United States v. Shawn Ratigan

581 F. App'x 587
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 2014
Docket13-3174
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 581 F. App'x 587 (United States v. Shawn Ratigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Shawn Ratigan, 581 F. App'x 587 (8th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

[Unpublished]

PER CURIAM.

Shawn Ratigan pleaded guilty to four counts of production of child pornography and one count of attempted production of child pornography, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). The district court 1 imposed a 50-year sentence. On appeal, Ratigan argues that his sentence is unreasonable. We affirm.

Ratigan was ordained as a Catholic priest in 2004 when he was thirty-eight years old. He thereafter served as a pastor at parishes in the Kansas City and St. Joseph, Missouri, areas. On December 15, 2010, Ratigan brought his laptop computer to a repairman, who came across several images of prepubescent girls. When the repairman discovered a close-up image of a young girl’s genital area, with her diaper pulled away to fully expose her vagina, he contacted the parish. The next day, he showed a deacon the images he had discovered. Thereafter, the deacon contacted the vicar general of the diocese, as well as Ratigan.

Ratigan denied knowing who had taken the pictures or who was depicted in them. He told the deacon and the vicar general that he had received the laptop six years earlier from a friend. The laptop was given to the diocesan director of management information systems, who viewed and preserved the images, copying several file folders to a flash drive. She discovered hundreds of images of girls under the age of ten. Ratigan’s Internet history revealed that he had bookmarked a photo-sharing website that contained images of children in swimsuits. Ratigan also had visited websites advertising two-way mirrors and so-called spy pens, which are cameras disguised to look like ballpoint pens. Moreover, the laptop was not six years old, which led the director to surmise that Ratigan was being untruthful about when he had obtained it. The director advised the vicar general to contact both the police and the diocesan attorney, and she made hard copies of several images to serve as examples of the most explicit pictures. The diocesan attorney opined that the images were not pornography. Church officials did not submit the laptop or images to the police, despite the director’s reiteration of her concerns.

On December 17, 2010, Ratigan attempted to commit suicide. He was treated for carbon monoxide poisoning and later was moved to a psychiatric unit within the hospital. After Ratigan’s release in late December, he moved in with his mother and later moved to Independence, Missouri, where he was assigned to serve as a chaplain to Franciscan nuns. The bishop referred Ratigan to counseling, and Ratigan entered into an agreement that placed certain restrictions on his ministry, namely, that he would avoid all contact with children, that he would not use any computer without a valid provision for oversight, and that he would not take pictures of children.

Within months of entering into the agreement, Ratigan violated the restrictions set forth above. He attended a child’s birthday party; he went to a parade, where the school associated with his former parish had sponsored a float; he *589 accessed social networking sites; he used a camera to take pictures of a girls gymnastics program as it was being shown on television; and he purchased a digital camera and a laptop computer. There were also rumors circulating within his former parish that he was no longer its pastor because the school principal was “out to get him,” but that he would soon return to parish work. 2

In May 2011, the vicar general decided to contact the police. After he did so, he learned that the diocesan attorney had returned the laptop to Ratigan’s family at the bishop’s request and that the computer had been destroyed. The attorney, however, remitted the flash drive containing several file folders from the laptop. On May 18, Ratigan was arrested and transported to the police station. While the detective was setting up recording equipment and Ratigan was alone in the interrogation room, Ratigan took his cellular phone from his pocket. He removed the SIM card and disposed of it. He then held the phone under the table and began pressing buttons before the detective entered the room to confiscate the phone. The SIM card was never found.

A search of Ratigan’s electronic media revealed images of child pornography. Ratigan was charged in a thirteen-count indictment and pleaded guilty to the five counts set forth above. The counts of conviction involved images of five different victims that were produced between 2005 and 2009. Jane Doe 1 was a relative of Ratigan’s. She was six years old when he produced a series of images that began with close up shots of her vaginal area clothed in a wet swimsuit and ended with an image of her swimsuit pushed to one side and her legs spread, revealing her bare vagina. Ratigan produced images of Jane Doe 2 over the course of three years. He produced an image of her naked backside when she was two years old. Ratigan had used his thumb to pull her left buttock aside to reveal part of her labia. In another image, Jane Doe 2 sat on a chair, naked from the waist down, with her legs spread. Jane Doe 3 was also a relative of Ratigan’s. She was five years old when Ratigan produced images of her sitting between his legs, naked from the waist down, with her legs spread to expose her vagina. Other images of Jane Doe 3, depict her vagina, with Ratigan’s hand pulling her thigh or buttocks to the side or his hand spreading her labia. Jane Doe 4 was seven years old when Ratigan produced a series of images of her wearing a swimsuit, including an image of her partially exposed vagina. Jane Doe 5 was eight or nine years old when Ratigan photographed her. Some of the images depict Jane Doe 5 sleeping, with Ratigan’s hand pulling her underwear away from her body to expose her vaginal area.

Ratigan’s advisory sentencing range was calculated under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (Guidelines or U.S.S.G.). His total offense level was 43, *590 his criminal history category was I, and his advisory Guidelines sentencing range was life imprisonment. The statutory maximum term of imprisonment for each count of conviction was 30 years’ imprisonment. 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). Ratigan asked to be sentenced to the statutory minimum sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment; the government requested a 50-year sentence.

Defense counsel argued that a 15-year sentence would be “[t]he better part of the rest of [Ratigan’s] life[,]” given his age and continued problems with diabetes and high blood pressure. Sentencing Tr. 14. Counsel asked the court to consider Ratigan’s family’s long history of service to the Catholic church as well as Ratigan’s close relationship with his father. Ratigan spent years caring for his father, who suffered from debilitating depression and later, cancer. When Ratigan was no longer able to provide the care his father needed, he placed his father in a nursing home, a decision that angered his father, who thereafter did not speak to Ratigan. Ratigan then became a priest, earning a degree in liberal arts and a master’s degree in divinity.

Counsel argued that Ratigan was “cured now” and that he would be able to lead a law abiding life after serving a 15-year sentence. Id. at 18.

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581 F. App'x 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-shawn-ratigan-ca8-2014.