United States v. Wise

278 F. App'x 552
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 19, 2008
Docket07-5019
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 278 F. App'x 552 (United States v. Wise) 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. Wise, 278 F. App'x 552 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge.

In October 2006, a jury convicted defendant Charles Ray Wise on four of six counts charged in the superseding indictment 2 (“Indictment”), stemming from his romantic relationship with a 14-year-old female in late 2005 and early 2006. The district court subsequently sentenced Wise to 360 months’ imprisonment. On appeal, Wise argues the district court improperly denied his motions for acquittal and erred in a litany of ways with respect to the imposition of his sentence.

*556 Upon review of the record and applicable law, we find that sufficient evidence existed for a reasonable juror to have concluded that Wise committed all the crimes of conviction and the district court did not err when it sentenced Wise. Accordingly, we AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND

In October 2005, the victim met defendant Wise in an internet chatroom. The victim was then a 14-year-old female from Jonesboro, Arkansas and Wise was a 37-year-old male from Winchester, Kentucky. The victim’s internet profile listed her age as 18-years-old, and she admitted that she pretended she was older than she was when she first communicated with Wise. However, by mid-November 2005, the victim had told Wise her true age.

After their initial meeting on the internet and despite the victim’s age, a relationship ensued between the victim and Wise. For months, the two exchanged romantic e-mails and telephone calls. During this time, they also engaged in telephone sex and exchanged sexually explicit pictures of each other.

In early December 2005, the victim’s mother began to notice some personality changes in her daughter and at the same time, she noticed a lot of telephone calls to and from Winchester, Kentucky on her cellular telephone bill. When she asked her daughter about the telephone activity, she told her she had met some children on the internet. Shortly thereafter, the victim’s mother called one of the telephone numbers and reached Wise. She proceeded to tell him that her daughter was 14-years-old and asked Wise to put a stop to his children calling her daughter.

On December 31, 2005, unbeknownst to the victim’s family, Wise made his first of three trips from Kentucky to Arkansas. On this first visit, Wise brought the victim gifts to a prearranged location near the victim’s home, including an iPod and a cellular telephone, but he did not actually meet the victim in person.

On January 1, 2006, the victim’s mother went to the Jonesboro, Arkansas police department to report the situation about her daughter. After the victim’s mother provided her telephone bill to police, the officer called one of the listed numbers believed to be associated with Wise. Wise told the officer that his minor daughter had been communicating with the victim via the telephone and internet and that he recently learned his daughter had sent two cellular telephones to the victim. The officer told Wise that the victim was a minor.

The next day, the victim’s mother returned to the police department to provide them with an express mail package that Wise sent to her daughter at her friend’s address. Inside the package, a note addressed to the victim read “I love you more than ever, and I will be here for you. Please call me. I am waiting.” The note was dated November 26, 2005, 6:30 a.m.

The officers requested that the victim’s mother bring her daughter to the police department the following day for an interview. During the interview, the victim claimed she had been corresponding with a girl named Randi, a 10-year-old, that she met on the internet.

On January 6, 2006, Wise contacted the Jonesboro police department and asked an officer to return the telephones to him. The officer informed Wise that the telephones would not be released until the investigation was complete. The officer told Wise that he believed Wise, or another adult with access to the telephones, not his daughter, mailed them to the victim. Wise stated his knowledge to the officer that the victim was 14-years-old.

*557 Over the weekend of January 13, 2006, unbeknownst to the victim’s family or police, Wise visited Arkansas a second time. On this visit, Wise brought his minor son with him, and he also rented a car for the trip rather than drive his own vehicle. On his first night in Arkansas, he met the victim in the woods near her grandmother’s house where she was staying. Wise fondled the victim’s breasts and genitals in the car while his minor son slept in the back seat. Later that same evening, Wise brought the victim to a nearby hotel room where they engaged in sexual activity, and he gave her a promise ring and $150 in cash. The following night, Wise picked up the victim again at her grandmother’s house. They went straight to the hotel and proceeded to engage in sexual contact.

On January 20, 2006, again without the victim’s family or police knowing, Wise made his third trip to Arkansas. On this visit, Wise picked up the victim outside her grandmother’s house and then drove her to Kentucky. The two arrived the next morning at the Kentucky house of Wise’s friend and employee, Clarence Daniel Dunn. During the trip, the victim performed oral sex on Wise. Upon Wise’s request later that same day, Dunn moved the victim to a hotel in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. During the victim’s stay in the hotel, Wise visited the victim and engaged in sexual conduct with her, including fondling, oral sex, and anal sex. On those occasions, he often brought his minor son with him to the hotel.

On January 21, 2006, the victim’s mother reported to police that her daughter, who had been staying with her grandmother at the time, had left her grandmother’s home. That same day, Jonesboro police contacted the Winchester, Kentucky police department to advise them that the victim may be in them jurisdiction with Wise. A Winchester police officer then located and questioned Wise about the victim’s whereabouts, and he denied having any knowledge of her location.

After police continued to gather more information about the relationship between Wise and the victim, Winchester police again interviewed Wise. Wise stated all cellular telephones belonging to him were in his possession and that no one in his family had been in contact with the victim in the previous two weeks.

On January 24, 2006, FBI agents met with Wise. He repeatedly denied any knowledge of the victim’s whereabouts, denied any relationship with her, and maintained instead that his children had an ongoing relationship with her.

On that same day, FBI agents interviewed Wise’s 9-year-old daughter regarding her knowledge of the victim and her whereabouts. She stated she met the victim in an internet chatroom and she detailed her various alleged communications with her. The same day, the agents conducted a shorter interview with Wise’s 12-year-old son. He reported that his sister met the victim in a chatroom.

Later that day, agents interviewed Dunn. Dunn explained that three to four months ago, Wise advised him that he had met a female with the victim’s name over the internet. Approximately one month ago, Wise told him he was in love with the victim, who he said was 24-years-old. And, approximately one week ago, Wise told Dunn that she was only 14-years-old.

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Bluebook (online)
278 F. App'x 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wise-ca6-2008.