MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
Introduction
This is an 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2) child pornography prosecution. Defendant concedes the facts. They are stipulated. Only legal defenses are raised. Specifically, in an earlier motion, defendant challenged the anticipatory search warrant that allowed authorities to seize the pornographic material almost contemporaneously with its delivery to defendant. That challenge was turned back.
In this proceeding, defendant first attacks federal jurisdiction, contending that the government illegitimately manufactured the interstate commerce element. But the principal legal defense is a due process attack on the government's conduct leading to defendant’s arrest. Neither attack succeeds. Federal jurisdiction validly exists; it is neither manufactured nor illegitimate. The due process attack, though not insubstantial, also ultimately fails. On close inspection, the government’s conduct does not violate due process; it does not offend traditional notions of fairness; and it is neither shocking nor disproportionate to the evil at which it is aimed.
The failure of these legal defenses coupled with the stipulated facts, which the court accepts and adopts, compels the court to conclude that the offense charged against the defendant, in all its elements, has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It follows that defendant must be and is adjudged guilty as charged in the indictment.
Facts
Operation Looking Glass, which led to defendant's arrest, was conceived and implemented by the United States Postal Inspection Service to ferret out and prosecute consumers of child pornography. This group is one of the targets of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2).
The perniciousness of child pornography can hardly be exaggerated. Children are horribly victimized and abused to feed a most unwholesome and destructive appetite. To combat this growing scourge,
Operation Looking Glass set out
to identify those who were predisposed to consume child pornography and who sought to use the United States mails for this purpose. The means chosen was an undercover operation.
The Far Eastern Trading Co., Ltd. of Hong Kong is an undercover child pornography mail order firm established by the Postal Inspection Service to accomplish the purpose of Operation Looking Glass. Hong Kong was chosen with the consent and cooperation of the local government apparently because substantial amounts of child pornography come from overseas. A branch office was located at P.O. Box 3071, Frederiksted, St. Croix, Virgin Islands, 00840, in order, as we shall see, to add to the authenticity of the operation.
The method of operation was simple and effective. In general, various means were used to identify persons, initially at least, as predisposed towards child pornography. Typically, initial identification of targets was accomplished by answering advertisements apparently seeking such material or by the use of lists transmitted by the Customs Service of persons to whom offending material had been sent from overseas and then seized. Subsequent test correspondence was sent to confirm predisposition. Thereafter, the target was sent a catalog and order form. This material, as well as the pornographic materials themselves, was assembled by the government at Operation Looking Glass’ facilities in Newark, N.J. All pornographic materials used in the operation were taken from material earlier seized by the authorities. Orders received were filled by sending the material from Newark to Postal Inspector Northrop in Washington, D.C., who in turn placed the material in an envelope with a St. Croix stamp and postmark and then had the postal service deliver the material to the individual. Very shortly thereafter,
the individual was visited by the authorities armed with a search warrant. The arrest followed.
In the instant case, the essential facts fit this pattern. Defendant, Ralph E. Goodwin, Jr., first came to the Postal Inspection Service’s attention in September, 1983 when he placed the following advertisement in the October issue of the now defunct Met Forum, a Washington area swinger’s magazine:
Wanted: Lollitots, moppets & chicken magazines & photographs. If you have single copies you want to sell, send your telephone number to MP Code 3941.
Test correspondence with the person who placed the ad revealed that it was the defendant, Ralph Goodwin, and that defendant was a “beginner,” whose “latent desires” were just then emerging.
The September, 1983 test letter received from defendant confirmed his interest in obtaining the types of material described in the ad as well as accounts of personal experiences. He identified himself as a mid-forties, married, white male with four children and employed by a large advertising firm.
While the 1983 ad and resulting correspondence were the first evidences of defendant’s predisposition, they were not the last. Mr. Goodwin was also known to the Postal Inspection Service through additional test correspondence. In this correspondence, defendant stated that he spent over $100 a year on hard core pornography usually through the mails or from Europe and that he was interested in teenage and
pre-teenage sexual activity involving both heterosexual and homosexual activity.
