After a jury convicted him of “computer fraud in violation
of 18 U.S. Code § 1030”, Bruce Raisley appealed, arguing, in part, that the
district court judge who presided over his trial made three “erroneous
evidentiary rulings” that required the reversal of his conviction. U.S. v.
Raisley, 2012 WL 753745 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3d Circuit
2012).
To understand the arguments Raisley made on appeal, it is
necessary to understand a little about how the case arose and evolved. According to this opinion, Raisley was once
a volunteer for the organization
`Perverted Justice.’ The group uses the internet to seek out sexual predators
and expose them to the public. Group members assume fake online personas,
pretending to be minors, and then conduct explicit online conversations with
adults. Once the adult is identified, Perverted Justice posts the individual's
identity and a copy of the text of the online chats on the group's website.
Eventually
Raisley began voicing his disapproval of the group's `vigilante’ tactics. The
group's founder, Xavier Von Erck, responded by using those very tactics against
him. Von Erck posed as a woman named `Holly,’ started an explicit online
relationship with Raisley, and convinced Raisley to meet `Holly’ one day at the
airport. When Raisley arrived, flowers in hand, he was met with photographers.
Von Erck posted pictures of the encounter and Raisley's conversations with
`Holly’ online.
U.S. v. Raisley,
supra.
The opinion explains that in September 2006 and July 2007, Radar
and Rolling Stone magazines published “articles about Perverted Justice and its
questionable methods, specifically mentioning Raisley and his ordeal with Von
Erck.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
According to the Court of Appeals, Raisley responded to “this
embarrassing publicity” by taking “matters into his own hands.” U.S. v.
Raisley, supra.
Armed with a background in computer
programming, Raisley created a `malware’ program and introduced it to the
internet where . . . it spread to thousands of computers worldwide. Raisley
then used this infected network of computers to launch `Distributed Denial of
Service’ (`DDOS’) attacks against websites that published the Radar and Rolling
Stone articles. A DDOS attack uses multiple computers simultaneously to request
information from a website. If done on a large enough scale, the requests
overwhelm the website, take the victim server off line, and render the site
inaccessible.
The websites for Rolling Stone, Radar,
and the Rick A. Ross Institute of New Jersey (`RRI’), among others, published
copies of one or both of the articles about Perverted Justice and Raisley and
later experienced DDOS attacks. As a result, the websites became disabled or
the content became unavailable due to overwhelming attempts to access the
sites.
U.S. v. Raisley,
supra.
In November of 2007, RRI “communicated with the FBI to
complain about the DDOS attacks.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. The FBI
investigated and executed a search warrant at Raisley's home, where they “seized
computers, portable computer storage, and a Rolling Stone magazine containing
the article about Raisley”. U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
Raisley told the
agents executing the warrant that: (i) everything they needed “`was on the
thumbdrive [they] had recovered from his home,’” (ii) he wrote the “code that
`was on that thumbdrive,’” (iii) he used the code to “`attack’ `the
rickross.com websites’” and (iv) he “`didn't
mean to hurt anybody, he just wanted them to take his name off their sites.’” U.S. v.
Raisley, supra. When the FBI
searches Raisley's computers and the thumbdrive, they found “substantial
evidence linking him to the DDOS attacks, including the malware program and its
source code.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
In August of 2008, Raisley and his defense attorney “attended
a proffer session with the Government.” As
I explained in an earlier post, In federal criminal practice a “proffer” (also
known as a “proffer letter” or “proffer agreement”) is a written agreement
between a prosecutor and someone suspected of committing federal crimes.
Defense attorneys use proffers to try to negotiate plea bargains or immunity
for their clients, but they can be tricky.
As this article explains, the proffer lets the suspect “tell the
government about [his] knowledge of crimes, with the supposed assurance that
[his] words will not be used against [him]” in any subsequent prosecution. During his proffer session, Raisley admitted
that “he launched DDOS attacks against rickross.com, but he failed to reach an
agreement with the Government.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
Raisley was charged with and, as noted above, convicted of
one count of computer fraud in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 1030. U.S. v.
Raisley, supra. The district court judge sentenced Raisley to 24 months in
prison followed by “3 years of supervised release” and ordered him to pay $90,386.39
in restitution. U.S. v. Raisley, supra. (I don’t understand why the opinion refers
to “computer fraud” rather than transmitting code and damaging a protected
computer in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 1030(a)(5)(A). From comments in Raisley’s brief on appeal, I
get the impression he was charged with the § 1030(a)(5)(A) crime. Brief of
Appellant, U.S. v. Raisley, 2011 WL
5045508.)
Raisley’s first challenge to the district court judge’s
evidentiary rulings at trial argued that the judge abused his “discretion by
allowing evidence of his contemporaneous DDOS attacks against websites other
than the RRI's website.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. When the issue
came up at trial, Raisley object to the prosecution’s “opening up the case beyond
the actual charged count, arguing that taking focus away from the central issue
and introducing extraneous information would lead to an unfair and impartial
trial.” Brief of Appellant, U.S. v. Raisley, supra. The government claimed the evidence was
“highly probative” because it corroborated
the attack on rickross.com; showed how
the DDOS attack worked; showed Raisley's method in configuring and launching
this attack; showed the effects of the DDOS attacks; and showed the common
motive behind all the attacks -- Raisley's desire to destroy any website that
posted the articles.
