United States v. Franklin Torres

894 F.3d 305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 2018
Docket16-3078
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 894 F.3d 305 (United States v. Franklin Torres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. 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. Franklin Torres, 894 F.3d 305 (D.C. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Pillard, Circuit Judge:

J.A., a teenage boy, testified at trial that Defendant-Appellant Franklin Torres, an adult twice his age, had anal sex with him, and that during the same encounter Torres used his cell phone to take four photographs of J.A.'s erect penis while J.A. was lying on his back alone on his parents' bed, naked, with his hands covering his face. Torres posted one of the photos to Facebook, and all four were later discovered on Torres's phone. The jury convicted Torres under District of Columbia law of sexually abusing a minor, and under federal law of producing, possessing, and distributing child pornography.

Torres appeals his convictions of producing child pornography based on the photos of J.A.'s exposed genitals, and of sexual abuse based on the anal intercourse with J.A. He challenges his child pornography conviction because, in his view, no jury could reasonably conclude that he induced J.A. to engage in "sexually explicit conduct"-which, under the statute, includes "lascivious exhibition of the genitals," 18 U.S.C. § 2256 (2)(A)(v) -specifically "for the purpose of producing" the photos, id. § 2251(a). He also challenges the sex-abuse conviction because, he contends, the government impermissibly elicited crucial testimony with a leading question.

We hold that the jury heard sufficient evidence from which to infer that Torres induced J.A.'s lascivious exhibition of his genitals in order to photograph it, including evidence that Torres held J.A.'s penis toward the phone's camera in taking one of the pictures, as well as evidence that he lied to J.A. that he had deleted the photos when he in fact retained them for later use. As to the form of the government's questions, we hold that the district court had discretion to let the government ask J.A., a very reticent witness, to clarify the nature of his sexual contact with Torres in the manner that it did. We thus affirm both convictions.

I.

The crimes of which Torres was convicted took place while he shared a one-bedroom apartment with his childhood friend Andrea, her husband, and their five children-including J.A., then sixteen years old. (To protect J.A.'s privacy, we use his initials and omit his mother's surname.) J.A.'s parents agreed to let Torres move in with the family in January 2014, during a period when Torres was unemployed and struggling to afford a place to live. Torres was in his early thirties.

In August or September of 2014, Torres posted a photo to Facebook, where Andrea caught a glimpse of it. The picture showed a naked teenage boy with his erect penis prominently displayed. Andrea did not at first recognize the boy, who was shielding his face with his arm. Andrea confronted Torres about the post. According to Andrea, Torres got "very nervous," said that the boy in the photo was his "boyfriend," and explained that he was "drunk" and "mad" when he posted it. Transcript of Trial at 96, 98, United States v. Torres , No. 15-1345 (D.D.C. Mar. 8, 2016) (3/8/16 Tr.). Torres expressed concern that J.A.'s father might have seen the photo and, if so, would think the "boyfriend" was J.A.

Andrea, troubled by the episode, set out to investigate the contents of Torres's cell phone. Finding it password-protected, she surreptitiously removed its memory card and downloaded the contents to the family computer. She later hunted through the many images she found, eventually locating the photo she had seen on Facebook. Upon closer inspection, she realized that the photo was taken on her bed, and that the young man in the picture was J.A. She also found three other nude pictures of J.A. on the phone, evidently taken during the same afternoon. All four photos, taken from a vantage point near J.A.'s knees, looking up along his outstretched body, depict J.A. lying back on the bed covering his face with his arm, with his genitals prominently displayed. In one photo, the most zoomed-in of the four, Torres's hand can be seen reaching forward from outside the frame, placing his fingers behind the shaft of J.A.'s penis to tilt it toward the camera.

Andrea again confronted Torres. He begged for forgiveness, saying he was drunk when he took the pictures, and claimed that J.A. had initiated the sexual encounter. Torres moved out of the apartment, after which Andrea showed J.A.'s father the photos she had found. Together, they asked J.A. about the photos, and what happened between him and Torres. In response, J.A. wept and was only able to say "[n]o, no, no." Id. at 125-26 . J.A.'s parents then took the photos to the police, who interviewed J.A. and seized the phone and the family computer. A forensic analysis of Torres's phone, and of the image files, corroborated Andrea's account of finding the photos on Torres's phone.

Torres was arrested and charged with production, possession, and distribution of child pornography, in violation of federal law. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 2251 (a), 2252(a)(2). He was also charged, under District of Columbia law, with first degree sexual abuse of a minor. See D.C. Code § 22-3009.01 . 1

At trial, J.A.'s parents testified about finding the images on the memory card of Torres's phone, and a digital evidence recovery specialist who later analyzed the images described his findings. The government introduced all four photos in evidence.

J.A. testified, through a translator because Spanish is his primary language, as the government's last trial witness. J.A. reviewed the four photos, described for the jury what was going on in them, and recounted how Torres took them. He said Torres took all four photos in quick succession, with his phone, and that Torres was fully clothed at the time. J.A. testified that he did not want to be photographed and that he had asked Torres to delete the pictures, to which Torres replied-falsely-that he already had.

J.A. next testified about "what happened right before [Torres] took those pictures," Transcript of Trial at 104, United States v. Torres , No. 15-1345 (D.D.C. Mar. 9, 2016) (3/9/16 Tr.), describing the following sequence of events: He and Torres were alone in the living room watching television when Torres rested his hand on J.A.'s thigh. Torres then went into the bedroom, telling J.A. that he wanted to show him something. J.A. followed, and once they were in the bedroom Torres removed J.A.'s clothes, over resistance from J.A. J.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
894 F.3d 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-franklin-torres-cadc-2018.