Defendant’s contact with Operation Looking Glass leading to his arrest and indictment commenced in March, 1987. Based on substantial previous evidence of predisposition, the Far Eastern Trading Company sent him a solicitation letter on March 20, 1987. The letter, on Hong Kong stationery, was enclosed in an envelope on which defendant’s name was incorrectly spelled as “Goodwon”. This solicitation letter plainly focused on child pornography. It stated:
As many of you know, much hysterical nonsense has appeared in the American media concerning “pornography” and what must be done to stop it from coming across your borders. This brief letter does not allow us to give much comments; however, why is your government spending millions of dollars to exercise international censorship while tons of drugs, which makes yours the world’s most crime ridden country are passed through easily. We have read the comments of Mr. Van Rabb of your Customs Service concerning the efforts of his agents to find “children’s pornography” and we find that many of you are denied a product because of that agency. After conversation with enlightened Americans, we have found that if material is given to your post without a Custom inspection, a search warrant must be gotten in order to open your mail.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
Introduction
This is an 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2) child pornography prosecution. Defendant concedes the facts. They are stipulated. Only legal defenses are raised. Specifically, in an earlier motion, defendant challenged the anticipatory search warrant that allowed authorities to seize the pornographic material almost contemporaneously with its delivery to defendant. That challenge was turned back.
In this proceeding, defendant first attacks federal jurisdiction, contending that the government illegitimately manufactured the interstate commerce element. But the principal legal defense is a due process attack on the government's conduct leading to defendant’s arrest. Neither attack succeeds. Federal jurisdiction validly exists; it is neither manufactured nor illegitimate. The due process attack, though not insubstantial, also ultimately fails. On close inspection, the government’s conduct does not violate due process; it does not offend traditional notions of fairness; and it is neither shocking nor disproportionate to the evil at which it is aimed.
The failure of these legal defenses coupled with the stipulated facts, which the court accepts and adopts, compels the court to conclude that the offense charged against the defendant, in all its elements, has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It follows that defendant must be and is adjudged guilty as charged in the indictment.
Facts
Operation Looking Glass, which led to defendant's arrest, was conceived and implemented by the United States Postal Inspection Service to ferret out and prosecute consumers of child pornography. This group is one of the targets of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2).
The perniciousness of child pornography can hardly be exaggerated. Children are horribly victimized and abused to feed a most unwholesome and destructive appetite. To combat this growing scourge,
Operation Looking Glass set out
to identify those who were predisposed to consume child pornography and who sought to use the United States mails for this purpose. The means chosen was an undercover operation.
The Far Eastern Trading Co., Ltd. of Hong Kong is an undercover child pornography mail order firm established by the Postal Inspection Service to accomplish the purpose of Operation Looking Glass. Hong Kong was chosen with the consent and cooperation of the local government apparently because substantial amounts of child pornography come from overseas. A branch office was located at P.O. Box 3071, Frederiksted, St. Croix, Virgin Islands, 00840, in order, as we shall see, to add to the authenticity of the operation.
The method of operation was simple and effective. In general, various means were used to identify persons, initially at least, as predisposed towards child pornography. Typically, initial identification of targets was accomplished by answering advertisements apparently seeking such material or by the use of lists transmitted by the Customs Service of persons to whom offending material had been sent from overseas and then seized. Subsequent test correspondence was sent to confirm predisposition. Thereafter, the target was sent a catalog and order form. This material, as well as the pornographic materials themselves, was assembled by the government at Operation Looking Glass’ facilities in Newark, N.J. All pornographic materials used in the operation were taken from material earlier seized by the authorities. Orders received were filled by sending the material from Newark to Postal Inspector Northrop in Washington, D.C., who in turn placed the material in an envelope with a St. Croix stamp and postmark and then had the postal service deliver the material to the individual. Very shortly thereafter,
the individual was visited by the authorities armed with a search warrant. The arrest followed.
In the instant case, the essential facts fit this pattern. Defendant, Ralph E. Goodwin, Jr., first came to the Postal Inspection Service’s attention in September, 1983 when he placed the following advertisement in the October issue of the now defunct Met Forum, a Washington area swinger’s magazine:
Wanted: Lollitots, moppets & chicken magazines & photographs. If you have single copies you want to sell, send your telephone number to MP Code 3941.
Test correspondence with the person who placed the ad revealed that it was the defendant, Ralph Goodwin, and that defendant was a “beginner,” whose “latent desires” were just then emerging.
