Wednesday, June 30, 2010

"Possession" and the Thumb Drive

As I noted in a post I did a couple of years ago, most people know that the law makes it illegal to “possess” certain items, including controlled substances and child pornography. What I suspect most people don’t know is that there are, as I explained in that post, two kinds of possession: actual and constructive.


In that earlier post, I used an instruction from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit to illustrate the difference between the two types of possession:


The term `possess’ means to exercise authority, dominion or control over something. It is not necessarily the same as legal ownership. The law recognizes different kinds of possession.

Possession includes both actual and constructive possession. A person who has direct physical control of something on or around his person is then in actual possession of it. A person who is not in actual possession, but who has both the power and the intention to exercise control over something is in constructive possession of it.

U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, Pattern Jury Instructions 4.06 (1998).


This post is about a case in which the “possession” of a thumb drive was at issue, not because it’s illegal to possess a thumb drive but because of what was on this particular thumb drive.


The case is Hunt v. State, 2010 WL 1224372 (Georgia Court of Appeals 2010). As the opinion notes, “[f]ollowing a jury trial, Jimmy Dee Hunt was convicted of five counts of sexual exploitation of children” in violation of Georgia Code § 16-12-100. Hunt v. State, supra. Hunt appealed his conviction, and one of his arguments on appeal concerned the possession of the thumb drive. Hunt v. State, supra. Before we get to the issue, you need to know how it, and the case, arose:


Hunt was a registered guest in Room 508 at the Best Western Hotel in College Park from June 23-28, 2007. In August 2007, a housekeeper found a USB Kingston thumb drive on the fifth floor of the hotel, and turned it in to the hotel's lost and found area. After determining the USB drive did not belong to any of the hotel guests, Carlita Leonard, a front desk clerk, took the USB drive home for her daughter to use. On August 10, 2007, Leonard's daughter inserted the USB drive into a friend's computer, and when she opened the USB drive, she observed photographs of children. Leonard immediately contacted the police.


Detective Redding of the City of College Park Police Department confirmed that images depicting underage children engaged in various sexual acts were stored on the USB drive as well as two photographs of a man, later identified as Hunt. The USB drive also contained several files entitled `d.b.a., Jimmy Hunt’ or referencing a business affiliated with Hunt, which Detective Redding was unable to open due to the file's format.


Pursuant to Redding's request for assistance, Detective Ward of the Jonesboro Police Department in Arkansas obtained a search warrant to search Hunt's home in Paragould, Arkansas to seize Hunt's computers, equipment capable of storing media or internet communications, floppy drives, CDs, and cameras. Ward searched Hunt's home and discovered several computers, including a laptop computer, a second Kingston thumb drive, a portable hard drive, a Kodak digital camera, two floppy disks, a wireless mouse, and various cables. . . .


Jonathon Sims, a forensic computer specialist, . . . conducted a forensic examination of the USB drive found at the Best Western, and determined that on April 15, 2007 at 9:48 a.m., thirteen pornographic images of children were saved to [it]. Within seconds thereafter, two photographs of Hunt, dated April 14, 2007, were also saved to the drive. Sims testified that on April 29, 2007, two images of naked children were saved to the drive at 11:48 a.m. Six files, which included the name Jimmy Hunt or one of his businesses, were saved to [it] at 11:52 a.m. on April 29, 2007. . . .


Hunt v. State, supra. It appears, then, that the evidence on which Hunt’s conviction was based all came from the thumb drive the housekeeper found on the fifth floor of the Best Western. On appeal, Hunt argued that the prosecution


failed to establish that Hunt exercised dominion or control over the USB drive, and therefore, the evidence was insufficient to show that he knowingly possessed material depicting children engaged in sexually explicit conduct.


Hunt v. State, supra. As I noted above, the opinion says Hunt was convicted of “five counts of sexual exploitation of children in violation of Georgia Code § 16-12-100. Two of the counts (4 and 5) charged him with violating § 16-12-100(b)(7), which makes it a crime “knowingly” to “bring or cause to be brought” into Georgia “any material which depicts a minor . . . engaged in any sexually explicit conduct.” Hunt v. State, supra. The other counts (1, 2 and 3) charged Hunt with violating § 16-12-100(b)(8), which makes it a crime “knowingly” to possess “any material which depicts a minor . . . engaged in any sexually explicit conduct”. Hunt v. State, supra. And as I said, it appears that factually, all five counts were based on the material contained on the thumb drive found on the fifth floor of the College Park Best Western. Hunt v. State, supra.


Georgia law, like that (I assume) of all the states, recognizes both “actual possession” and “constructive possession.” In Uriostegui v. State, 269 Ga. App. 41, 603 S.E.2d 478 (Georgia Court of Appeals 2004), the court explained the difference between the two:


A person who knowingly has direct physical control over a thing at a given time is in actual possession of it. A person who, though not in actual possession, knowingly has both the power and the intention at a given time to exercise dominion or control over a thing is then in constructive possession of it.


Uriostegui v. State, supra. In another decision, the Court of Appeals said that “[a]s long as there is slight evidence of . . . power, and intention to exercise control or dominion over an instrumentality, the question of fact regarding constructive possession remains within the domain of the trier of fact”, i.e., it’s up to the jury to decide whether the person "possessed" the "instrumentality". Wright v. State, 279 Ga. App. 299, 630 S.E.2d 774 (Georgia Court of Appeals 2006).


In this case, the Court of Appeals rejected Hunt’s argument and held that the evidence was sufficient to establish that he had constructive possession of the thumb drive:


[T]he evidence showed Hunt was a resident of Paragould, Arkansas and had rented Room 508 at the College Park Best Western Hotel from June 23, 2007 until June 28, 2007. In August 2007, the USB drive was found on the fifth floor of the Best Western in which Hunt had stayed as a guest.


Sims testified that the date and time imprinted on a photograph taken from a digital camera is recorded from the digital camera's date and time feature. . . . Given Sims' testimony, coupled with the fact that Hunt possessed several computers, a Kodak digital camera, and another Kingston USB thumb drive in his home in Arkansas, a rational trier of fact could find that Hunt took photographs of himself on April 14, 2007 from his home in Arkansas with his digital camera; saved those photographs to the USB drive on April 15, 2007; took the USB drive with him to Georgia, where he stayed at the Best Western in late June 2007; and inadvertently left the USB drive on the fifth floor of the hotel. The jury could also conclude that Hunt knowingly possessed material depicting minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct in light of evidence that on April 15, 2007, 13 sexually explicit images of children were saved to the USB drive within seconds of the time two photographs of Hunt were saved to such drive. . . . Further, on April 29, 2007, six files listing Hunt's name and/or his business, two sexually explicit images of children, and two photographs of Hunt were saved to the USB drive within four minutes of each other. And three of the foregoing files listed the name of Hunt's business, Mister Appliance. . . .


Hunt had been a guest at the Best Western prior to the discovery of the USB drive, and . . . had the opportunity to access computer equipment from his home in order to save his photographs, files associated with him and his business, and sexually explicit images of children to the USB drive. Thus, the evidence was more than sufficient to exclude every reasonable hypothesis that someone other than Hunt possessed the USB drive when he stayed at the College Park Best Western in June 2007. . . . Accordingly, the evidence was sufficient to convict Hunt of five counts of sexual exploitation of children beyond a reasonable doubt.


Hunt v. State, supra. If nothing else, this opinion suggests that it's probably a good idea to keep track of your thumb drives.

No comments:

Post a Comment