13‐417‐cr
United States v. Kopstein
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2
3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
4
5 August Term, 2013
6
7
8 (Argued: February 10, 2014 Decided: July 21, 2014)
9
10 Docket No. 13‐417‐cr
11
12 ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐x
13
14 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
15
16 Appellee,
17
18 ‐ v.‐
19
20 SCOTT D. KOPSTEIN, AKA “MIKEHRNY,”
21
22 Defendant‐Appellant.
23
24 ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐ ‐x
25 Before: JACOBS, LIVINGSTON, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
26
27 Scott D. Kopstein appeals from a judgment entered in the United States
28 District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Seybert, J.). He argues that the
29 jury charge confused the jury as to entrapment, which was the sole defense. For
30
1 the following reasons, we vacate Kopstein’s conviction and remand for a new
2 trial.
3 Judge LIVINGSTON dissents in a separate opinion.
4 NORMAN TRABULUS, New York, NY, for
5 Defendant‐Appellant.
6
7 WILLIAM P. CAMPOS, Assistant United
8 States Attorney (Jo Ann M. Navickas,
9 Assistant United States Attorney, on the
10 brief) for Loretta E. Lynch, United States
11 Attorney, Eastern District of New York, for
12 Appellee.
13
14 DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:
15 Scott D. Kopstein was convicted by a jury, in the United States District
16 Court for the Eastern District of New York (Seybert, J.), of transporting and
17 shipping child pornography to a federal agent posing as a twelve‐year‐old girl
18 during an electronic conversation in a “chat room.” Kopstein did not deny that
19 he possessed the images, but argued that he was entrapped into transporting and
20 shipping them when the agent threatened to terminate the conversation (and
21 Kopstein’s sexual excitement) if Kopstein did not comply with the agent’s
22 repeated requests that he transmit child pornography.
23
2
1 Given Kopstein’s trial strategy, it was critical that the jury be adequately
2 instructed on entrapment, a defense that the district court deemed “surely . . . not
3 frivolous.” App. 235. A review of the trial transcript, however, reveals
4 substantial jury confusion, made worse by supplemental jury instructions that: (1)
5 could be understood to say that the jury could convict even if the entrapment
6 defense was successful; (2) lacked consistent direction as to what must be
7 “induced” to show entrapment; and (3) suggested that the government had to
8 both “prove” and “disprove” entrapment. The instructions therefore failed to
9 consistently and adequately guide the jury on Kopstein’s only defense to the only
10 charge that carried a mandatory minimum sentence.
11 We vacate Kopstein’s conviction and remand for a new trial.
12
13 I
14 In June 2009, Kopstein, a 20‐year‐old New York college undergraduate,
15 initiated an instant message chat with an undercover federal agent posing as a 12‐
16 year‐old girl in California.
17 Kopstein immediately turned the conversation toward sex. He repeatedly
18 sent naked pictures of himself to the agent, and asked the agent to return the
3
1 favor. See App. 22‐23. In response, the agent sent Kopstein a yearbook‐style
2 photo of a young girl; but Kopstein requested “more naughty pics.” Id. When
3 the agent said he did not have any, the following exchange ensued:
4 [Kopstein]: do u have any other pics?
5 [Agent]: yeah...what do i get out of it????????
6 [Kopstein]: i got some more naughty pics of me for you
7 [Kopstein]: if i can see more of u
8 [Agent]: u hav any w a girl
9 [Kopstein]: none of me with a girl
10 [Agent]: awwwww
11 [Kopstein]: but I have other people with other girls
12 [Agent]: any good ones
13 [Kopstein]: yea
14 [Kopstein]: if u send me more pics
15 [Kopstein]: ill show u alot
16
17 Id. at 24. The agent responded by sending Kopstein a photo of a girl in a dress,
18 and Kopstein detailed the sexual acts he wished to perform on the girl. See id.
19 The agent quickly steered the conversation back to his request for child
20 pornography:
21 [Agent]: thought u were gona send me some stuff
22 [Kopstein]: send me a few more pics
23 [Kopstein]: then ill send u alot
24 [Agent]: nope
25 [Kopstein]: okkk
26
27 Id. at 24‐25. Undiscouraged, Kopstein sent more pictures of himself, which
28 prompted the agent to muse:
4
1 [Agent]: sur got a lot of pics of urself
2 [Agent]: hehehehhe
3
4 Id. at 25.
5 Only at that point did Kopstein send the agent child pornography. Id.
6 Kopstein expressed hope that these images would sexually excite his chat partner,
7 and the agent was enthusiastic: “i lik[e] pics like that”; “wow..that last pic was
8 nice...she is cute.” Id. The agent also expressed a fondness for videos that depict
9 a young girl “and a guy having real fun,” but Kopstein demurred: “its more fun
10 to do it yourself.” Id.
11 The rest of the chat consisted of Kopstein gloating about sexual experiences
12 with an 11‐year‐old girl and expressing a desire to actually meet his chat partner
13 for sex. See id. at 27‐28. The agent sent additional inoffensive pictures of a young
14 girl, and Kopstein responded with more images of child pornography. See id. at
15 25‐28. Asked where Kopstein had found these pictures, Kopstein explained,
16 “other people.” Id. at 28. Soon after, Kopstein ended the chat. See id. at 29.
