United States v. Larson

558 F. Supp. 2d 1103, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84884, 2008 WL 2315742
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedJune 5, 2008
DocketCR 07-07-BU-DWM
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 558 F. Supp. 2d 1103 (United States v. Larson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Larson, 558 F. Supp. 2d 1103, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84884, 2008 WL 2315742 (D. Mont. 2008).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

DONALD W. MOLLOY, District Judge.

I. Introduction

Joshua Larson is twenty-one years old. He has the mental capacity of a nine-year-old child. He wets his bed. He lives in squalor and filth, surrounded by garbage and dog feces. He cannot ride a bike. He is incapable of driving a car. He is the product of special education and has a tested I.Q. of just over 70. Joshua reads *1105 at a third-grade level, spells at a third-grade level, and has the arithmetic skill of a second grader. While he can do simple addition and subtraction, he is incapable of division or multiplication. On March 23, 2007, the United States of America indicted Joshua for the receipt and possession of child pornography. If convicted, Joshua faces a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in a federal prison, and a maximum sentence of ten years. The question here is what to do with Joshua, considering that he is guilty on both counts.

II. Findings of Fact

This case was tried without a jury on October 10, 2007. While the facts are simple enough, the consequences of the prosecution are not. An investigation of Joshua stemmed from the Wyoming ICAC identifying IP addresses which were downloading digital information known to contain child pornography. The locations of the IP addresses were found by sending subpoenas to Bresnan Communications, which in turn provided information corresponding to the IP accounts. Through this process agents located an IP address assigned to Lance Larson, Joshua’s father, at 1305 Sunset Road in Butte, Montana. This is where Joshua lived with his mother and his father.

A search warrant was executed on November 30, 2006, early in the morning. The agents executing the warrant were greeted by Lance Larson, who told them that his wife Debbie and his son Joshua were both in the house. The occupants of the house were surprised that law enforcement officers were there with a warrant. What the law enforcement officers encountered in terms of filth and chaos is shown in exhibits 2-2, 2-4, 2-6, 2-8, 2-9, 2-14, and 2-15. The home was unkempt, filthy, in disarray and full of garbage. The house was strewn with dirty clothing, fast-food receptacles, cans, and debris that covered the floor and the furniture. There was one dog in the home, and he had left his mark with piles of excrement. In addition to this chaos the agents found four computers, all connected to the internet.

About twenty-five minutes after beginning the search the agents interviewed Joshua, his father, and his mother. They immediately ruled out Debbie Larson as a suspect because she told them she had no knowledge of any child pornography in the house. Lance Larson was interrogated next, and the agents thought he was a potential suspect even though he, like his wife, made no admissions about child pornography and denied seeing child pornography in the home. He admitted to having adult pornography, and reported that he had seen adult pornography on Joshua’s computer and “told him not to do it”. Strangely, the government elicited testimony from the agents at trial that neither Joshua’s mother, nor his father, voluntarily raised an issue about Joshua’s intellectual impairment. In my view, this testimony was self-serving and represents a feeble attempt to answer the obvious question this case presents: why was Joshua prosecuted?

After the agents examined the parents they turned their attention to Joshua. He seemed nervous and he stammered a bit more than the usual suspect being questioned. Joshua confirmed he was using file-sharing programs and that he had used both Bresnan and AOL in the past. He claimed he had been using the internet for four years. When asked for a driver’s license, Joshua told the agent he didn’t have one and that all he had was an ID card. For a twenty-one year old male this fact would be strange, even in Butte, Montana. There was no indication, however, of curiosity on the part of the agents in light of this fact, or in light of the strange circumstances of Joshua’s living environment. This testimony seemed to merely *1106 suggest that adverse inferences should be drawn from Joshua’s failure to raise questions himself or to offer information concerning his own mental capacity. He did describe being able to use file sharing programs and to download Hentai (anime cartoon) pornography. Joshua admitted to downloading child pornography ten times each week and told the agent that when he first saw child pornography he had deleted it. He disclosed that he had about three hundred child pornography files including images and movies. His practice was to keep some images and delete others.

Keeping in mind that Joshua has the mentation, and the moral scruples, of a nine-year-old child, it is not surprising that he told the agent his preference was for girls under the age of fifteen and that he didn’t like girls over eighteen. Dale Watson, Ph.D., is the fourth professional to evaluate Joshua and to confirm that he is mentally retarded. He testified that persons like Joshua in general have normal sexual development, but that in Joshua’s case he was otherwise developmentally immature and socially very awkward, and that he likely had few friends at his own level. For Joshua, contemplating sexual interest in an adult woman would be very intimidating, because she would be so psychologically and developmentally ahead of him as to seem overpowering. While sexual attraction to children and teenagers is not necessarily a “natural consequence” of the developmental disability Joshua suffers, it is likely a factor in his interest pattern.

Dr. Watson testified that the computer depictions of child pornography were likely Joshua’s expression of his sexuality, and that while it was not normative behavior, it is his only sexual expression and outlet. Furthermore, the social and family environment that Joshua was raised in, including his father’s ready access and use of adult pornography, could lead to a lack of social norms and erroneous judgment. This problem is particularly perplexing given that Joshua is prone to errors in judgment and is unable to sort out in his own mind what is appropriate and what is not. Ironically, his mother, a college graduate, discovered Joshua using her computer to look at pornography so she, in her own words, “locked down on him.” She installed software on her computer and on her husband’s computer that prevented Joshua from uploading or downloading anything. She took no precautionary measure regarding Joshua’s computer other than to extract from him a promise that he would erase the pornography on his machine. The justification she offered for permitting her mentally retarded son to have a computer with images that were not “something like a playboy pose, it was far more than that,” was, “I was trying to let him make some decisions.”

Joshua’s ability to reason abstractly is significantly impaired. He was unable to conceptualize the meaning of proverbs during the proverb test Dr. Watson administered. For example, when asked to explain proverbs such as “people who live in glass houses should not throw stones” or “an old ox plows a straight row,” Joshua was unable to abstract meaning from these statements. Not only does he lack abstract reasoning, but also his parents and his sister confirmed the significant deficits he has in day-to-day skills.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Rothwell
847 F. Supp. 2d 1048 (E.D. Tennessee, 2012)
United States v. C.R.
792 F. Supp. 2d 343 (E.D. New York, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 F. Supp. 2d 1103, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84884, 2008 WL 2315742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-larson-mtd-2008.