This post examines an issue that arose in a California
juvenile court proceeding. It began on
May 17, 2010 when the San Joaquin County District Attorney filed a “juvenile
wardship petition” pursuant to California’s Welfare and Institutions Code §602(a). In re Mitchell W., 2012 WL 1155972 (California Court of Appeals
2012).
The petition “alleged that the minor”, Mitchell W., “had
violated [California] Penal Code sections 422, criminal threats, and 242,
battery. His mother, Lisa W., was the alleged victim on both counts. In re
Mitchell W., supra. The opinion says
that after his mother told Mitchell he could
not play video games because he was not
attending school regularly, he struck her several times and repeatedly
threatened to kill her. Lisa W. sustained swelling and bruises on her
arm and pain to her hand. [Mitchell’s] conduct also endangered his
seven-year-old sister, who was nearby.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra. His mother told the authorities
that Mitchell “had made similar threats before.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
On May 20, 2010, Mitchell admitted the charges and on July 7
the juvenile court declared him a ward of the court, “placed him on probation
with a maximum period of confinement set at one year two months, directed him
to follow all laws and court orders, and subjected him to unlimited search and
seizure.” In re Mitchell W., supra. On
September 21, the probation officer filed a probation violation petition,
alleging that Mitchell “had repeatedly missed school and his mother had said he
was `out of control.’” In re Mitchell W.,
supra. On September 22, 2010, he
admitted the violations and the court released him to his mother's custody. In re Mitchell W., supra.
On November 18, 2010, police seized Mitchell’s computer and found
child pornography on it. [His] mother
had caught [him] viewing child pornographic images on the computer two years
prior and had admonished [him] about collecting such images. She had recently
caught him again.
A court-ordered psychological
evaluation of [Mitchell] stated that [he] had a history of watching child
pornography on his computer. The evaluation also stated that [his] mother
described [him] as manipulative and said [he] had stolen a credit card from her
and used it to make online purchases.
[Mitchell’s] mother reported an
incident that occurred in early February 2011 to the probation officer. On
February 8, [he] was verbally abusive to his sister and kept increasing the
volume of the television. . . . He refused to turn the volume down when [his]
mother requested he do so, so [she] mother turned the television off and
unplugged it.
[He] plugged the television back in.
When his mother unplugged it again, [Mitchell] cornered [her] . . . and told
her she did not want to find out what would happen if she disabled the
television. . . . The police were called.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra.
On
February 14, 2011, the probation officer filed a second probation violation
petition, “alleging [Mitchell’s] possession of child pornography and [his]
mother's reports of [his] threatening behavior.” In re Mitchell W., supra. The
officer recommended that his computer “be seized and destroyed and that he be
allowed computer and Internet access only under responsible adult supervision.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
On February 17, 2011, Mitchell admitted the violations in
return for the State’s agreeing not to “ file a new petition based on the
allegations underlying the February 14, 2011 violation of probation.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
On March 10 and March 17, 2011, the juvenile court heard
argument on the State’s request for an order to destroy Mitchell’s computer. In re
Mitchell W., supra. At the March 10
hearing, a deputy public defender, who was “filling in” for Mitchell’s assigned
counsel, asked if “technicians could simply `erase the offending materials or
files.’” In re Mitchell W., supra. The attorney said Mitchell had told her that
there is a `file shredder application
already on the computer’ and the material could deleted beyond recovery. [Mitchell]
told the court that the file shredder application `overwrites it numerous
times.’ Unpersuaded, the court ordered the computer destroyed, but stayed the
order so [his] assigned counsel could argue the matter.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra.
At the March 17 hearing, Mitchell’s assigned attorney told
the court the computer at issue was a laptop.
In re Mitchell W., supra. His attorney said it would make
more sense to remove the hard drive
than to force [his] mother to pay to replace the computer, which the entire
family used. Counsel said he or an investigator from his office could take the [laptop]
to a computer store to have the illegal images removed. [He] cited no authority
that would except him or his investigator from what would be possession of
illegal material.
[He] further suggested the probation
department could test the computer to confirm the material had been removed.
Counsel contended that removing the hard drive would not only remove the criminal
matter, but would serve `the rehabilitative purpose of the order and prevention
of future crimes’ just as well as destroying the entire computer.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra.
The prosecutor noted that the police department “routinely
destroyed computers when `the instrument of the crime itself is a computer’”
and argued that “crime should have consequences.” In re
Mitchell W., supra. And he was
reluctant to release a laptop containing child pornography “to anyone.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
The judge found
that destroying the computer was in Mitchell’s “best interest because it was `part
of [his] rehabilitative process,’ which included learning that `there had to be
a consequence’ for his misconduct.” In re Mitchell W., supra. He reinstated the destruction order but stayed it pending
appeal. In re Mitchell W., supra.
On appeal, Mitchell argued that the juvenile court “`abused
its discretion by imposing an unconstitutional condition of probation which was
not specifically tailored to meet [his] needs by ordering destruction of his
entire computer.’” In re Mitchell
W., supra. The Court of Appeals
began its analysis of his arguments by noting that juvenile court judges have
“`broad discretion to fashion appropriate conditions of probation’” because
their goal is to rehabilitate the child, rather than, as is true in adult
criminal court, punish an offender. In re Mitchell W., supra.