17 Federal agents thereafter seized Kopstein’s computer and recovered many
18 other images of child pornography. Kopstein signed an affidavit confessing to a
19 habit of initiating “sexual conversations . . . with younger girls” and to sometimes
20 trading pictures of himself for pictures of those girls (the images are not
5
1 characterized). He added, however, that he “never shared [pictures of his chat
2 partners] with anyone” else and never “met, talked to on the phone, or had sex of
3 any kind[] with any underage girl.” See id. at 20‐21.
4
5 II
6 Kopstein was charged with three counts of transporting and shipping child
7 pornography. Transport and shipment, unlike possession, is punishable by a
8 five‐year mandatory minimum sentence. See 18 U.S.C. § 2252(b)(1).
9 At the three‐day trial, Kopstein’s only defense was that he had been
10 entrapped into transporting and shipping child pornography (though not into
11 possessing it). The theory was that the agent’s request for “good” pictures of
12 “girls,” and the implicit threat that the agent would cut off the chat if Kopstein
13 did not comply, induced Kopstein into sending the images, which he had no
14 predisposition or inclination to do.
15 In summation, Kopstein’s counsel conceded that Kopstein initiated the chat
16 and that the government had proven “the underlying act: transporting and
17 shipping.” App. 145. He affirmatively invited the jury to convict Kopstein of the
18 lesser‐included offense of possession, for which Kopstein had no defense. See id.
6
1 at 155. Counsel argued, however, that (1) the federal agent induced the transport
2 and shipment conduct; and (2) the government did not prove beyond a
3 reasonable doubt that Kopstein was predisposed to send the images. See id. at
4 146‐52.
5 A unanimous jury found Kopstein guilty of transporting and shipping
6 child pornography. In December 2012, the district court sentenced Kopstein to 66
7 months’ imprisonment, adding six months to the mandatory minimum because
8 Kopstein sent child pornography to a person he thought was a 12‐year‐old girl.
9 See id. at 272.
10
11 III
12 “We review a jury instruction challenge de novo, but we will reverse only
13 where the charge, viewed as a whole, demonstrates prejudicial error.” United
14 States v. Coppola, 671 F.3d 220, 247 (2d Cir. 2012). “Instructions are erroneous if
15 they mislead the jury as to the correct legal standard or do not adequately inform
16 the jury of the law.” Hudson v. New York City, 271 F.3d 62, 67 (2d Cir. 2001)
17 (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). “Objectionable instructions
18 are considered in the context of the entire jury charge, and reversal is required
7
1 where, based on a review of the record as a whole, the error was prejudicial or the
2 charge was highly confusing.” Id. at 67‐68 (internal quotation marks and
3 alteration omitted); see also Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. One 25,900 Square Foot
4 More or Less Parcel of Land, 766 F.2d 685, 688 (2d Cir. 1985) (“A charge that
5 appears likely to have left the jury ‘highly confused’ may, on that ground alone,
6 be reversed.”).
7 We will vacate a conviction if the initial jury instructions are faulty, the jury
8 expresses confusion, and the court’s supplemental instruction fails to alleviate the
9 jury’s concerns or only adds to the already‐existing confusion. For example, in
10 United States v. Rossomando, we concluded, on plain‐error review, that
11 the court’s initial charge posed a genuine risk of confusing the jury
12 into believing that it would be proper to convict Rossomando . . .
13 without finding that he [committed an essential element], and that
14 the court’s supplemental charge on intent did not adequately cure
15 any such potential misperception. We therefore reverse the district
16 court’s judgment because we are not fully confident that the jury
17 found Rossomando guilty of an essential element of [the crime], and
18 because our doubts are sufficient to call into question the fairness
19 and integrity of Rossomando’s conviction.
20 144 F.3d 197, 200‐01 (2d Cir. 1998) (citation omitted).
21 Even if an initial instruction is not itself erroneous or highly confusing, a
22 supplemental instruction prompted by a jury question may be so muddled as to
8
1 warrant vacatur. We have explained:
2 If the court’s instructions . . . had been confined to those contained in
3 its original charge to the jury, a reversal would not be required. . . .
4 However, in its supplemental instructions to the jury after
5 deliberations had begun, the district court left the issue . . . in further
6 confusion and thereby inadvertently undermined its earlier correct
7 instructions . . . . In short, the court’s supplemental instructions to
8 the jury were sufficiently incomplete and misleading so as to make
9 the charge, viewed as a whole, inadequate . . . .
10
11 United States v. Hastings, 918 F.2d 369, 371‐73 (2d Cir. 1990) (citations omitted);
12 see also United States v. Velez, 652 F.2d 258, 262 (2d Cir. 1981) (“Although
13 reluctant to upset a conviction because of an error in the supplemental charge, we
14 are constrained to reverse here because the trial court’s failure to recharge the jury
15 on [an] element was both erroneous and highly prejudicial.”).
