United States v. Lonny J. Andrews

383 F.3d 374, 65 Fed. R. Serv. 272, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18549, 2004 WL 1944137
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 2004
Docket03-5088
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 383 F.3d 374 (United States v. Lonny J. Andrews) 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. Lonny J. Andrews, 383 F.3d 374, 65 Fed. R. Serv. 272, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18549, 2004 WL 1944137 (6th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

*375 OPINION

DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

The defendant, Lonny Andrews, was convicted on 27 counts of a 28-count indictment that charged him with the production, receipt, and possession of child pornography, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § § 2251(b), 2252(a)(2), and 2252(a)(4)(B) respectively. Under count 28, he was ordered to forfeit items and equipment utilized in committing those offenses. On appeal, he challenges only his convictions on the first two counts, contending that § 2251(b) is unconstitutional as applied to him because the government failed to establish a sufficient nexus between his alleged activities and interstate or foreign commerce, thereby depriving the district court of jurisdiction to try the case. He also argues that the district court erred in permitting the introduction of certain photographs. We find no basis on which to overturn the jury’s verdict and affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The record in this ease establishes that defendant Andrews lived in a four-bedroom trailer in Nicholasville, Kentucky, with his wife, his seven-year-old stepdaughter, and the couple’s two-year-old daughter. In May 2002, his two nieces, aged 12 and 16, came to Andrews’s home from Alabama to spend the summer. Apparently, the 16-year-old left the house with the defendant’s wife at various times, leaving Andrews in the house with the other children. On one occasion, he took advantage of their absence to show the seven-year-old and the 12-year-old a “video of naked people” engaged in sexual relations. After the two children watched the video, Andrews told them that he wanted them to do similar things with him and forced his step-daughter to perform oral sex on him. At another time, Andrews showed the girls a picture of a “naked teenager” from his computer’s “picture gallery,” telling them that he had received the picture from a friend.

Andrews had purchased a small “pen camera” at Wal-Mart that he could use to produce photographs on his computer screen. Andrews taught his niece and step-daughter how to use the pen camera and, on two occasions, he told them to take pictures of each other’s “privates” while they were naked. The first time, Andrews watched his niece take pictures of his stepdaughter. After the girls took the pictures of each other, Andrews loaded the pictures into his computer’s “picture gallery.” These pictures could also be uploaded onto the Internet, although there was no evidence presented at trial that Andrews actually did so. Andrews frightened the two children into silence by threatening that “if [they] ever told on him that he — that he would go to jail and it would be all [their] fault and that he would beat [them].”

Nevertheless, the younger of the two nieces apparently confided in her older sister, who then told Andrews’s wife, Stacy, that the 12-year-old had something to tell her. From her ensuing conversation with the 12-year-old, Stacy Andrews learned that her husband was making the two children take sexually explicit photos of each other with the pen camera. She contacted the local sheriffs office and filed a petition for an emergency protective order on behalf of the children. The order was granted and, as a result of its directive, Lonny Andrews was removed from the residence.

After the defendant’s departure, the sheriff searched the trailer with Stacy’s consent and seized various items, including the defendant’s computer, some compact disks, hard disk drives, and the pen camera — all of which had been manufactured *376 or acquired from out-of-state or abroad. During the search, a detective examined Andrews’s computer there on the premises, opened some electronic files, and found “visual depictions,” each of which was described in the indictment as involving “a minor female engaged in the lascivious exhibition of her genitals or pubic area.” The hard drive on Andrews’s computer also contained 107 photographs of his niece and his step-daughter, mostly of the girls’ genitals and buttocks, that Andrews had directed the girls to take of each other using his pen camera.

The detective found the pen camera attached to Andrews’s computer. Nearby, he also found a compact disk containing over 200 pornographic images of unidentified prepubescent girls, defined as under the age of 12. Research verified that these images were available on the Internet and could be downloaded onto a disk using the disk “burner” found among the defendant’s computer equipment. They appeared to have been downloaded from the Internet in December 1999 and January 2000. Once, in the fall of 2000, almost two years before the events at issue here took place, Stacy Andrews was using the computer and happened upon an image of a young, nude child. According to her testimony at trial, she told her husband to remove the image from the computer or she would “throw the computer out in the front yard.”

Lonny Andrews testified at trial, denying that he had enticed his niece or his step-daughter to use his pen camera to take the pornographic photos. He also denied uploading their pictures onto the computer or the internet, or downloading the pornographic images of prepubescent girls onto the compact disk. Because the file on the compact disk was labeled “Jimmy,” he argued that a friend of his named Jim must have downloaded the images while he was staying at the Andrews house. The jury nevertheless convicted the defendant on all 27 counts of the indictment, presumably finding that his testimony was not credible, and the district court imposed consecutive sentences totaling 405 years, pursuant to sentencing guidelines mandated by Congress as part of the Sex Crimes Against Children Prevention Act, and enhanced by a finding that Andrews had obstructed justice by testifying falsely at trial. The defendant now appeals only his convictions for the production of child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(b), as set out in counts one and two of the indictment.

DISCUSSION

At the time of Andrews’s trial, § 2251(b) provided as follows:

Any parent, legal guardian, or person having custody or control of a minor who knowingly permits such minor to engage in, or to assist any other person to engage in, sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such conduct shall be punished as provided under subsection (d) of this section, if such parent, legal guardian, or person knows or has reason to know that such visual depiction will be transported in interstate or foreign commerce or mailed, if that visual depiction was produced using materials that have been mailed, shipped, or transported in interstate or foreign commerce by any means, including by computer, or if such visual depiction has actually been transported in interstate or foreign commerce or mailed (emphasis added).

Federal jurisdiction over the offenses charged in counts one and two was based on the fact that Andrews purchased his computer from New Jersey and that the pen camera was made in China. Andrews does not argue that § 2251(b) is *377 facially unconstitutional, instead contending that it is unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause as applied to him because his activities did not substantially relate to interstate commerce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
383 F.3d 374, 65 Fed. R. Serv. 272, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18549, 2004 WL 1944137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lonny-j-andrews-ca6-2004.