Brief of Appellee, U.S.
v. Raisley, 2011 WL 5845083.
In making this argument, Raisley relied on Rule 403 of the
Federal Rules of Evidence, which states that the trial judge can “exclude
relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by a
danger of one or more of the following: unfair
prejudice, unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue
delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
Raisley claimed that the probative value of “this evidence
of uncharged crimes” was “`substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
prejudice.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. Rule 403 is a restriction on Rule 402 of the
Federal Rules of Evidence, which says (i) relevant evidence “is admissible
unless” admitting it is inconsistent with the Constitution, a federal statute,
another of the Federal Rules of Evidence or a Supreme Court decision and (ii)
“irrelevant evidence is not admissible.”
The Court of Appeals found the evidence was “highly
probative” because it (i) corroborated the attack on the RRI's website, (ii) showed
how a DDOS attack worked, Raisley's method in configuring and launching an
attack and the effects of the attacks and (iii) showed that the “common motive”
behind the attacks was Raisley’s “desire to destroy any website that posted the
embarrassing articles about him.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. It also found that the district court judge “obviated
any danger of unfair prejudice by repeatedly instructing the jury that it could
consider the evidence of the other attacks only for the very limited and proper
purposes it explained.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
And, in dictum, it found that, “given
the overwhelming evidence that Raisley attacked the RRI's website, any
conceivable error in admitting evidence of [his] simultaneous DDOS attacks on
similar victims was harmless.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
Next, Raisley argued that the district court judge
erred by excluding certain evidence
about his feud with Von Erck, specifically his belief that Von Erck used a
picture of Raisley's son to lure online pedophiles and that Von Erck sent a
pipe bomb to Raisley's home.
U.S. v. Raisley,
supra. Here, the Court of Appeals
found that the trial judge correctly applied Rules 402 and 403 “in determining .
. . that these areas were irrelevant to the core issue of whether Raisley
attacked the RRI's website and were likely to cause confusion, prejudice, and
time-consuming mini-trials.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. In other words, it found that the evidence
was irrelevant and therefore inadmissible under Rule 402 and that even if it
was relevant its probative value was substantially outweighed by the three
negative factors noted above.
Finally, Raisley argued that the district court judge abused
his “discretion by admitting his statements, made during his proffer with the
Government, that he attacked the RRI's website.” U.S. v.
Raisley, supra. According to his
brief on appeal, the government sought to introduce three statements from the
proffer session:
First, according to the proffer
statements, Raisley told the government that [the system administrator for the
rickross.com site] was attacking his site because of the attack he made against
rickross.com. . . . The government contended that the statement was admissible
because it was inconsistent with the theory of defense.
Second, the government
wanted to introduce Raisley's knowledge that the virus had infected computers
in Greece. Finally, the government sought to introduce statements about
Raisley's acknowledgment that the virus spread via a USB device.
Brief of Appellant, U.S.
v. Raisley, supra.
The Court of Appeals began its analysis of this issue by
noting that “[p]roffer agreements are contracts, and their `terms must be read
to give effect to the parties’ intent.’”
U.S. v. Raisley, supra
(quoting U.S. v. Hardwick, 544 F.3d
565 (3d Circuit 2008)). It then found that
the district court judge did not err in interpreting the proffer agreement,
which
provided that `[t]he government may use
[Raisley's] statement and any information provided by [him] to cross-examine
[him] and to rebut any evidence or arguments offered on [his] behalf.’ We have
explained that the terms of an identical waiver provision are `expansive[,]’
and that they allow the use of proffer statements `to rebut any evidence
or arguments’ offered on a defendant's behalf. . . .
During his proffer, Raisley admitted he
attacked the RRI website. In his opening statement at trial, however, his
defense counsel told the jury that `Raisley did not attack the Rick Ross
website.’ Because of the clear contradiction between Raisley's proffer
statement and his opening statement at trial, the District Court did not abuse
its discretion by admitting Raisley's proffer statement.
U.S. v. Raisley, supra
(emphasis in the original).
The court also rejected Raisley’s argument that “admission
of the proffer statement is inconsistent with his right to a fair trial because
he could not assert any defense at trial without opening the door to the
proffer session.” U.S. v. Raisley, supra. It
pointed out that, he “could have argued that the `facts put in evidence by the
prosecution are insufficient to permit the jury to find the elements of the
crime proved.’” U.S. v. Raisley, supra
(quoting U.S. v. Barrow, 400 F.3d 109
(U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2d Circuit 2005)).
In other words, the court said Raisley could have defended
himself by arguing that the government had not proven the elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt, which would not have “triggered the waiver” in his
proffer agreement. U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
For these and other reasons, the Court of Appeals upheld
Raisley’s conviction and sentence. U.S. v. Raisley, supra.
1 comment:
I actually feel bad for Raisley after reading this. While Raisley took the law into his own hands, the using of his sons picture to lure predators (assumingly without Raisleys permission) would probably find Von Erck in the hospital and the parent with assault charges in many situations. That evidence obviously was too prejudicial for the stated offense, but the whole situation seems worthy of a one hour TV special somewhere. Thank you for sharing.
Post a Comment