The September, 1983 test letter received from defendant confirmed his interest in obtaining the types of material described in the ad as well as accounts of personal experiences. He identified himself as a mid-forties, married, white male with four children and employed by a large advertising firm.
While the 1983 ad and resulting correspondence were the first evidences of defendant’s predisposition, they were not the last. Mr. Goodwin was also known to the Postal Inspection Service through additional test correspondence. In this correspondence, defendant stated that he spent over $100 a year on hard core pornography usually through the mails or from Europe and that he was interested in teenage and
pre-teenage sexual activity involving both heterosexual and homosexual activity.
Defendant’s contact with Operation Looking Glass leading to his arrest and indictment commenced in March, 1987. Based on substantial previous evidence of predisposition, the Far Eastern Trading Company sent him a solicitation letter on March 20, 1987. The letter, on Hong Kong stationery, was enclosed in an envelope on which defendant’s name was incorrectly spelled as “Goodwon”. This solicitation letter plainly focused on child pornography. It stated:
As many of you know, much hysterical nonsense has appeared in the American media concerning “pornography” and what must be done to stop it from coming across your borders. This brief letter does not allow us to give much comments; however, why is your government spending millions of dollars to exercise international censorship while tons of drugs, which makes yours the world’s most crime ridden country are passed through easily. We have read the comments of Mr. Van Rabb of your Customs Service concerning the efforts of his agents to find “children’s pornography” and we find that many of you are denied a product because of that agency. After conversation with enlightened Americans, we have found that if material is given to your post without a Custom inspection, a search warrant must be gotten in order to open your mail.
For those of you who have enjoyed youthful material from publishers such as COQ, Color Climax, Rodox and others, we have devised a method of getting these to you without prying eyes of U.S. Customs seizing your mail. All material that you order from your company will be sent to you through our branch office in the Virgin Islands. After consultations with American solicitors, we have been advised that once we have posted our material through your system, it cannot be opened for any inspection without authorization of a judge.
The letter included a response coupon, which defendant filled out requesting further information. He also signed a disclaimer on the response coupon, promising that he was not an undercover law enforcement agent. The disclaimer added authenticity to the letter. Defendant mailed the completed response form to the St. Croix address, where it was forwarded unopened to Inspector Northrop in Washington, D.C. Northrop opened the letter on April 30, 1987.
In response to defendant’s request for more information, a mailing containing a catalog of available mail order child pornography material was sent to defendant by the Far Eastern Trading Company, with United States postage affixed and a Virgin Islands postmark. The catalog provided detailed descriptions of seven video tapes, two 8mm films and seven magazines, all dealing with child pornography. Each item was generally described as consisting of visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. Two letters were also included in the mailing. One informed defendant of the procedures to follow in ordering material, while the second provided information to those who wished to sell child pornography to Far Eastern Trading Company.
Defendant responded by placing an order. On May 14, 1987, a letter from defendant was received at Far Eastern’s Virgin Islands post office box. The letter bore a May 3, 1987, northern Virginia postmark and was forwarded to Inspector Northrop in Washington who opened it on May 15, 1987. The letter contained an order from defendant for four magazines advertised in the catalog together with a check for $80.00 signed by defendant and drawn on the business account of Business Promotions, Inc. at First Virginia Bank, Falls Church, Virginia. The letter requested that the material be sent to 10208 Tamarack Drive, Vienna, Virginia 22180, defendant’s home address. The four magazines defendant ordered,
Torrid Tots, Lolita Sex, Children Love,
and
Boys Who Love Boys
all were advertised as depicting chil
dren in sexually explicit situations.
It is stipulated, and the court agrees, that each magazine contains visual depictions of sexually explicit conduct involving individuals under the age of 18 years as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 2256.
Far Eastern, through its Newark, N.J. office, responded to defendant’s order by preparing two of the magazines,
Children Love
and
Boys Who Love Boys,
for mailing. The magazines were prepared under controlled circumstances from material previously seized or purchased during Postal Inspection Service investigations. The material defendant ordered was then sent from Newark to Inspector Northrop in Washington who in turn had the material delivered to defendant at his home by the United States Postal Sendee on June 10, 1987. The envelope was sealed, stamped and postmarked at the time of its delivery, which occurred at approximately 1:00 p.m. on June 10, 1987 and which was observed by postal inspectors. Thereafter, at about 4:00 p.m., postal inspectors executed a search warrant at defendant’s residence and recovered,
inter alia,
correspondence to and from Far Eastern Trading Company, a typewriter used by defendant to type letters to Far Eastern, and the two child pornography magazines delivered to defendant earlier in the day. Also recovered were a large volume of nudist and sexually explicit material depicting children as well as adults.
