United States v. Baston

818 F.3d 651
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 2016
DocketNos. 14-14444, 15-10923
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 818 F.3d 651 (United States v. Baston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Baston, 818 F.3d 651 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

WILLIAM PRYOR, Circuit Judge:

This appeal and cross-appeal require us to review the convictions and sentence of Damion Bastón, an international sex trafficker nicknamed “Drac” (short for Dracula) who sometimes dressed up as a vampire, "complete with yellow contact lenses and gold-plated fangs. Bastón forced numerous women to prostitute for him by beating them, humiliating them, and threatening to kill them, and he pimped them around the world, from Florida to Australia to the United Aab Emirates. [657]*657Bastón challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for one conviction, a supplemental jury instruction,' and the award of restitution to his victims. Those challenges fail, but the cross-appeal by the government about a refusal to award one victim increased restitution has merit.

The government argues that the district court erred when it refused to award restitution to a victim of Baston’s'sex trafficking in Australia. The district court ruled that an award of restitution for Baston’s extraterritorial conduct would exceed the power of Congress under Article I of the Constitution, U.S. Const. Art. I, and the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, id. Amend. V. To decide those issues, we must examine the scope of the Foreign Commerce Clause, id. Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, a question of first' impression in this Circuit, and the constitutionality of the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 § 223, 18 U.S.C. § 1596(a)(2), a question of first impression in any circuit. We conclude that Congress has the constitutional authority to punish sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion that occurs overseas. We affirm Baston’s convictions and sentence, but we vacate his order of restitution and remand with an instruction for the district court to increase his restitution obligation.

I. BACKGROUND

Bastón immigrated to the United States from' Jamaica in 1989. After he was convicted of an aggravated felony, Bastón was ordered removed in 1998. But Bastón illegally reentered the country by purchasing the identity of a citizen of the United States. Under this assumed identity, Ba-stón opened bank accounts, started businesses, and rented apartments in Florida. He also obtained a Florida driver’s license and a United States passport. Bastón, traveled the world under the assumed identity, visiting Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, the United Arab Emirates, Russia, China, arid Brazil,- among other places. Bastón funded his lavish lifestyle by forcing numerous women to prostitute for him.

Bastón learned how to be a pimp from Pimpology, a book written by Pimpin’ Ken. Consistent with the fifth law of Pim-pology, Bastón “prey[ed] on the weak” by recruiting women who ' were sexually abused as children. See Pimpin’ Ken, Pimpology: The 48 Laws of the Game 21 (2008). Bastón also forced his victims to refer to him as “Daddy,” see id., and took all of the money they earned, see id. at 20.

But Bastón was not always faithful to the laws ■ of Pimpology. Unlike Pimpin’ Ken who rejected" the use of violence, see id. at 2-3, Bastón punched, slapped, choked, arid threatened to kill his victims whenever they got “out of line.” And his victims took those threats ■ seriously. In addition to his Transylvanian tendencies, Bastón maintained a muscular physique aided by having his victims inject him with steroids on a regular basis. He also claimed to b'e a member of the Bloods gang. . ■

K.L., an Australian, met Bastón at' a .nightclub in Gold ..Coast, Australia, .when she was 24 years old. . She. dreamed of opening her own restaurant, and Bastón offered to help her. But K.L.,soon discovered that Baston’s real business was pimping women. Bastón sent K.L. to have,sex with clients throughout Australia at prices he determined. When Bastón was not in Australia, he had K.L. wire her earnings to his bank accounts in Miami., K.L. also prostituted for Bastón in the United Arab Emirates, Florida, and Texas.....

K.L. testified that Bastón beat her “often” and that -he threatened to hurt her [658]*658and her family if she ever stopped working for him. Bastón would backhand K.L. whenever she committed any perceived slight, like failing to cook him breakfast or telling a bouncer how much money she made. One night, Bastón suspected that K.L. was cheating on him. He woke her up, punched her hard in the pelvis, threw her to the ground, and strangled her. He heated up kitchen knives over an open flame and threatened to slit her throat. On another occasion, Bastón took K.L. to the bathroom, held her against the wall by her throat, and bit her cheek until she bled. K.L. eventually escaped Baston’s control after her family contacted the American embassy, which refused to let her return to Bastón in the United States.

T.M. was 21 years old when she met Bastón. She was attending Georgia Southern University and needed money for college. She sent pictures of herself to one of Baston’s associates, who convinced her to come to Miami to work as an escort. After she arrived in Miami, T.M. met Ba-stón at a nightclub. He convinced her to work at various strip clubs in Miami, where she would meet clients and have sex with them at prices set by Bastón. T.M. also prostituted for Bastón in Texas and Australia.

Bastón often reminded T.M. that, if she ever left him, “it wouldn’t be good” for her or her family. One night, Bastón thought that T.M. was flirting too much with a client. He drove her to a secluded park and backhanded her so hard that she fell to the ground. He reminded T.M. that he could bury her in the park and no one would ever find her. On another occasion, Bastón thought T.M. was being “disrespectful,” so he wrapped a belt around her neck and made her beg for forgiveness while she crawled around on her hands and knees like a dog. T.M. mustered the courage to flee from Bastón when he temporarily left the country to visit Jamaica.

J.R. met Bastón in 2013. She was 21 years old at the time, living with her mother in Georgia and working at a Little Caesars restaurant. But J.R. dreamed of being a model. Bastón saw her modeling pictures on Instagram and began communicating with her over the Internet and phone. Bastón promised to help her modeling career and convinced her to take a bus from Georgia to Miami. When she arrived, Bastón forced her to prostitute for him at various strip clubs. J.R. also prostituted for him in Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Tennessee, and New York. Bastón and J.R. typically stayed in hotels, most often a Marriott in Miami, and Bastón advertised her services on Backpage.com. Whenever J.R. was supposed to be working for Ba-stón, she had to call him “[e]very hour on the hour” and text him regularly.

If J.R. disobeyed his orders, Bastón would punch her in the face. One night, Bastón drove J.R. to a secluded parking lot and told her not to “fuck with him” or he would “chop ... [her] body up and have [her] thrown in the Everglades.” On another occasion, J.R. and Bastón got into an argument and, although J.R. was pregnant at the time, Bastón punched her in the side and threatened to stab her with a broken broom. Bastón later forced J.R. to have an abortion because he “didn’t want to have a baby by a punk bitch.”

Bastón was arrested at his mother’s house in New York. A grand jury indicted him on 21 counts, including sex trafficking of KL. by force, fraud, or coercion, 18 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
818 F.3d 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-baston-ca11-2016.