16 A supplemental instruction can be a potent influence. A jury’s interruption
17 of its deliberations “to seek further explanation of the law” is a “critical moment
18 in a criminal trial”; and we therefore ascribe “crucial importance” to a
19 “completely accurate statement by the judge” at that moment. United States v.
20 Lefkowitz, 284 F.2d 310, 314 (2d Cir. 1960). “[T]he district court must exercise
21 special care to see that inaccuracy or imbalance in supplemental instructions do
22 not poison an otherwise healthy trial. This is especially true since the judge’s last
23 word is apt to be the decisive word.” Tart v. McGann, 697 F.2d 75, 77 (2d Cir.
9
1 1982) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
2 Unaddressed or aggravated juror confusion is almost certainly not
3 harmless if it pertains to a defendant’s “only” or “primary” defense. See Velez,
4 652 F.2d at 262; Rossomando, 144 F.3d at 198.
5
6 IV
7 “[A] valid entrapment defense has two related elements: government
8 inducement of the crime, and a lack of predisposition on the part of the defendant
9 to engage in criminal conduct.” Mathews v. United States, 485 U.S. 58, 63 (1988).
10 The defendant bears the burden of presenting credible evidence of government
11 inducement. See United States v. Bala, 236 F.3d 87, 94 (2d Cir. 2000). If the
12 defendant sustains that burden, the prosecution must prove predisposition to
13 commit the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See United States v. Al–Moayad,
14 545 F.3d 139, 153 (2d Cir. 2008). The government may do so by demonstrating
15 “(1) an existing course of criminal conduct similar to the crime for which the
16 defendant is charged, (2) an already formed design on the part of the accused to
17 commit the crime for which he is charged, or (3) a willingness to commit the
18 crime for which he is charged as evidenced by the accused’s ready response to the
10
1 inducement.” Id. at 154 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).
2 The government relied on Kopstein’s ready compliance, which “is usually
3 indicated by the promptness of a defendant’s agreement to commit an offense.”
4 United States v. Cromitie, 727 F.3d 194, 206 (2d Cir. 2013).
5
6 V
7 A
8 In deciding whether jury instructions are prejudicially erroneous or highly
9 confusing, we evaluate them in the context of the entire record. See, e.g., Hudson,
10 271 F.3d at 67‐68. We therefore discuss the jury instructions and their context at
11 some length.
12 The initial entrapment charge, unchallenged on appeal, was as follows1:
13 The defendant asserts as a defense to the indictment three counts of
14 transporting and shipping child pornography that he was entrapped
15 into committing those offenses by the undercover government agent.
16 The defendant may not be convicted of a crime if it was the
17 Government who gave the defendant the idea to commit the crime, if
18 it was the Government who also persuaded him to commit the crime,
19 and if he was not ready and willing to commit the crime before the
1 This section appears, in relevant part, on page 42 of the instructions given to
the jury. Passim, the court, counsel, and the jury referred to instructions by page
number.
11
1 Government agent first was in communication with him.
2
3 On the other hand, if the defendant was already ready and willing to
4 commit the crime of transporting and shipping child pornography,
5 and the Government merely presented him with an opportunity to
6 do so, that would not constitute entrapment.
7
8 Your inquiry on this issue should first be to determine if there is any
9 evidence that the undercover agent took the first step that led to a
10 criminal act of the defendant transporting and shipping child
11 pornography. If you find there was no such evidence, there can be
12 no entrapment, and your inquiry on this defense should end there.
13
14 If, on the other hand, you find some evidence that the undercover
15 government agent initiated the criminal acts charged in the
16 indictment, then you must decide if the Government has satisfied its
17 burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that prior to that the
18 defendant was ready and willing to commit the crimes of
19 transporting and shipping child pornography.
20
21 If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was
22 predisposed, that is, ready and willing to commit transporting and
23 shipping child pornography as charged, and merely was awaiting a
24 favorable opportunity to commit those offenses, then you should find
25 that the defendant was not entrapped.
26
27 On the other hand, if you have a reasonable doubt that the
28 defendant would have committed the offenses charged without the
29 Government’s inducements, you must acquit the defendant of the
30 crimes of transporting and shipping child pornography.
31
32 App. 187‐88.
33 Confusion set in with the explanation as to the lesser included offense of
12
1 possession2:
2 In some cases, the law which a defendant is charged with breaking
3 actually covers two separate crimes. One is more serious than the
4 second, and the second is generally called a lesser included offense.
5
6 The indictment in this case charges the defendant with three counts
7 of transporting and shipping child pornography, and I have
8 explained to you the elements which the Government must prove
9 beyond a reasonable doubt before you may convict him of that crime.
10
11 If you find that the Government has not satisfied its burden of proof on any
12 of those elements, then before you may render a verdict of not guilty as to
13 transporting and shipping child pornography, you must proceed to
14 determine whether the defendant has committed the lesser crime of
15 possession of child pornography.
16
17 On the other hand, if you find that the Government has proven the
18 defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as to each of the three
19 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography, you should
20 stop deliberating and inform the Court before you consider the lesser
21 included offense.
