United States v. Arnold Fox

600 F. App'x 414
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2015
Docket14-5391
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 600 F. App'x 414 (United States v. Arnold Fox) 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. Arnold Fox, 600 F. App'x 414 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Arnold Fox of using a means of interstate commerce to attempt to persuade, induce, entice, or coerce a fifteen-year-old girl in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2422(b). Fox appeals, arguing that (1) the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to support his conviction because he did not discuss sexually explicit topics with the minor via text message, (2) the district court abused its discretion by modifying Fox’s requested jury instruction regarding “grooming,” and (3) the government violated Brady v. Maryland by withholding evidence about his victim’s character. In separately filed pro se motions, he challenges the constitutionality of § 2422(b) and the Criminal Justice Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A. We AFFIRM.

I.

In late 2011, Fox exchanged hundreds of text messages with S.S., a fifteen-year-old girl, before asking her for sex during a face-to-face meeting. They began their correspondence shortly after the Tennessee Department of Child Services removed Fox’s daughter, W.F., from his home. On November 16, 2011, S.S. sent a text message to W.F.’s mobile telephone, which W.F. left behind at Fox’s house. Fox replied two days later and explained that W.F. was in state custody. On the following day, after exchanging several text messages with S.S. using his daughter’s phone, Fox gave her his personal mobile phone number.

Fox asked S.S. about her family, and then confided that he missed his daughter and felt that she did not love him or need him anymore. He offered to take her shopping after she wrote that her family struggled to pay bills, and bought her an iPod, a jacket, pajamas, belts, sweatshirts, jeans, perfumes, lotions, two bras, and a teddy bear. After their trip, he wrote to ask if she was “still all smiles?” and he told her that she was a “pretty, hard working *416 young lady” who “deserved” his gifts. (App’x at 29.) He later wrote “Still smiling? What did everyone think. Happy for u i hope. Next I would like to get you those nice earrings.” (App’x at 29.) S.S. replied that her mother was about to call Fox; she asked him to lie and say that Fox’s daughter joined them for the shopping trip.

S.S. wrote later to say that she needed more clothing and Fox replied, “We can work on that. No problem. I was just thinking about you.” (App’x at 30.) He asked, “What does your boyfriend plan to get you for the holidays.” (App’x at 30.) She replied that she didn’t have a boyfriend and had recently ended a relationship. He responded, “Oh. Sorry. I just assumed you had one. Your a very pretty girl. You’ll get another.” (App’x at 30.) He told her that people suspected him of “hurting” his daughter and, while he used to have a girlfriend, “that didn’t help [dispel suspicions] because we werent having. ... well u know.” (App’x at 31.) Fox suggested that it was hard to “be friends” with S.S. because of the “big age difference,” adding that “I know that should not matter. But i know it does. Cant just hang out. Only have text and shopping. But thats good too.” (App’x at 31.) Later that day, he asked why she ended her relationship with her previous boyfriend. He told her that “i dont feel nor think that i am my age. You are as they say as only as old as you think you are. In that case im a teenager. Lol.” (App’x at 33.)

Fox told S.S. that he worried about taking her shopping again because he didn’t want her to “get the wrong idea” about him. (App’x at 30.) He added, “Some people would believe that we were 'doing things and would not understand. A man being with a pretty young teen. All of a sudden buying her real nice things.” (App’x at 31.) Nonetheless, he wrote that “[t]he more we talk about it the more i want to take u out shopping” but advised her that he wanted to shop in a different town “for fear of us being seen.” 1 (App’x at 32.) He said he “enjoy[ed][her] company” and wanted to buy her “some nice earrings or something.” (App’x at 32.) Later, he told her, “Im stuck on taking you out tonite or waiting a day or two.... If i get you everything now. Wont have anything to get you later.” (App’x at 33.)

Still, Fox took S.S. shopping the following day. Afterward, he sent her a text message asking if she was happy, acknowledging, “Again i know i ask a lot if you are happy. I know the answer. Its just nice to see you smiling. You do have a VERY nice smile. I like feeling that im doing something for you.” (App’x at 34.)

In the meantime, the FBI received an anonymous tip that Fox kept child pornography at his residence. Agents searched Fox’s home on November 23, seizing his cell phone and computers. Fox wrote to S.S. later that day using his daughter’s phone and said that he needed to talk with her. He told her that the FBI took his phone and predicted that agents would “wonder about our friendship ... [and] think there is more to it.” (App’x at 3.)

One day later, Fox repeated his request to meet and told her, “I may [ask] you for a great big favor.” (App’x at 4.) He explained that he needed to talk to her in person rather than over the phone because the FBI could access his deleted text messages. Later, he elaborated, “Its a big favor. Too big maybe. But it would make it easier to make up my mind to help you more.” (App’x at 4.) He added, “I didnt want to ask. But I don’t know anyone else that can do it for me right now. Because *417 u r a good friend. And I believe you would be understanding. Even if you didnt want to help.” (App’x at 5.) And he said, “Sorry to be so mysterious.... Its about this stuff and what is going to happen to me. You because I don’t have anyone to turn too.... Its a strange request that i have never had to make before.” (App’x at 5.) Later, when she said she had to babysit and could only get away for a short time, he wrote, “I can’t say how long our talk will last.... I could try to be quick with the favor if you agree ... I really don’t think you will agree though.” (App’x at 7.)

S.S. testified that Fox picked her up that night and revealed the favor: he wanted to have intercourse with her because, in S.S.’s words, “he was going to jail for a really long time and he didn’t know if he was going to ever get it again.” (R. 159, Trial Tr. at 43.) She refused, and he took her home. S.S. later sent a text message in which she threatened to tell her brother and the FBI that Fox propositioned her for sex unless he gave her money. He denied asking her for sex in the message he sent in response. Over the next few weeks, she asked him repeatedly for money to cover various expenses, including her family’s rent. Later, after he became suspicious that she was using the money to buy drugs and confronted her about it, she again threatened to report him to the FBI. But S.S. never contacted law enforcement about Fox’s conduct. Instead, she reported his request only when an FBI agent asked her about their relationship after discovering their text messages on Fox’s phone.

In September 2013, three months before Fox’s trial, the government charged a different Millington resident, Michael Lilley, with running a child prostitution ring out of his home. The indictment named S.S. as one of Lilley’s child victims. S.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 F. App'x 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-arnold-fox-ca6-2015.