David Chiaradio was indicted on two counts of possessing
child pornography in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 2252(a)(4)(B) and one count of
distributing it in violation of 18 U.S. Code § § 2252(a)(2). U.S. v.
Chiaradio, __ F.3d __, 2012 WL 2821892 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit 2012). After a jury found him
“guilty across the board”, the judge imposed “concurrent 97-month incarcerative”
sentences “on each count of conviction.”
U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. Chiaradio appealed. U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra.
Chiaradio raised a number of arguments on appeal, but we’re
only concerned with two of them, the first of which went to “the government’s
decision to charge him with two counts of possessing child pornography” in
violation of 18 U.S. Code § 2242(a)(4)(B).
U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. Chiaradio argued that the charges were
multiplicitous, i.e., that the prosecution was essentially "doubling up" on the charges. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
As I explained in a post I did several years ago,
criminal charges are based on the premise that each “charge” – which usually
translates into a “count” in an indictment or other charging document – is
based on the commission of one “crime.” As
I noted in another post, a defendant can challenge a charge if he believes it violates
this premise. As § 919 of the U.S.
Department of Justice’s Criminal Resource Manual notes, multiplicity is “the
charging of a single offense in several counts.” And as this court explained, a
charge is multiplicitous when the prosecution charges a defendant twice for a
single crime.
Determining whether an indictment is
multiplicitous requires an inquiring court to examine whether a particular
course of illegal conduct constitutes one or multiple offenses. . . . Congress's intent is
paramount on this point: the legislature may castigate a particular act by
exposing the actor to several prosecutions and punishments, or it may specify
that the act should only be subject to a single unit of prosecution.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra.
To understand Chiaradio’s argument, you need to understand
how the case arose. On February 28, 2006, FBI Agent Cecchini went online to
search for child pornography, using a version of the peer-to-peer file-sharing
program known as LimeWire. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. He actually used “a special version of
LimeWire developed by the FBI, known as `enhanced peer-to-peer software’
(EP2P), which was customized to assist child pornography investigations.” U.S.
v. Chiaradio, supra.
The opinion notes that EP2P differs from the commercially
available version of the software in “three principal respects”:
First, when a user of the commercially
available version . . . tries to
download a file, the program seeks out all the users who are sharing the same
file and downloads different pieces of that file from multiple locations in
order to optimize download speed. EP2P eliminates that functionality; it allows
downloading from only one source at a time, thus ensuring that the entire file
is available on that source's computer.
Second, in its commercially available
iteration, LimeWire responds to a search term by displaying basic information
such as the names of the available files, file types, and the file sharers'
Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. EP2P displays not only that data but also the
identity of the Internet Service Provider (ISP) and the city and state associated
with the IP address sharing a particular file.
Third, EP2P has been modified so an
agent can easily compare the hash value (essentially, the digital fingerprint)
of an available file with the hash values of confirmed videos and images of
child pornography. Taken together, these three modifications permit agents to
download a file from a single source, learn the general location of the source,
and facilitate the identification of child pornography as such.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra. We’ll come back to EP2P later
in this post.
Cecchini used EP2P to run a search for a term he knew was
“fancied by collectors of child pornography” and got a number of hits, one of
which came “from an IP address in Rhode Island.” U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra. Cecchini used LimeWire’s
browse function to review the files being shared by that IP address, and found
“643 files with titles suggestive of child pornography.” U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra.
He downloaded three of them, confirmed they contained
child pornography, used a subpoena to the ISP to get the IP address and traced
it to “a residence in Westerly, Rhode Island, owned by” Chiaradio’s
father. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
Another Agent, Agent Yesnowski, used this information to obtain a
warrant to search the residence. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
On August 22, 2006, Yesnowski and Agent Kohn executed the
warrant, seizing a laptop from Chiaradio’s bedroom and a desktop computer from
a spare bedroom. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
Chiaradio took responsibility for both computers and agreed to speak with the
agents about his computer
usage. He explained the house had a shared wireless network connecting both
computers to the Internet, as well as its own internal file-sharing system
enabling a user of one computer to access data and files on the other. . . . [He]
admitted installing and using LimeWire on the laptop to download music but
denied he had ever searched for, or downloaded, child pornography.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra. Analysis revealed “over 5,000
images and videos” of child pornography on the desktop and “nearly 2,000” on
the laptop. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
That brings us back to multiplicity. Section 2252(a)(4)(B) makes it a crime to
knowingly possess “one or more books, . . . , video tapes, or other matter”
which contains “any visual depiction” that has traveled in or was produced by
materials that traveled in interstate commerce if producing it involves the use
of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct and the depiction “is of such
conduct.” 18 U.S. Code § 2252(a)(4)(B). The opinion then explains that in this
case, the government seized a “plethora” of
files during a single search of a single
dwelling, yet charged [Chiaradio] with two counts of . . .
possession. The government defends its use of dual counts . . . on the ground
that the proper unit of prosecution is each matter or physical medium on which
images are stored.
As the government would have it, [Chiaradio’s] utilization
of two computers . . . exposed him to prosecution for two separate crimes. This
is especially fitting, the government suggests, because the computers were in
different rooms and had different functions: the laptop was used for acquiring
the pornographic images, whereas the desktop was used for storing them.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra (emphasis in the original).