22
23 Id. at 188‐89 (emphasis added). The emphasized passage (“before you may
24 render a verdict”) could be read to instruct that if the jurors find that Kopstein
25 was entrapped into transporting and shipping child pornography (which would
26 be a complete defense to that charge), they should not render a verdict of not
27 guilty on that charge (the correct outcome) until after they had determined
2 This section appears on page 44 of the instructions given to the jury.
13
1 whether Kopstein committed the lesser offense of possession.3 That in turn could
2 have misled the jury into thinking that it could return a verdict of guilty on the
3 greater offense even if the prosecution had failed to prove a necessary part of its
4 case, simply because Kopstein was guilty of the lesser offense. This source of
5 potential confusion would recur throughout the instructions.
6 Right before the jury retired to deliberate, the court summarized its
7 instructions as follows4:
8 As I instructed you earlier, if you find that the Government has not
9 satisfied its burden of proof on any of those elements, then before you may
10 render a verdict of not guilty as to transporting and shipping child
11 pornography, you must proceed to determine whether the defendant has
12 committed the lesser crime of possession of child pornography.
13
14 On the other hand, if you find that the Government has proven the
15 defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as to each of the three
16 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography, you should
17 stop deliberating and inform the Court before you consider the lesser
18 included offense.
19 Id. at 198‐99 (emphasis added). Once again, the language could be
20 misunderstood (as it was) to say that the jury should not automatically return a
3 Maybe it was intended that the jury would understand that the “rendering”
of the verdict would not take place until the jury’s return to open court; but few
lawyers and no laymen would intuit the distinction.
4 This section appears on page 59 of the instructions given to the jury.
14
1 verdict of not guilty as to transporting and shipping even if the government failed
2 to sustain its burden‐‐while of course that is exactly what the jury was required to
3 do if the entrapment defense was successful.
4 Kopstein’s counsel objected that the instructions suggested to the jurors
5 that “they should consider the lesser included [offense] if they find the defendant
6 not guilty by reason of a failure to prove the elements. But it should also include
7 a situation whether they find him not guilty, not just because of a failure . . . not to
8 prove the elements, but . . . by reason of the defense of entrapment.” Id. at 201.
9 The government did not object and the court then told the jurors:
10 Ladies and gentlemen, there’s an issue I want to bring to your
11 attention. I misspoke previously. On pages 44 and 59 of the charge
12 that you will be getting, I failed to include the following instruction:
13 If you find that the Government has not satisfied its burden of proof
14 on any of those elements, or if you find that the defendant has proven
15 his defense of entrapment, before you may render a verdict‐‐
16
17 Id. at 202 (emphasis added). Kopstein’s counsel objected on the ground that
18 Kopstein was being assigned the burden of proof. Id. at 203. The Court
19 acknowledged the objection, and continued:
20 It should read on 44 and again on 59: If you find that the Government
21 has not satisfied its burden of proof on any of those elements, or if
22 you find that the Government has not disproved the defendant’s
23 defense of entrapment, then you must go on to consider the lesser
24 included offense of . . . possession of child pornography.
15
1 All right. Ladies and gentlemen, that will appear again on page 59,
2 and I instruct you that the same rules apply. If the Government fails
3 to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the elements of shipping or
4 transporting child pornography, or whether or not the Government failed
5 to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not entrapped.
6 All right.
7 Id. at 203 (emphasis added). Thus, it remained muddled whether the jury must
8 find the defendant not guilty of transport and shipment if the prosecution failed
9 to prove its case or if the entrapment defense were successful. The last line of
10 instructions the jury heard before entering deliberations did not help: “whether or
11 not the Government failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
12 was not entrapped.”
13 B
14 Shortly after deliberations began, the jury submitted a note requesting
15 clarification regarding page 44 of the jury instructions, which discussed the lesser‐
16 included offense of possession. See id. at 206. The court asked the jury to be
17 more specific, prompting this second note:
18 Please clarify:
19
20 p. 42 “If you find there was no such evidence there can be no
21 entrapment and your inquiry on this defense should end there”
22
23 p. 44 “or if the government has not disproved the defense of
24 entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt, then before you may render
16
1 a verdict of not guilty”
2
3 If we find in favor of the page 42 instructions, do we consider the
4 instruction on page 44 and if so what does it mean to “disprove the
5 defense of entrapment”?
6 Id. at 225.
7 The referent of the phrase “[s]uch evidence” on page 42 is “any evidence
8 that the undercover agent took the first step that led to the criminal act of the
9 defendant transporting and shipping child pornography.” But the jury is left to
10 wonder what the “first step” was that “led to” the transporting and shipping of
11 the images in question: Possession of the child pornography (Kopstein)?
12 Initiation of the chat (Kopstein)? Sexual references (Kopstein)? Mention of
13 pictures involving other “girl[s]” (the agent)? Request to transmit an image of a
14 child being raped (the agent)?
15 The jury’s cryptic note also reflects basic confusion about some critical
16 points:
17 • The jury was wondering why it should not “render” a verdict for
18 defendant if the government did not “disprove the defense of
19 entrapment.” Well might one wonder.
20 • The jury does not know what it means to “disprove the defense of
17
1 entrapment.” If it did not understand that, it understood nothing.
