United States v. Walton, James P.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 2001
Docket00-4133
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Walton, James P. (United States v. Walton, James P.) 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. Walton, James P., (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-4133

United States of America,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

James P. Walton,

Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 99 CR 141--Rudy Lozano, Judge.

Argued May 11, 2001--Decided June 28, 2001

Before Bauer, Rovner and Evans, Circuit Judges.

Bauer, Circuit Judge. James P. Walton was convicted by a jury on one count of possession of child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. sec. 2252(A)(a)(5)(B), and one count of receiving child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. sec. 2252A(a)(2). In determining his sentence, the district court applied various enhancements under the Sentencing Guidelines, including a four-level enhancement under U.S.S.G. sec. 2G2.2(b)(3) for receiving an image which "portrays sadistic or masochistic conduct or other depictions of violence." Walton challenges the enhancement and asks us to vacate his sentence and to remand for further proceedings. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Walton’s sentence.

BACKGROUND

Walton was an employee of Purdue University who worked at the University’s Herrick Laboratories. The University has a large number of individual computers which are connected with one another and with Purdue’s Telecommunications Center through various computer servers, and which offer internet access. In November of 1997, Joshua Bussert--the systems administrator at Herrick Labs and Walton’s immediate supervisor--performed a routine back-up of the network server. He did this by copying to a back-up tape all of the files stored in the computers connected to the server (including Walton’s workstation computer). When Bussert compared the files contained on the back-up tape to those contained in the original computers, he noticed that a large number of files were present on the back-up tape which were not longer present on the original computer space. Investigating this matter further, Bussert discovered that 99% of the missing files came from one location on the server, a location that was assigned to Walton. He also observed that these files were organized into various directories which carried different labels, some of which suggested to him that the files contained child pornography. For example, one of the directories, which contained a file named "14-year-old model," was labeled "users\jwalton\james\stories\incest." Another directory was labeled "users\jwalton\james\stories\pedophilia."

Bussert notified the Purdue University Police Department of his discovery. At the request of the University police, Scott Ksander, the Associate Director of Purdue’s computer center, examined the hard drive on Walton’s workstation computer. Ksander discovered several deleted files, and hundreds of "active" (non-deleted) files which contained sexually explicit images.

During an interview with the Chief of the University Police, Walton provided a voluntary recorded statement in which he admitted downloading child pornography from the internet, including pictures of children as young as five or six years old. Walton also admitted that after he downloaded the pornographic files, he created subdirectories to store and organize the files. On October 26, 1998, FBI Special Agent Bruce Guider interviewed Walton. During the interview, Walton admitted that he searched the internet for files involving pedophilia and child pornography, and that he downloaded approximately 50-150 such images during a period of his life when pedophilia was of interest to him. A federal grand jury subsequently indicted Walton on one count of possession of child pornography and one count of receiving child pornography. Walton pleaded not guilty to the charges and his case went to trial.

At trial, however, Walton told a different story. He testified that he used a newsgroup reader program called "Agent" to access pornography sites, some of which contained child pornography. However, he claimed that he downloaded files in bulk without viewing them all, that he deleted any files that appeared to contain child pornography, and that he never viewed any images of children performing sex acts. He stated that the child pornography images which were found on his computer "came with the downloads." Further, Walton asserted that when he downloaded all of the files available from the newsgroup entitled "alt.sex.pedophilia," he thought that the newsgroup involved a foot fetish, not child pornography, and that he did not discover that they contained child pornography until two to three weeks later. Nevertheless, Walton admitted during cross-examination that he did not delete the images. When asked why, he stated that he might have been called away from his desk and forgotten about the images. Finally, when asked how the "incest" and "pedophilia" subdirectories were created, Walton testified that they were created by an executable or "zip" file which was attached to one of the messages that he had retrieved. Walton denied having anything to do with the creation of the subdirectories.

The government called Mark Sidell, who wrote and developed the Agent newsreader program, and FBI forensic computer examiner Russell Fox. Both witnesses testified that the files on Walton’s computer could only have gotten there because a user of the computer employed a series of specific manual commands to retrieve and store the files. Both also testified that the Agent program could not have organized the network file space into subdirectories on its own without user command. Moreover, Fox testified that the "audit trail" of the Agent program installed on Walton’s computer (which records the newsgroups and files accessed by the program) revealed that of the many newsgroups available, the only newsgroup that had been accessed from Walton’s computer was "alt.sex.pedophilia." FBI examiners retrieved 325 non-deleted individual files which had been downloaded to Walton’s computer from the "pedophilia" newsgroup. Fox testified that of the 325 images retrieved, every image that he examined "appear[ed] to be children . . . under the age of 18 engaged in some sex act or some other lascivious display." Trans. at 306. A number of printouts of these computer images were admitted as government’s exhibits 10(a) and 10(b). Exhibit 10(a) consisted of 21 pages containing approximately 240 separate images which were retrieved from Walton’s computer, and exhibit 10(b) was 31 pages long and contained approximately 352 separate images which were originally found on Walton’s network server file space. The majority of the images contained in exhibits 10(a) and 10(b) depict young, prepubescent girls who are either engaged in sexually explicit conduct (some with adult males) or striking lascivious poses. These images were displayed on a screen at trial in full view of the judge and jury. One of the images in exhibit 10(a) depicts a prepubescent girl who is blindfolded and suspended from the ceiling by her wrists, with her ankles bound to her thighs.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty on both counts, and Walton proceeded to sentencing. In calculating Walton’s sentence, the court determined Walton’s base offense level to be 17, and then applied a number of guideline enhancements which brought his total offense level up to 27. One of the enhancements that the court applied was sec. 2G2.2(b)(3), which prescribes a 4- level increase for the offense of receiving child pornography "if the offense involved material that portrays sadistic or masochistic conduct or other depictions of violence." Following the recommendation of the Probation Department in the Presentence Investigation Report, the court applied this enhancement based on the single image of the bound and blindfolded girl, which was introduced as part of government exhibit 10(a).

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

Related

United States v. Tucker
136 F.3d 763 (Eleventh Circuit, 1998)
Morissette v. United States
342 U.S. 246 (Supreme Court, 1952)
United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc.
513 U.S. 64 (Supreme Court, 1994)
United States v. Harry Edward Singleton
946 F.2d 23 (Fifth Circuit, 1991)
United States v. Todd Williams
49 F.3d 92 (Second Circuit, 1995)
United States v. William Bonnie Fry
51 F.3d 543 (Fifth Circuit, 1995)
United States v. Terry Burton Kimbrough
69 F.3d 723 (Fifth Circuit, 1995)
United States v. Dennis Redding and William Perez
104 F.3d 96 (Seventh Circuit, 1996)
United States v. Watketa Valenzuela
150 F.3d 664 (Seventh Circuit, 1998)
United States v. Otis L. McClellan and John D. Sargent
165 F.3d 535 (Seventh Circuit, 1999)
United States v. Mardisco Staples and Delwin Brown
202 F.3d 992 (Seventh Circuit, 2000)
United States v. Ralph A. Scanga
225 F.3d 780 (Seventh Circuit, 2000)
United States v. Jeffrey Harris
230 F.3d 1054 (Seventh Circuit, 2000)
United States v. Thomas C. Richardson
238 F.3d 837 (Seventh Circuit, 2001)
United States v. Brian W. Cooper
243 F.3d 411 (Seventh Circuit, 2001)
Holmes v. Pension Plan of Bethlehem Steel Corp.
213 F.3d 124 (Third Circuit, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
United States v. Walton, James P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-walton-james-p-ca7-2001.