United States v. McKenzie Carson

870 F.3d 584, 104 Fed. R. Serv. 382, 2017 WL 3709137, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16495
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2017
Docket15-3421
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 870 F.3d 584 (United States v. McKenzie Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. McKenzie Carson, 870 F.3d 584, 104 Fed. R. Serv. 382, 2017 WL 3709137, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16495 (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted McKenzie Carson of four counts of violating. the federal sex trafficking statute. Three of those counts alleged that Carson engaged in sex trafficking with knowledge that the victims were forced, threatened or coerced. The other count alleged 'that Carson was involved in the sex trafficking of a person under the. age of eighteen. He asks this court to reverse his conviction and remand for a new trial, claiming that he was prevented from eliciting relevant testimony from his victims, that he was precluded from effectively cross examining a key witness, that the district court errantly admitted evidence of uncharged “bad acts,” and that- he was prejudiced by incorrectly worded jury instructions. We find no reversible error and thus affirm the decision of the district court.

I.

Toward the end of 2009, Kaitlin Fratto’s neighbor, Christopher Richardson asked her if she would be interested in working in an escort business run by his acquaintance, McKenzie Carson; Fratto, although only seventeen years old, was in need of money and expressed interest in the job. Richardson. brokered a meeting, but not before telling Carson that Fratto. was seventeen, as he worried that both of them could get “into potentially a lot. of trouble” if Fratto worked as an escort while a minor. Tr. 12/2/13 at 165 (R. 161, pagelD 1495). Richardson drove Fratto to a Motel 6 in Joliet to meet Carson, reminding him again that Fratto was. seventeen. Despite the warning, Carson, asked Fratto to remove her clothing, took her to the bathroom and raped her, threatening to kill her if she told anyone. After the rape, another woman, Katie Smego arrived, and the four left for another hotel where Carson took provocative photographs of Fratto and Smego, including some in which the two were naked. Carson used the photographs to p,ost advertisements for prostitution services on the website Backpage.com.

In the two day period after Carson posted the advertisements, Carson arranged one commercial sex transaction for Fratto and two for Smego.' He also arranged to have another man take more photographs of Fratto for additional advertisements on Backpage.com. As the photographs were being taken, Richardson reminded Carson that Fratto was only seventeen. After the photo session, Richardson drove Fratto to and from three or four more commercial sex transactions that night. Carson directed Richardson where to deliver the money Fratto earned, but when Richardson insisted that some of the money was his, a heated'argument, ensued in which Carson told Richardson, that if Richardson did not bring both Fratto and the money back to *589 him, “I’ll kill you, I’ll kill your kids, I’ll kill your family.” Tr. 12/2/13 at 183 (R. 161, pageID 1513). Richardson relayed the threats to Fratto who stayed with Richardson instead of returning to Carson. Carson continued to call throughout the night, issuing more threats and threatening to kill Fratto if he did not get his money, and at one point telling Fratto that he had killed Smego.

Eventually Fratto agreed to, continue working for Carson, during which time she traded sex for money three or four times a day. During the time Carson was trafficking Fratto, he flattered her' by telling her she was “his top notch bitch,” that she was pretty, and would get rich modeling. Tr. 12/3/13 at 410-11 (R. 162, pageID 1740-41). He also tried to isolate Fratto from her mother, took her battery out of her phone and told her “he didn’t- want [her] talking to nobody, and he didn’t want nobody to know where [she] was.” Id. at 403 (R. 162, pageID 1733).

Fratto testified 'that she told Carson that she was seventeen and even showed him her identification card. In response, she testified that he said, “it was alright, that [they] would just have’to keep it under the radar until [she] turned 18.” Id.

Unlike Fratto, the remaining three, victims were not minors, but they were easily manipulable.for other reasons. All of them were long-time drug addicts, homeless, desperate for drugs and had nowhere to go.

Veronica Del Valle was in-just such a desperate' state when she met Carson. She •testified that she had been using crack cocaine since the age- of twelve, and at the height of her addiction any interruption left her throwing up, sweating; unable to sleep and eat. In late 2009 and early 2010 she was living in a crack house when another woman suggested she could work as a prostitute for Carson. On two occasions in 2010 Del Valle left the crack house with Carson who took her to a hotel, took seductive pictures of her for advertisements he posted on Backpage.com and supplied her with drugs. In the summer of 2010, he located- her at the crack house again, bought her drugs and convinced her to work as a prostitute, promising that -she would keep the money she earned and that she could decide for herself when she wanted to work. Del Valle ended up working for Carson for five to -six months, engaging in commercial sex transactions up to as many as five times a day, staying with Carson at hotels, and using drugs that he provided for her.

Del Valle testified that Carson took most of her money, took away her personal cell phone and gave her á phone she could use for “business” only. He checked her phone regularly to see if anybody out of the ordinary was calling her and told her he would use the phone’s GPS to find her, which, in fact, he did one night when Del Valle tried to leave. -Using the GPS to track her, he ran up and down a street at 3 •a.m. screaming her name. He also took away her shoes and clothes to keep her from leaving the hotel where she stayed. But that was not enough control for Carson. He beat her with belts, slapped her face, anally raped her, gave her black eyes and cut lips and told her that if she “were to leave, he would kill [her] grandmother and [her]-children.” Tr, 12/4/13 at 548 (R. 163, pagelD 1879).

Like Del Valle, Jessica' Sikora was a heroin addict who experienced severe withdrawal—vomiting, sweating, and pain—when she stopped using heroin. Si-kora testified that she too met Carson in 2010 when she was homeless. When another woman told Sikora that Carson could get her a job and a place to live, Sikora got into a car with Carson who took her straight to Chicago’s west side to buy her *590 heroin and then to a hotel where she met Del Valle. Carson promised he could “hook [her] up with dates,” that she would make money, he would buy her drugs, cosmetics, anything she needed, and give her a place to stay. Sikora knew she had nowhere to go and decided to stay. What she did not count on was the fact that Carson would require her to give him all of the money she earned, ordering her to strip naked so she could not hide money; that he would beat her with his hands, with a belt, with an extension cord; that he would hold a knife to her throat; and rape her orally, vaginally and anally, including one time while a woman and her newborn child watched. At one point, when she said she was too tired to work, Carson punched her in the eye leaving her with a permanently broken blood vessel.

Nahrin Lazzar’s story was nearly the same. She became addicted to heroin at 16 and was homeless in 2010 when Sikora introduced her to Carson. She testified that she agreed to join Carson’s business because she was homeless, had no money, no food and was suffering from withdrawal symptoms and needed drugs.

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Bluebook (online)
870 F.3d 584, 104 Fed. R. Serv. 382, 2017 WL 3709137, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mckenzie-carson-ca7-2017.