2 As the district court recognized, the jurors “are getting confused about the
3 defense of entrapment, and they are coordinating it to inducement, which is
4 understandable.” Id. at 208.
5 The note prompted colloquy between court and counsel on how to dispel
6 the confusion. Though the jury did not hear this discussion, the back‐and‐forth
7 draws on some of the same sources of confusion that had appeared (and would
8 reappear) throughout the transcript and reflects as well the active intervention of
9 Kopstein’s counsel (as well as the constructive role performed by the prosecutor):
10 THE COURT: I was basically going to advise them if they initially
11 decide‐‐if they do not initially determine beyond a reasonable doubt that the
12 Government agent induced the criminal activity‐‐
13
14 [Kopstein’s counsel]: That reverses the burden.
15
16 THE COURT: No, that makes it worse. Let me redo this. Initially
17 they have to decide whether or not the Government has proven beyond a
18 reasonable doubt that the Government agent induced the criminal activity.
19
20 [Kopstein’s counsel]: I think, your Honor, you said it correctly the
21 first time ‐‐
22
23 THE COURT: You have to show that the Government agent induced
24 the defendant to engage in criminal activity.
25
26 [Kopstein’s counsel]: But the defendant does not have to show that beyond
27 a reasonable doubt.
18
1 THE COURT: No, the Government has to show that.
2
3 [Kopstein’s counsel]: All right.
4
5 [Prosecutor]: The Government has to show beyond a reasonable
6 doubt that the defendant . . . was ready and willing to commit the
7 crimes of transporting. That’s what the Government has to prove
8 beyond a reasonable doubt.
9
10 THE COURT: And one of the elements of that is to establish that the
11 Government agent induced the defendant to enter into the criminal activity.
12 Because if you don’t have the inducement‐‐
13
14 [Prosecutor]: We don’t have to disprove the‐‐
15
16 THE COURT: No, you have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
17 Government agent induced‐‐
18
19 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Did you mean to say “did not induce”?
20
21 [Prosecutor]: Your Honor, the defense of entrapment is that they
22 claim there was an inducement.
23
24 THE COURT: Right. You have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that‐‐
25
26 [Prosecutor]:‐‐that the defendant was, despite the claim of
27 inducement, was nonetheless ready and willing to commit the crime.
28
29 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Well, your Honor, they seem to be focusing first
30 on the inducement.
31
32 THE COURT: Right. That’s an element of entrapment.
33
34 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Right. Right. . . . I’m concerned they may think the
35 first step is simply entering into a chat without regard whether the first step
36 had anything to do with transporting.
19
1 THE COURT: That they induced the defendant to send, transport, to
2 ship the materials.
3
4 * * *
5
6 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Obviously, the charge as given is correct, but I
7 think they are confused. What I would suggest the Court do is to
8 explain the language on page 42 means that if there is any evidence
9 that the Government agent took the first step, that is, gave the
10 defendant the idea to commit the crime and persuaded him to
11 commit the crime, then you proceed to the issue of predisposition on
12 which the Government bears the burden of establishing beyond a
13 reasonable doubt that he was predisposed ‐‐
14
15 THE COURT: But there has to be some evidence.
16
17 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Right. . . . I think that when they say “first step
18 that led,” they may think that is something different than giving the
19 defendant the idea to commit the crime or persuading the defendant
20 to commit the crime. They may think the first step is meeting in a chat . .
21 . . That is what led to this, notwithstanding that I may have been a
22 government agent during the course of the chat who persuaded him
23 to commit the crime. That first step may be something different than
24 the actual inducement, and that’s why I’m worried about that
25 question. I think as long as that is clarified, it will be pretty easy for
26 them to follow this instruction. . . .
27
28 [Prosecutor]: That may be an interesting inquiry, but that is not the
29 question posed. The question posed seems to confuse the issue on
30 page 44 and the verbiage that was put in, which is disprove the
31 defense of entrapment. The way that is done in the entrapment
32 charge is by the Government’s burden of proving beyond a
33 reasonable doubt that defendant had a predisposition, that he was
34 already willing and able to commit the act despite the inducement.
35 So this concept of disproving the defense of entrapment appears to confuse
36 the jury in what the burden is on the Government‐‐ . . .
20
1 THE COURT: How about there must be some evidence of
2 inducement that the Government agent took the first step to have the
3 defendant transport, ship child pornography?
4
5 [Kopstein’s counsel]: That’s fine.
6
7 [Prosecutor]: Yes.
8
9 THE COURT: There’s no problem with that. The first step that led to a
10 criminal act and so forth. If you find there is no such evidence, there
11 can be no entrapment, and your inquiry on this defense should end.
12 If, on the other hand, you find some evidence that the undercover
13 government agent initiated the criminal acts charged in the
14 indictment, then you must consider if the Government had satisfied
15 its burden beyond a reasonable doubt that prior to that the defendant
16 was ready, willing and so forth. And that gets into the whole
17 predisposition. Moving on to the lesser included, which is on page
18 44, we can list the elements what the Government would be required
19 to disprove. Your position . . . is that the defendant wasn’t
20 predisposed to commit this crime.
21
22 [Kopstein’s counsel]: Right, and that there was an inducement in the
23 chat and by the agent. . . .
