United States v. Ramos

763 F.3d 45, 2014 WL 3938590, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 15537
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2014
Docket12-1801
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 763 F.3d 45 (United States v. Ramos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Ramos, 763 F.3d 45, 2014 WL 3938590, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 15537 (1st Cir. 2014).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

Zairo Ramos and three co-defendants were recorded on video engaging in sex acts with a fourteen-year-old girl. In defending at trial against a charge of aiding and abetting the production of child pornography, Ramos claimed unsuccessfully that he did not know the acts were being recorded. Invoking the insufficiency of the evidence, he presses that same argument on appeal, along with a claim that the trial judge deprived him of his right to call a key witness.

With respect to sentencing, Ramos contests the length of, and justification for, his prison term, and challenges supervised release conditions that generally forbid him from using a computer or the internet without permission from his probation officer or the court, and another supervised release condition that bars him from having any “pornographic material.”

After carefully considering the record, we affirm the conviction and reject Ramos’s challenges to his prison sentence. However, we agree with Ramos that United States v. Perazza-Mercado, 553 F.3d 65 (1st Cir.2009), requires us to vacate the internet, computer, and pornography supervised release conditions. Under Peraz-zar-Mercado, these conditions are not reasonably related to Ramos’s characteristics and history, and thus deprive him of more liberty than reasonably necessary to achieve the goals of sentencing. There remain several narrower computer and internet restrictions that Ramos did not challenge on appeal.

I.

In 2010, KMV, 1 then 14, asked a friend of her mother’s if he knew anyone in their housing project who had a computer and Internet access. 2 KMV had known her mother’s friend, Félix Iván Rodríguez-Acevedo, since she was seven or eight and considered him “like my uncle.” Rodriguez-Acevedo introduced KMV to Rey Vi-lanova-Delgado (‘Vilanova”), a resident on another floor of her building. Through this introduction, KMV was able to use Vilanova’s computer to check social-networking websites, lounge in his apartment playing video games, and watch movies. She told investigators that Vilanova and Rodriguez-Acevedo began to touch her during her visits to the apartment. Other men also came to the apartment and engaged in sexual acts with KMV.

*50 In February 2011, a social worker in the housing project learned of the sexual contact between KMV and Vilanova. Other neighbors had heard this rumor as well; they reacted by beating Vilanova with a baseball bat. While Vilanova recovered in the hospital, his mother turned over to the social worker a box of sexually-explicit photos, along with various VCR and DVD recordings. Investigators from the cyber crimes unit of the Department of Homeland Security interviewed Vilanova, and they searched some of his electronic devices after he signed a form consenting to the searches.

Among the recordings turned over to police were three videos, shot from different angles, of an incident in May or June of 2010. 3 In the videos, Ramos and co-defendants Rodriguez-Acevedo, Vilanova, and Félix Javier González-Morales, engaged in sex acts with KMV. Count 1 of a superseding indictment alleged that Ramos, “while aiding and abetting” the three co-defendants in the video, “did employ, use, persuade, induce, entice or coerce” KMV to engage in “the lascivious exhibition of the genital areas” and the performance of “sexual acts, for the purpose of producing a visual depiction,” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). 4 The aiding and abetting statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2, provides that a defendant “is punishable as. a principal” if he “aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures” the commission of a federal crime.

At trial, Ramos conceded that he was depicted engaging in sexual acts with KMV, such as receiving oral sex, but contended that he did not know he was being filmed, and thus he could not have aided and abetted the crime of producing child pornography. The jury instructions, which are not challenged on appeal, told jurors to consider whether “the defendant was aware that recording, video recording, photographing, was taking place during the sexual conduct.” 5

At the close of the prosecution’s case, Ramos moved for a judgment of acquittal under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29. The district court denied the motion, noting in its ruling from the bench that there was a video camera visible in one of the still images from the videos, and that it was “patently clear, it’s beyond any reasonable doubt, that everybody in that room knew that they were being recorded, and that cameras were being used to record.”

*51 Ramos then sought to call Vilanova as a witness to ask whether Vilanova had told him that the sex acts were being recorded. Vilanova asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, citing the pending sentencing on his plea deal in the case, possible incriminating answers that might be elicited on cross-examination, and local charges still pending for lascivious acts. The district court held that Vilanova had properly invoked the Fifth Amendment. The jury found Ramos guilty, arid the court sentenced him to 188 months in prison and ten years of post-release supervision. Included in the special conditions of supervision were requirements that Ramos “shall not possess or use a computer that contains an internal, external or wireless modem without the prior approval of the Court,” and that he “shall not possess or use a computer, cellular telephone, or any other device with internet accessing capability at any time and/or place without prior approval from the probation officer.” Further, the court added a condition that Ramos “will not possess any pornographic material, unless approved by the probation officer.” Ramos objected only to the general ban on the use of computers and the internet. He followed with this timely appeal, which includes a challenge to the ban on the possession of pornographic material.

II.

We review de novo Ramos’s preserved claim that there was insufficient evidence that he knew the sexual conduct with KMV was being recorded. 6 Our task is to evaluate the evidence “in the light most favorable to the prosecution,” United States v. Jones, 674 F.3d 88, 91 (1st Cir.2012) (internal quotation marks omitted) to see if “a rational factfinder could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” id. We do not re-weigh the evidence or take up the jury’s credibility determinations, United States v. Polanco, 634 F.3d 39, 45 (1st Cir.2011), nor do we place a “premium” on “direct as opposed to circumstantial evidence; both types of proof can adequately ground a conviction.” United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
763 F.3d 45, 2014 WL 3938590, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 15537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ramos-ca1-2014.