United States v. Dylan Heatherly

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 2020
Docket19-2424
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Dylan Heatherly (United States v. Dylan Heatherly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Dylan Heatherly, (3d Cir. 2020).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _______________

Nos. 19-2424 & 19-2932 _______________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

v.

DYLAN HEATHERLY, also known as Daniel Sotherland, also known as John Doe-9, Appellant in No. 19-2424 _______________

WILLIAM STAPLES, also known as Bill Simpson, also known as John Doe-7, Appellant in No. 19-2932 _______________

On Appeals from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Nos. 1:16-cr-00082-010 & 1:16-cr-00082-008) District Judge: Honorable Yvette Kane _______________ Argued: July 8, 2020

Before: McKEE, BIBAS, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges

(Filed: December 11, 2020) _______________

Robert J. Daniels [ARGUED] Richard H. Katsifis Killian & Gephart 218 Pine Street P.O. Box 886 Harrisburg, PA 17101 Counsel for Appellant Dylan Heatherly

M. Jason Asbell [ARGUED] Gibbel, Kraybill & Hess 2933 Lititz Pike P.O. Box 5349 Lancaster, PA 17606 Counsel for Appellant William Staples

Stephen R. Cerutti, II Office of United States Attorney Middle District of Pennsylvania 228 Walnut Street P.O. Box 11754 220 Federal Building and Courthouse Harrisburg, PA 17108

2 Austin M. Berry [ARGUED] United States Department of Justice Criminal Division Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section 1400 New York Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20005 Counsel for Appellee _______________

OPINION OF THE COURT _______________

BIBAS, Circuit Judge. Dylan Heatherly and William Staples frequented an inter- net chat room where users regularly shared child pornography. One chat-room user repeatedly live-streamed himself raping and sexually abusing his six-year-old nephew. Heatherly and Staples encouraged him as he did so. And they repeatedly asked users for other child-pornography videos too. A jury convicted the men of receiving child pornography and conspir- ing to do the same. Though they challenge their convictions and sentences on many grounds, we find no error and will affirm across the board. In doing so, we hold that the District Court properly ad- mitted videos shown in the chat room of children suffering vi- olent sexual abuse. After reviewing that evidence for itself, the court properly found that the risk of unfair prejudice did not substantially outweigh its probative value. The evidence was highly probative of the conspiracy and the defendants’ aware- ness of what they were involved in.

3 I. BACKGROUND Child-pornography cases test our legal system’s commit- ment to fairness. That is doubly true of cases involving child rape and sexual abuse. Though the details to follow are unset- tling, to do justice we must describe the facts explicitly, with- out flinching. A. The investigation Long before it became a staple of working from home, Zoom was regularly used for sharing child pornography. Ra- ther than download images or videos, child pornographers and viewers can meet in a Zoom conference room while one user plays a video and shares his screen. The chat function lets them share messages either privately with a single user or publicly with everyone in the room. The child-pornography community has developed its own language and rules of conduct in these rooms. Typically, users require one another to turn their computers’ webcams on so that others can see that they are real users, not bots or police. Users have a shorthand to describe the kind of pornography they seek, like “K-9” for bestiality, “bby” for babies, or “no limit ped perv” for children of any age, even babies. App. 227– 28, 363–64. They use special lingo to approve and encourage sharing contraband, like saying, “hail [user]” after that user shares a video. App. 235. And their aliases themselves often embrace violence and pedophilia, like “Twisted Brutal R4pist,” “babyRaperSnuffer,” and “SEXeducation8-13.” App. 643, 667, 674.

4 This case stems from the undercover work of Detective Constable Janelle Blackadar of the Toronto Police. On the evening of July 22, 2015, she logged into a Zoom conference room that she knew was used to share child pornography. While in the room, she recorded the videos and images that were displayed and saved the public messages. Detective Constable Blackadar watched and preserved sev- eral prerecorded videos showing children being sexually abused. One video showed an eighteen-year-old man named William Augusta (Zoom alias “Guy Johnson”) grabbing his six-year-old nephew (Victim-1), hitting him, and forcing him to perform oral sex. Augusta then live-streamed from his room: as the Zoom users watched and egged him on, he abused his nephew again. After the livestream, users shared more pre- recorded videos, including one showing men raping babies. While Augusta was abusing his nephew live, his chat com- ments suggested that he was in Pennsylvania. So Blackadar reached out to her contacts in the U.S. Government to notify them about what she was witnessing. Federal agents then phoned Zoom’s CEO to help in the investigation. Zoom gave agents the IP address of the user “Guy Johnson.” Police iden- tified him as Augusta, used the Zoom images to identify his grandmother’s house in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, got a search warrant, and found his nephew there. Officers then found Au- gusta at his job and arrested him. Eventually, police managed to trace the IP addresses of many of the users who were in the Zoom room that evening. Federal prosecutors in the Middle District of Pennsylvania in-

5 dicted fifteen defendants. Twelve pleaded guilty, and a thir- teenth died before trial. This appeal focuses on the two defend- ants who made it to trial: Heatherly and Staples. B. The defendants 1. Dylan Heatherly. Heatherly, then 31, lived alone near San Diego. He used the Zoom alias “Daniel Sotherland” and logged into the room while users were sharing prerecorded child pornography. On July 22 at 6:59 p.m. EDT, he posted a public comment in the room: “so appreciate if someone showed vids—need to bust [that is, ejaculate] before work.” App. 678. Less than a minute later, Augusta began streaming his live abuse of his nephew. Within three minutes, Heatherly posted a second public comment: “so close here.” App. 679. The livestream continued for roughly twenty more minutes. Throughout it, other users expressed their approval. Right be- fore Heatherly’s second comment, “dirtypervy” told the other users that the live-rape scene “made me shoot haha.” App. 679. Other users publicly asked Augusta to abuse the six-year-old boy in particular ways: “nyc perv” told Augusta to “get him naked”; “babyRaperSnuffer” said, “smack him around a cou- ple of times”; and “Andy” asked him to “rape him.” App. 679– 81. IP logs linked “Daniel Sotherland” to Heatherly’s address. When federal agents got a search warrant and searched his home, he spoke to them for hours, admitting that “Daniel Sotherland” was his alias and that he watched child pornography. Forensic analysts found multiple child-

6 pornography images as well as a video on his electronic devices. 2. William Staples. Staples, then 56, lived alone in Ken- tucky. Using the alias “Bill Simpson,” he logged into the Zoom room on July 22 about an hour after Augusta’s livestream ended. During his session, Staples posted several comments asking other users to stream videos of babies: “any hot bby vids?”; “anyone have hot bby vids?”; and “any other….bby?” App. 687, 697, 699. After user “cigarffpumpboy” shared a video showing the rape of an infant, Staples replied: “hail cigarffpumpboy.” App. 692. As with Heatherly, federal agents used IP logs to trace “Bill Simpson” to Staples. They got a search warrant, searched his home, and seized electronic devices that had child pornography on them. When agents questioned him, he admitted using the alias “Bill Simpson” and watching child pornography. He also admitted that he knew that users shared child pornography in the rooms.

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