24
25 THE COURT: What about: The Government has failed to prove
26 beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not entrapped. I
27 mean, that’s what you have to prove. You have to disprove that he
28 was entrapped. We tell them what entrapment is. In order for them
29 to even consider entrapment, they have to find there was some
30 evidence of inducement. If there is no evidence of inducement, they
31 don’t bother with entrapment.
32
33 [Prosecutor]: Correct. So what language?
34
35 THE COURT: At 44, the language would be: If you find that the
36 Government has not satisfied its burden of proof on any of these
21
1 elements, or that the Government has failed to prove beyond a
2 reasonable doubt that the defendant was not entrapped. . . . In order
3 to find him not entrapped, they have to find, first, that there was
4 some inducement.
5
6 [Prosecutor]: I don’t disagree. I’m fine with that.
7
8 THE COURT: Hopefully, that will do it. We’ll bring them out and
9 give it.
10 Id. at 208‐16 (emphases added).
11 When the jury was called back in, the following supplemental instruction
12 was given:
13 With respect to page 42: Initially, before you even consider
14 entrapment, you have to find that there has been presented in this
15 case some evidence that the defendant was induced by the Government
16 agent to commit the criminal act, the first step in committing the criminal
17 act of transporting child pornography and shipping child pornography.
18
19 So again, there must be some evidence of inducement on the part of
20 the Government agent that this inducement caused the defendant to take
21 the first step. If there is no such evidence, or you conclude there is no
22 such evidence based on the testimony, then you cannot consider
23 entrapment, and your inquiry stops there.
24
25 Now, your next question relates to page 44: Or if the Government has
26 not disproved the defense of entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt,
27 then before you may render a verdict of not guilty . . .
28
29 I know that is confusing.
30
31 And you then go on to say: If we find in favor of the page 42
32 instruction, do we consider the instruction on page 44?
22
1 If, on page 42, you find that there was some evidence of inducement by
2 the Government agent and that this caused the first step to have the
3 defendant transport or ship . . . child pornography, if you find there is
4 some evidence of that, then you consider entrapment. All right.
5
6 If you find there is no evidence of that, then forget about entrapment
7 and disregard any mention of entrapment.
8
9 So look at page 42. Initially, make a determination whether there is
10 some evidence of inducement, that is, that the Government agent took
11 the first step to have defendant transport and/or ship child pornography.
12
13 Now, with regard to the instructions here, if you decide there is no
14 inducement, disregard the instructions on entrapment, and then you
15 go on to the next step, which is to decide whether or not the
16 Government has proven each and every element of the transporting
17 and shipping of child pornography beyond a reasonable doubt.
18
19 If you decide that the Government has proven this beyond a
20 reasonable doubt on all three counts, then you report that to the
21 Court.
22
23 If you decide that the Government has not proven it on all three
24 counts, the three elements that I’ve told you about, then you let the
25 Court know. And if you can’t decide on all three counts, let me
26 know.
27
28 If your verdict is not guilty on all three counts, then you can go on to
29 consider the lesser included. If you can’t decide on all three counts,
30 then you come in and tell me you can’t decide, and we’ll go from
31 there.
32
33 But if you decide that the Government has proven the defendant’s
34 guilt, once you get to the three counts, beyond a reasonable doubt,
35 you tell me that, and you stop your deliberations.
36
23
1 So let’s review for a moment.
2
3 On page 42, the first inquiry you make is whether or not there is
4 some evidence of entrapment. If you‐‐I’m sorry, of inducement, not
5 entrapment. If you find there is some evidence that the Government
6 agent took the first step to have the defendant transport or ship child
7 pornography, then you go on to consider the other elements as to whether
8 or not the Government has proven entrapment and has disproven
9 entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt.
10
11 First off, is there some evidence of inducement?
12
13 If you find there is some evidence of inducement, you go on to
14 consider whether or not the Government has disproven beyond a
15 reasonable doubt that the other elements of entrapment which I’ve
16 listed here apply.
17
18 In other words, if the defendant was already ready and willing to
19 commit the crime of transporting and shipping child pornography,
20 and the Government merely presented him with an opportunity to
21 do this, all right. Then there’s no entrapment.
22
23 First, look if there is some evidence of inducement. If you find there
24 is no evidence of inducement, that stops the inquiry on entrapment.
25 If you find there is some evidence of inducement in that first step, then
26 you go on to decide whether or not the Government has proven to
27 you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was already
28 ready, willing and able to commit the crime of transporting child
29 pornography, and if the Government merely presented him with an
30 opportunity to do so, that wouldn’t constitute entrapment.
31
32 If you decide this issue of entrapment, you go on to decide whether or not the
33 Government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt the three elements‐‐or
34 the elements that I’ve outlined for you for transporting and shipping child
35 pornography. If all those elements are met beyond a reasonable doubt, then
36 you should convict the defendant and report your verdict.
24
1 If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the Government has not
2 met that‐‐if you find that the Government has not met that standard
3 as to shipping and transporting, and if you unanimously agree that
4 the defendant has not, for each of the counts, you will render a
5 verdict in favor of the defendant.