Without doubt, this defendant was a consumer of child pornography, predisposed to continue to do so in violation of the law.
At the time of the search and prior to the arrest, defendant admitted ordering the two child pornography magazines sent by Far Eastern and seized in the search. Defendant was thereafter arrested and indicted and the trial followed.
Analysis
A.
The Offense
The stipulated facts establish beyond a reasonable doubt each of the elements of the charged offense. Defendant received in the mail, at his request, materials he knew would be and are statutorily proscribed child pornography.
He has es
sentially admitted that he was predisposed to consume such material, that he ordered it through the mails fully aware of its nature and that he received it. Guilt under the statute cannot be seriously disputed.
B.
Jurisdiction
Defendant claims that the statute’s jurisdictional requirement is not met because the mailing and interstate commerce nexus were manufactured by the government.
United States v. Archer,
486 F.2d 670 (2d Cir.1973), is the sole support cited. It is, however, distinguishable and cannot bear the weight of defendant’s argument.
Archer
was a Travel Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1952, prosecution growing out of an intensive local and federal undercover investigation of corruption in New York City’s criminal justice system. Ultimately, the principal issue was whether three telephone calls were sufficient to trigger the Act. The court concluded they were not, noting that
Whatever Congress may have meant by Section 1952(a)(3), it certainly did not intend to include a telephone call manufactured by the government for the precise purpose of transforming
a local bribery offense into a federal crime.
486 F.2d at 681 (emphasis added). In that court’s view the undercover scheme “needlessly injected the federal government in a matter of state concern.”
Id.
at 672. That court also distinguished
United States v. Edwards,
366 F.2d 853 (2d Cir.1966),
cert. denied,
386 U.S. 908, 87 S.Ct. 852, 17 L.Ed. 2d 782 (1967), by noting that the participants in
Edwards
never considered themselves limited by New York boundaries. So, too, the defendant here never considered himself limited to Virginia’s boundaries in his search for child pornography. He advertised in a magazine, obviously inviting responses from any state the magazine might reach. He responded by mail to Far Eastern’s out of state mailings and used the U.S. mail to order the offending material he knew would be delivered by the U.S. mail. Far Eastern was established in Hong Kong and the Virgin Islands for reasons wholly unrelated to jurisdiction; it was done to add authenticity to the venture. Unlike
Archer,
therefore, Far Eastern’s foreign venture was not chosen to manufacture jurisdiction or as an attempt to transform an essentially local matter into a federal crime. Moreover, unlike the Travel Act, the federal statute proscribing the receipt of child pornography is satisfied if the material is received in the U.S. mail even if mailed intrastate.
In sum, defendant’s reliance on
Archer
is misplaced and the facts amply confirm the existence here of jurisdiction under Section 2252(a)(2).
C.
The Due Process Attack
Claims that the authorities bent on fighting crime have overstepped due process grounds should not be taken lightly by courts. To be sure, crime in all its manifestations is a constant societal threat and authorities must be zealous in ferreting out and prosecuting criminals. But on occasion, authorities can be (and have been)
overzealous, abusing their enormous power. When this occurs, individual rights fall victim and courts are often the only recourse, the only source of a remedy. So it is that this court and all courts should give careful scrutiny to claims of this sort.
The starting point for a due process analysis of government conduct in an inves
tigation must be
Hampton v. United States,
425 U.S. 484, 96 S.Ct. 1646, 48 L.Ed.2d 113 (1976). There, defendant was convicted of selling heroin which, as it turned out, was supplied to him by a government informant and sold by him to undercover agents. Conceding that his predisposition to sell heroin precluded an entrapment defense,
defendant nonetheless challenged the conviction on the ground that the government’s outrageous conduct in supplying him with contraband denied him due process. He relied on
dicta
in
United States v. Russell,
411 U.S. 423, 431-32, 93 S.Ct. 1637, 1643, 36 L.Ed.2d 366 (1973), to the effect that
[W]e may some day be presented with a situation in which the conduct of law enforcement agents is so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial processes to obtain a conviction,
