United States v. Kellogg

202 F. App'x 96
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 27, 2006
Docket05-6516
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 202 F. App'x 96 (United States v. Kellogg) 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. Kellogg, 202 F. App'x 96 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinions

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

After a grand jury charged Timothy Kellogg with possession of child pornography and after the district court denied his motion to suppress evidence discovered during two searches, Kellogg entered a conditional plea of guilty. On appeal, Kellogg contests the admissibility of evidence uncovered at a friend’s farm, a statement he made after his arrest and evidence seized from a storage locker in Lexington, Kentucky. Because the district court correctly rejected each of these arguments, we affirm.

I.

In March 2000, the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Police Department received a report that Kellogg had sexually abused his teenage daughter. During an interview with state police, Kellogg’s daughter revealed that “Kellogg [had] asked her to pose for nude photographs that were to be taken with a digital camera,” JA 124, and that she had observed Kellogg viewing child pornography on his computer. She also described several “plastic tubs” that had “lined the halls of the residence” before she left. A subsequent search of Kellogg’s residence uncovered neither the tubs nor any evidence of illegal conduct.

Not long thereafter, an acquaintance of Kellogg’s contacted the police to report that Kellogg had “cleaned out” his residence in mid-March, that he was planning to store some guns at a friend’s farm in Woodford County and that he had asked about local storage facilities. JA 157-58. The farm owner, James White, told the police that Kellogg was a coworker and a friend. White also said that, in mid-March, Kellogg had asked for permission to use White’s barn to work on his car, to which White had responded, ‘Yeah, go down there and make yourself at home,” JA 185.

With White’s consent, the officers searched the barn, uncovering several weapons and eight closed but unlocked containers bearing Kellogg’s name or initials. Among these eight containers were two of the plastic tubs described by Kellogg’s daughter. White denied that he had given Kellogg permission to use the barn as a storage facility, and he gave the officers permission to seize the containers and everything inside them. The officers found computer hard drives inside an ammunition box and dozens of compact disks and diskettes inside the two tubs. The police recovered several thousand sexually explicit images of children from the hard drives, the compact disks and the diskettes. Kellogg acknowledges that he owned these containers and their contents.

By October 2003, Kellogg had moved to Columbus, Ohio, to live with his friend Mark Weaver. On October 7, federal law enforcement officers arrested Kellogg at home. While escorting Kellogg out of the house, the officers asked if they could search the car sitting in the driveway. Kellogg responded, “I’d rather you not, you’re going to have enough to deal with in there” and motioned towards the house. JA 137. During the arrest, Weaver gave the officers consent to search the shared areas of the residence and assisted the officers by identifying two computers as Kellogg’s.

About two weeks later, on October 23, Weaver asked federal officers to remove [99]*99Kellogg’s computer equipment from the house and told them that Kellogg had stored additional equipment in a local storage facility. The officers obtained a warrant the next day to search a storage facility in Columbus after confirming with the facility’s manager that Kellogg had rented space there. Although the search did not identify any incriminating evidence, the officers found a digital camera that contained pictures of what appeared to be storage unit D360 at the Versailles Road Mini Storage facility in Lexington, Kentucky. Also in the picture were several of the plastic tubs that had disappeared from Kellogg’s house after Kellogg’s daughter had left in March of 2000.

At roughly the same time, Weaver called the Columbus police to report that he had received a bill for Kellogg from the Versailles Road Mini Storage of Lexington. Federal officers contacted the manager of the facility and confirmed that Kellogg had been renting unit D360 since March 9, 2000, just two weeks prior to the search of his Lexington home. The manager also notified the officers that even after he had moved to Columbus, Kellogg would check on the items in the unit every two to three months. One month later, on November 19, federal agents obtained a warrant to search the Lexington storage unit, where they found dozens of sexually explicit images of children.

A grand jury charged Kellogg with 39 counts of receiving child pornography, see 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2), one count of conspiring to receive child pornography, see § 2251(b)(1), two counts of possessing child pornography, see § 2252(a)(4)(B), and one count of permitting a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing visual depictions for distribution in interstate commerce, see § 2251(d).

Kellogg filed a suppression motion on June 10, 2004, claiming that the search at White’s farm violated his Fourth Amendment rights and that the warrant to search the Lexington storage unit lacked sufficient evidence of probably cause to support the search. On July 15, 2004, the district court held a hearing on Kellogg’s motion. At that time, Kellogg did not present any evidence that White had permitted him to store his property in the barn but instead argued that Kellogg’s expectation of privacy arose because the boxes were opaque and “secure.” JA 240. The court denied Kellogg’s motion.

Kellogg renewed his motion to suppress on October 29, 2004. At the motion hearing on December 13, Kellogg testified about what happened at White’s farm: “I had problems with my vehicle ... I had some stuff in my car and I asked him if I could leave it in his barn.... He said I could. They were up in the loft attic or loft area, it’s a second floor of his hay barn. We put them behind some stuff so his kids wouldn’t get in them.” JA 225-26. Kellogg admitted that he had no direct evidence that White was coerced into allowing the police on his property and stated that he was “[n]ot at all” surprised “to know that Mr. White was just interviewed ... and [White stated] that what [Kellogg] ha[d] claimed here in court and in [his] motion is incorreet[.]” Mot. Hr’g Tr. at 12, Dec. 13, 2004. The district denied the renewed motion.

On May 6, 2005, Kellogg filed yet another motion to suppress, reiterating his previous claims and adding a Miranda claim. In response, the government filed a declaration signed by Detective Ann Gutierrez, who had participated in the search of White’s farm. Attached to the declaration was the transcript of a tape-recorded conversation, dated November 9, 2004, between Gutierrez and White — a conversation that she declared to be accurate under [100]*100penalty of perjury. In pertinent part, the transcript reads:

Gutierrez: ... [W]e had heard through some other sources that he had maybe stored some things on your farm. And so we had gone out to your farm.
White: Yes, ma’am. I ... I remember that very well.
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. I had spoken recently ... the case is actually getting ready to go to trial, we’re hoping this month. So, we’re just trying to touch base with everybody again and make sure that, kind of everything’s, the facts are all straight. And we had heard that there were some things that were being presented that were slightly different from the way I remember it.

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Related

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397 F. App'x 152 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Williams
650 F. Supp. 2d 633 (W.D. Kentucky, 2009)
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