6
7 If you cannot make up your mind on the three counts as
to guilty or not
8 guilty, then you come in and report that to me.
9
10 Let me know if that helps or confuses you further.
11 Id. at 216‐21 (emphases added).
12 Kopstein’s counsel objected that the supplemental charge “indicated that
13 even if [the jury] found entrapment, . . . [it] can still go on to consider transporting
14 and shipping.” Id. at 221. When the court told him that it was not the “sense of
15 it,” he backed down. Id. at 222‐23. The jury soon after returned a unanimous
16 guilty verdict.
17
18 VI
19 The jury instructions, including the supplemental instructions, drew upon
20 multiple sources of confusion.
21 A
22 First, the jury’s note reflects confusion regarding whether the “before you
23 may render a verdict” language in the original instructions authorized a finding
25
1 of guilt even if the entrapment defense were successful or the government failed to
2 sustain its burden of proof on an element of the offense. The supplemental
3 instructions compounded the problem several times over by indicating that,
4 however the jury decided entrapment, it should nevertheless proceed to consider
5 the three elements of transport and shipment. See id. at 220 (“If you decide this
6 issue of entrapment, you go on to decide whether or not the Government has
7 proved beyond a reasonable doubt the three elements‐‐or the elements that I’ve
8 outlined for you for transporting and shipping child pornography. If all those
9 elements are met beyond a reasonable doubt, then you should convict the
10 defendant and report your verdict.”). This could only increase the jury’s already
11 considerable confusion by indicating that entrapment was not a dispositive
12 defense.5
13 B
14 Second, the court’s supplemental instructions regarding inducement and
15 the “first step” were inconsistent and problematic given the facts of this case.6
5 It is undisputed by the government that Kopstein adequately raised this
objection to the district court, which dismissed it because that was not the court’s
“sense” of the instruction’s meaning. App. 223.
6 Kopstein’s counsel pointed out possible jury confusion regarding
inducement and the “first step,” but did not make a specific objection during or
26
1 At times, the court stated (in accord with model jury instructions) that the
2 proper inducement inquiry was whether the government agent took the first step. See
3 App. at 218 (“Initially, make a determination whether there is some evidence of
4 inducement, that is, that the Government agent took the first step to have
5 defendant transport and/or ship child pornography.”); see also 1‐8 Modern
6 Federal Jury Instructions‐Criminal 8.07 (“Your inquiry on this issue should first
7 be to determine if there is any evidence that a government agent took the first
8 step that led to a criminal act.”). At other times, however, the court took for
9 granted that Kopstein took the “first step,” short‐circuiting an inquiry it
10 simultaneously assigned to the jury. See App. 217 (“So again, there must be some
11 evidence of inducement on the part of the Government agent that this inducement
12 caused the defendant to take the first step.” (emphasis added)).
after the reading of the supplemental instructions. Review of this purported
error is therefore governed by the plain error standard. See Fed. R. Crim. P.
30(d), 52(b). Even so, however, a confusing jury instruction on the defendant’s
sole defense will constitute plain error. See Rossomando, 144 F.3d at 203 (even
though Rossomando’s counsel expressed satisfaction with supplemental
instruction, “because the court’s initial charge could have utterly vitiated
Rossomando’s defense, and because the jury’s request for further instruction is a
concrete indication that it may in fact have done so, the failure of the
supplemental charge to restore Rossomando’s defense critically undermines our
confidence in Rossomando’s conviction, and warrants reversal for plain error”).
27
1 Worse, unaided reference to the “first step” could not provide sufficient
2 guidance to the jury, given the possibilities that the cognizable “first step” was
3 the initiation of the chat, or the reference to sexual matters, or the proposal that
4 child pornography be transported or shipped‐‐or even possession of the images.
5 The entrapment defense contemplates “government inducement of the
6 crime,” Mathews, 485 U.S. at 63 (emphasis added), not government inducement
7 of a related crime or any crime. Kopstein was clearly, and admittedly, not induced
8 to possess child pornography and to initiate the chat, but that does not say
9 whether Kopstein was induced to commit the offenses of conviction: i.e.,
10 transport and shipment of child pornography.
11 “The question of entrapment is generally one for the jury, rather than for
12 the court.” Id. Kopstein did not suppose that a child would want to look at child
13 pornography, and expressed no interest in transporting it until the agent several
14 times urged Kopstein to do so. So the initial question of fact was whether
15 Kopstein was induced by the agent to transport and ship images of child
16 pornography involving other individuals and victims.
17 As the district court observed, Kopstein’s entrapment defense “surely was
28
1 not frivolous.”7 App. 235. But the undefined and inconsistent references to a
2 “first step” offered insufficient guidance for the jury to untie the knotty issues of
3 inducement. The court should have made clear that the critical inquiry concerned
4 inducement of the transport and shipment, and not inducement of other conduct,
5 however reprehensible.8
6 C
7 In addition to these two underlying sources of confusion, another problem
8 in the supplemental instructions could only have left the jury more perplexed:
9 inconsistent pronouncements on whether the government was required to
7 By observing that the defense was not frivolous, we do not mean to express
any view about the ultimate merit of the defense. A properly instructed jury
might well conclude that Kopstein’s desire to see “more naughty pics” of the
“girl” with whom he was corresponding, or to “see more of [yo]u,” indicated a
predisposition to engage, as a principal or as an inducer, in the transmission of
child pornography. But the jury was not required to see the evidence in that
light, and would have been equally entitled to conclude that Kopstein, left to his
own devices and absent the prodding of the agent, would have contented himself
with erotic “chat” and with the contemplation of his own collection of illegal
child pornography.
