival in Maine, Whalen, who was forty-three years old, began to spend an inordinate amount of time with Ward’s oldest child, Haley, who was thirteen years old. Whalen often took Haley shopping and invited her to join him on trips to visit family members, yet he never invited Ward’s other children. Mitchell confronted Whalen several times about his relationship with Haley, and both Mitchell and Ward discussed it with Haley. Whalen and Haley each denied that anything inappropriate was taking place. But that turned out to be false. Soon after her arrival in Maine, Haley began to sneak across the hall to Whalen’s bedroom. She testified that she would just lie there, and Whalen would kiss her. At times, however, far more inappropriate conduct took place. On one occasion Haley and Whalen engaged in sexual intercourse in Whalen’s bedroom, prompting Mitchell to come upstairs to inquire about the noise. On another occasion, during a shopping expedition, Whalen performed oral sex on Haley.

Mitchell and Ward continued to be suspicious of Whalen’s interactions with Haley. A conversation between Mitchell and Whalen about two weeks after Ward’s arrival boiled over into an altercation, at which point Whalen made clear that Mitchell was no longer welcome to stay at Whalen’s house. Mitchell left the house on foot that night. Mitchell and Ward both called the sheriffs office later that night to ask a sheriffs deputy to escort Ward and her children from Whalen’s property. When the sheriffs deputies arrived, Haley refused to leave. Whalen invited both Ward and Haley to stay with him indefinitely, and he separately invited Ward to leave Haley with him if Ward elected to go. Ward rejected both ideas out of hand. Haley refused to heed her mother’s decision, however, and the “sheriff had to physically pick her up and put her in the vehicle because she was screaming and crying that she did not want to leave.”

Ward and the four children went to a motel, where Ward’s ex-husband met them to take them back to Kentucky. But Whalen and Haley continued to communicate regularly with one another using an instant-messaging service on their phones and computers. Whalen often expressed his love for Haley, his disappointment in their separation, his desire to marry her, and his intent to come to Kentucky to pick her up. Haley responded with a description of the house where she was staying in Kentucky and encouraged Whalen to come get her. Because Haley shared her cell phone with Ward, Whalen told Haley to delete all of the messages that Haley sent and received “[bjecause if someone found out, he’d be in trouble.”

A few days later, on September 26, 2009, Ward awoke to discover that Haley was missing. Ward checked their shared cell phone and saw a text message, apparently written by Haley to Whalen, stating, ‘Where are you at now?” Suspicious that Whalen had taken Haley, Ward called the local sheriff and reported Haley’s absence. The sheriff issued an AMBER alert notifying authorities nationwide of the missing child, and the FBI pursued various leads to determine where Whalen was headed.

*538 Whalen had intended to take Haley to his sister’s house in Wisconsin. During the drive to Wisconsin, Whalen instructed Haley to throw his cell phone from the car to avoid being tracked by the police. They stopped overnight in Indiana, and as they lay in the back of Whalen’s truck, he inserted his finger into Haley’s vagina. They continued to Wisconsin in the morning, but they were unable to find Whalen’s sister’s house. As they were stopped in a hotel parking lot, a local police officer recognized Whalen’s truck from a BOLO (“be on the lookout”) issued by the FBI. Inside the truck the officer found Whalen and Haley.

Haley told the authorities in Wisconsin that Whalen had neither harmed nor inappropriately touched her, but the local police nevertheless took Haley to a hospital to be examined. Two women — a social worker named Beth Moeller and a police officer named Wendy — then interviewed Haley in Wisconsin. After initially denying any inappropriate contact by Whalen, Haley eventually told the interviewers that Whalen had engaged in sexual intercourse with her in Maine and had digitally penetrated her during their drive to Wisconsin.

In October 2009 a grand jury returned a one-count indictment charging Whalen with transporting a minor in interstate commerce with the intent to engage in sexual activity, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2428(a). After a three-day trial in July 2012, the jury adjudged Whalen guilty of the lone count. In December 2012 the district court sentenced Whalen to 360 months of incarceration and ten years of supervised release. Whalen timely appealed.

II.

Whalen asserts various arguments related to the district court’s evidentiary and procedural rulings at trial, the effectiveness of Whalen’s trial counsel, and the procedural reasonableness of Whalen’s sentence. We take the arguments in turn.

A.

Whalen first argues that the district court infringed his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial by closing the courtroom during Haley’s testimony without first “conducting an independent inquiry regarding the statutory criteria for closing the courtroom” under 18 U.S.C. § 8509(e). This argument has been waived, however, because Whalen’s trial counsel twice stated that he had no objection to the courtroom closure as long as Haley testified from the witness stand rather than via closed-circuit television. See Peretz v. United States, 501 U.S. 923, 936, 111 S.Ct. 2661, 115 L.Ed.2d 808 (1991) (citing

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578 F. App'x 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-archie-whalen-ca6-2014.