It noted that a condition of juvenile probation will not be
held invalid unless it “`(1) has no relationship to the crime of which the
offender was convicted, (2) relates to conduct which is not in itself criminal,
and (3) requires or forbids conduct which is not reasonably related to future
criminality’”. In re Mitchell W., supra (quoting In Re R.V., 171 Call. App. 4th
239 (2009)). The court found the laptop destruction order was valid because it
was “carefully tailored to [his] offenses, will serve the `compelling state
interest in [his] reformation and rehabilitation’ . . . by limiting his opportunity to reoffend and
impressing on him that misconduct can have serious consequences.” In
re Mitchell W., supra (quoting In re
Frank V., 233 Cal. App.3d 1232 (1991)).
Mitchell admitted the “child pornography on the laptop was
contraband the government could lawfully seize and detain,” but claimed the
order “unconstitutionally deprived him of a property interest, his possessory
interest in his computer, without due process of law.” In re
Mitchell W., supra. He argued that “the
juvenile court violated due process because it failed to determine that
destroying the contraband required destroying his computer (which was not
unlawful to possess), rather than simply destroying the hard drive.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
The Court of Appeals did not buy this argument. In re Mitchell W., supra. It found, first, that Mitchell had forfeited
this argument because his attorney “did not make a due process objection
grounded on the theory of unconstitutional taking” in the juvenile court
proceeding. In re Mitchell W., supra. As
the Court of Appeals noted, first, a “constitutional claim may be forfeited by
failure to raise it in the trial court” and “[such] is the case here.” In re
Mitchell W., supra.
The court also explained that “even if the court's order
might have posed a due process problem in an adult criminal case” Mitchell “cites
no authority from the juvenile justice context to support his due process
claim, and we know of no such authority.”
In re Mitchell W., supra. And, finally, it found that there was no due
process violation in this case because Mitchell received a hearing
on his assertion that the contraband
could be destroyed beyond recovery without destroying the
computer. Indeed, the juvenile court continued the matter specifically for that
purpose and to allow assigned counsel to address the issue.
However, counsel
offered no testimony, evidence, declaration or even an offer of proof grounded
on statements from a qualified technician who would be available to remove the
hard drive. Nor did counsel explain how he or an investigator could legally
possess a computer containing child pornography while transporting it to such a
technician. Therefore, the court impliedly determined the issue adversely to
the minor.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra (emphasis in the original).
Finally, the Court of Appeals rejected Mitchell’s argument
that the juvenile court’s order was “unconstitutionally overbroad because it is
not reasonably tailored to his needs, which could have been satisfied by
destroying the hard drive containing the unlawful matter and by the probation
condition requiring that he use a computer only under parental supervision.” In re Mitchell W., supra. It explained that there
is no requirement that the juvenile
court impose less restrictive conditions when those conditions present less
effective means to satisfy the underlying purpose. And nothing prevents the
juvenile court from imposing two conditions of probation narrowly tailored to
achieve the same purposes when neither condition, in and of itself, can ensure
achievement of those purposes.
Here, the juvenile court could
legitimately have been concerned that the search of [Mitchell’s] house did not
turn up other data media that could be played in the computer, such as optical
discs or flash drives, even if the original hard drive was destroyed. The
prosecutor told the court that an optical disc drive containing child
pornography had been found, but that does not mean other easily concealed media
was not found.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra.
The Court of Appeals also noted that “given the mobile
nature of the laptop, the court legitimately could have concluded its
destruction was necessary to prevent [Mitchell] from secretly using it,
notwithstanding the mother's best efforts.”
In re Mitchell W., supra. It therefore affirmed the juvenile court’s
order, which presumably means the laptop has been or soon will be
destroyed. In re Mitchell W., supra.
The California Court of Appeals – Third District heard this
case. It, like the five Districts, assigns three-justice panels to hear and
decide appeals. One of the justices in
this case wrote a short concurring opinion in which he concurred because
the minor was playing video games on
the computer, which was interfering with his school attendance. This is reason
enough to sustain the forfeiture of the entire computer, even if he had not
been using it for viewing pornography.
In re Mitchell W.,
supra (Robie, J., concurring).
Cybercrime is a term for any illegal activity that uses a computer as its primary means of commission.
ReplyDeleteStupid attorneys and judges. The laptop did not belong to the child! Children do not own any property! They cannot. It all belongs to their parents.
ReplyDeleteAnd why not just bring the computer into the courtroom and have a cop remove the hard drive? Takes like 30 seconds. Open case, remove cords from drive. Pull drive out of its bay. Close case.
The fact that the kid may have other porn hidden about the house is not relevant. There is nothing to stop the kid - or his mother - from acquiring another laptop. While the kid could be prohibited from a laptapo as a part of his probation, said probation has not effect on the mother.
I read the court's opinion, case# C067718, and it says that he was 16 in 2010 when the petition was first filed.
I wonder how he is doing now that he is 18.