Chiaradio argued that since the statute specifically outlaws
the possession of one or more
“container[s]” of child pornography, it therefore criminalizes the possession
of
`one or more’ computers containing
offending images. It follows, [he] says, that the government may charge only a
single crime regardless of whether a defendant possesses two or 2,000 images on
one or 100 computers, at least when that possession is simultaneous and under
one roof. In other words, the number of `matters’ (here, the number of
computers) does not in itself define the proper unit of prosecution.
Dividing
the crime of possession into two separate crimes was especially egregious in this
case, [Chiaradio] suggests, because the computers were linked (that is, they
shared an internal network through which files could freely move back and
forth) and their contents overlapped (albeit to an unspecified degree).
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra.
After reviewing the statute’s legislative history and
decisions from two other Courts of Appeals, the 1st Circuit agreed
with Chiaradio. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. It
held that one “who simultaneously possesses a multitude of forbidden images at
a single time and in a single place” commits only one act of possession in
violation of . . . § 2252(a)(4)(B). U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. It also held,
therefore, that Chiaradio’s two convictions violated his right to be free from
double jeopardy. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
The court then took up Chiaradio’s argument that the
district court judge “should have granted his pretrial motion to compel
production of the source code of the EP2P program (essentially, the
human-readable version of the instructions used by a computer running EP2P).” U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra. Chiaradio claimed he was entitled to the code as
part of the discovery – the process by which the prosecution and defense can
gain access to evidence the other intends to use at trial – allowed by Rule 16(a)(1)(E)
of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. U.S.
v. Chiaradio, supra.
Rule 16(a)(1)(E) “requires the government to permit the
defendant to examine and copy documents, data, and objects in its control if
the items are material to preparing the defense or if the government plans to
use them in its case in chief.” U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. The court
noted it reviews a district court judge’s rulings under Rule 16 for “abuse of discretion”, and if it finds an error, the error will not require reversing a
conviction unless the defendant can show he was prejudiced by it. U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra.
When Chiaradio sought access to the code prior to his trial,
he argued that “he had to obtain the source code in order to determine whether
he could credibly challenge the reliability of the technology and block the
expert testimony proffered by the government on the EP2P program and how it
implicated”. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. Chiaradio, therefore, wanted to see
if he could raise a Daubert challenge
to EP2P. In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 509 U.S. 579 (1993), the
Supreme Court held that before a trial judge can allow an expert to testify
about scientific knowledge, he or she must determine that the expert’s
testimony is sound, i.e., is scientifically valid.
The Court of Appeals noted that the FBI “developed EP2P as
an investigatory tool” and its source code is “closely held; it is not shared
with or accessible to the agents who use the program, let alone the public.” U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. It also
noted that the district court judge held an evidentiary hearing on Chiaradio’s
motion. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra. At the hearing, the judge heard
testimony from FBI Agent P. Michael Gordon,
the government's proposed EP2P expert.
Gordon had been involved in testing the program, had instructed other agents
about its use, and had participated in over eighty investigations in which EP2P
was employed.
He demonstrated, among other things, how to check the results of
an EP2P investigation manually to ensure the files transferred had come from
the location identified through EP2P. He vouchsafed that, in his wide
experience, no EP2P investigation had ever yielded a false positive.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra.
The district court judge found that Gordon’s testimony
satisfied the Daubert standard, i.e.,
established the scientific reliability of the software. U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra. And the Court of Appeals agreed:
Even if the source code were
discoverable under Rule 16 -- a matter on which we take no view – [Chiaradio] cannot
demonstrate prejudice from its nondisclosure. The government gave [him] a
digital file recording the transfer from [his] laptop to Cecchini's computer.
It also gave [him] a copy of the FBI guide detailing how to reconstruct an EP2P
session manually (using only the recording and publicly available programs).
The government presented testimony indicating that its agents had used these
materials to reconstruct the transfer and had verified that the files
downloaded by Cecchini came from [Chiaradio’s] computer.
[He] neither contradicted nor cast the
slightest doubt upon this testimony. This evidence makes it pellucid that the
forbidden files were located on [Chiaradio’s] computers and transferred to
Cecchini. Consequently, any error in the application of the EP2P program was
harmless.
U.S. v. Chiaradio,
supra. Since the court would not reverse the conviction unless any
error involving the use of the EP2P program prejudiced Chiaradio’s ability to
defend himself, and since the court found that the error, if any existed, was
harmless, it rejected Chiaradio’s argument on this issue. U.S. v. Chiaradio, supra.
The court therefore remanded the case to the district court
judge to address the multiplicity problem, either by “merg[ing] the two
possession counts or vacat[ing] the conviction and sentence on one of them.” U.S. v.
Chiaradio, supra.
The dude's attorney should have looked on The Pirate Bay. You can download the entire FBI's EP2P program from there and tear it apart and play with it as much as you want to and check out how to works or how to break it.
ReplyDeleteNot that it matters in this case. The guy either had porn on his computer or he didn't. In this case, there was no disagreement about him having the porn.