cf. Rochin v. California,
342 U.S. 165 [72 S.Ct. 205, 96 L.Ed. 183] (1952).
A divided Court rejected the
Hampton
defendant’s claim. A plurality held that the due process clause cannot be invoked to overturn a conviction on grounds of governmental misconduct absent a violation of a protected right of the defendant. Chief Justice Eehnquist, the author of the plurality opinion, took an even more restrictive view. He indicated that “the remedy ... with respect to acts of government authorities ... lies solely in the defense of entrapment.” 425 U.S. at 490, 96 S.Ct. at 1650.
A close reading of all the
Hampton
opinions, however, strongly suggests that a majority of the justices would hold that a due process defense survives
Hampton
and is available in appropriate circumstances. Several
post-Hampton
courts have so held
and the Fourth Circuit, while not directly deciding the issue, has certainly not foreclosed it.
This court concludes that
Hampton,
properly read, and taken together with
Russell,
leaves open that there may be some circumstances in which government conduct is so offensive that a conviction should be set aside on due process grounds. The question then is whether these circumstances, namely the establishment and conduct of Operation Looking Glass, are such as to warrant this extraordinary constitutional remedy.
From the decisions, and on principle, it is clear that due process violations exist only where the official conduct is not merely offensive, but outrageous. Government conduct does not reach this level simply because it is undercover or a reverse sting or because the government supplies an ingredient or even the contraband itself.
Government conduct must go beyond this to require reversal of a conviction or dismissal of the indictment.
Not surprisingly, therefore, in only two appellate decisions have courts found government conduct to be outrageous enough to warrant reversal of a conviction. In
United States v. Twigg,
588 F.2d 373 (1978), the Third Circuit reversed convictions of two defendants for “speed” manufacturing. Government agents and informers conceived and contrived the entire offense; they persuaded those defendants to operate a speed production laboratory and then proceeded to furnish virtually all of
the requisite machinery, apparatus, know-how and chemicals, and the isolated farmhouse location as well. As the court recognized, neither defendant “knew how to manufacture speed, and each provided only minimal assistance.” 588 F.2d at 378.
Greene v. United States,
454 F.2d 783 (9th Cir.1971), is essentially similar. There it was not an illegal speed factory, but a still. Neither case, however, is analogous to the one at bar. Defendant here was not an unwilling participant induced, persuaded,
inveighed or hectored into purchasing illegal child pornography; he was already a consumer of such material looking for opportunities to purchase more. All Operation Looking Glass did was to provide defendant with an opportunity, much as an undercover DEA agent posing as a cocaine seller provides an opportunity to a purchaser of cocaine before making the arrest. This is not government conduct so outrageous as to violate due process.
The due process calculus must take into account the nature of the crime involved. Conduct appropriate to ferrett out and deter perpetrators of serious crimes may not be appropriate where only a minor crime is involved. Child pornography is unquestionably a serious and pernicious crime.
The Government has a compelling, surpass-ingly important interest in preventing the sexual exploitation and abuse of children who are photographed for the production of such materials. Indeed, this interest has led Congress to provide stiff penalties for consumers as well as producers of the material.
The evil targetted by Congress in Section 2252(a)(2) is unquestionably of a nature and gravity sufficient to warrant the authorities to use undercover operations like Operation Looking Glass. Indeed, the Operation is noteworthy for the care taken to confirm a subject’s predisposition and for the absence of any repeated inducements or hectoring.
From this and because of the existence of quite appropriate limitations on governmental mail surveillance and seizure activities, it is fair to conclude that Operation Looking Glass, far
from violative of due process, is well tailored to achieve the congressional purpose embodied in § 2252(a)(2).
As applied with respect to this defendant, the Operation was neither shocking, nor offensive to traditional notions of fundamental fairness. Accordingly, this court holds that Operation Looking Glass does not violate due process as applied in this case. To hold otherwise would call into constitutional question even the most routine and now well-accepted sting or undercover investigative techniques.
In reaching this conclusion, however, the court makes clear its view that official conduct can cross the line into unconstitutional territory, but it intimates no view or opinion on what such conduct might be or on whether variations of Operation Looking Glass might fail constitutional muster.