8 The prosecutor’s trial summation urged the jury to speculate about what
Kopstein would have done if his chat partner had been a real girl living nearby.
See App. 158‐59 (“And does anyone here think that if that location was on Long
Island, this would only be a transportation of child pornography charge . . . .”).
Kopstein does not challenge the prosecutor’s line of argument on appeal, but the
prosecutor thus invited speculation on a subject that would likely further distract
the jury from the conduct charged.
29
1 “prove” entrapment or “disprove” entrapment. See, e.g., id. at 219 (“If you find
2 there is some evidence that the Government agent took the first step to have the
3 defendant transport or ship child pornography, then you go on to consider the
4 other elements as to whether or not the Government has proven entrapment and
5 has disproven entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt.”).
6 D
7 The Government argues that, despite these errors and sources of confusion,
8 the district court stated the standards correctly elsewhere in the transcript. We
9 have, however, “reject[ed] the notion” that incorrect statements “are necessarily
10 ‘cured’ so long as the charge contains the correct standard elsewhere. Our
11 precedents do not stand for any such proposition. They emphasize, rather, that
12 the instructions must be considered as a whole.” Hudson, 271 F.3d at 70.
13 Prudence counsels vacatur when the instructions become sufficiently confused, as
14 we emphasized in a civil case:
15 Reviewing [the judge’s] instructions as a whole, we find the mention
16 of the correct standard inadequate. After reading and rereading the
17 charge, we conclude that it was confusing as to whether intent to do
18 wrong was required to find a violation of Ellison’s . . . rights. . . . In
19 light of this confusion, we do not know whether a correctly charged
20 jury would have rendered a different verdict. Under the
21 circumstances, the prudent course is to vacate the judgment of the
22 district court and to remand for a new trial.
30
1
2 Id. at 70‐71. Clear and adequate jury instructions are no less important when a
3 criminal defendant’s liberty is at stake.
4 In sum, the jury instructions compounded the jury’s bewilderment
5 regarding Kopstein’s only viable defense. “[B]ecause our doubts are sufficient to
6 call into question the fairness and integrity of [Kopstein’s] conviction,” that
7 conviction must be vacated. Rossomando, 144 F.3d at 200‐01; see also Hastings,
8 918 F.2d at 373; Velez, 652 F.2d at 262.
9
10 VII
11 The dissent can be treated briefly:
12 • The revolting particulars of Kopstein’s exchanges with the agent, set
13 out fulsomely in the dissent, demonstrate only that there is enough
14 here to justify rejection of the entrapment defense–‐which no one is
15 disputing. But conviction itself was properly reserved to the jury,
16 acting under sufficiently useful instructions. The dissent, discounting
17 that procedural nicety, finds that Kopstein “was not entrapped, but
18 utterly predisposed.” Dissenting Opinion at 2. However, as the
19 district court observed, Kopstein’s entrapment defense was “surely . .
31
1 . not frivolous,” App. 235, and even the government has not argued,
2 either in the district court or on appeal, that it was.
3 • The dissent conflates two distinct questions of predisposition: (1) to
4 receive sexualized images of the girl Kopstein met online, conduct
5 with which he was not charged; and (2) the charged conduct, the
6 transport and shipment of images of unrelated child pornography
7 involving different girls. A jury might find, as the dissent does, that
8 Kopstein’s predisposition to engage in other conduct bears upon his
9 predisposition to transport and ship the child pornography solicited
10 by the government agent. Then again, a jury might find that it does
11 not.
12 • The dissent glosses over the last ten words of the jury note: “what
13 does it mean to ‘disprove the defense of entrapment’”? Id. at 225. If
14 the jury did not understand that, exactly what part of the entrapment
15 defense did it understand?
16 • The dissent points out that the district court’s use of “term[s] of
17 abeyance” are blessed by model instructions and by the acquiescence
18 of Kopstein’s counsel during the reading of the initial instructions.
32
1 But the jury’s later note specifically asked about the phrase “before
2 you may render a verdict of not guilty,” suggesting confusion about
3 why it should not “render” a verdict for Kopstein if the government
4 did not disprove the defense of entrapment. Further guidance
5 became necessary; but the supplemental instruction could only have
6 deepened the confusion: “If you decide this issue of entrapment, you
7 go on to decide whether or not the Government has proved beyond a
8 reasonable doubt the three elements . . . .” Id. at 220. At the risk of
9 being obvious, this advice works only if the jury decides the issue of
10 entrapment by finding there was none.
11 • The bouncing ball that a reader should follow going through the jury
12 instructions is: the “first step.” The dissent argues that there was not
13 “any need to define” it, Dissenting Op. at 33, because Kopstein
14 initiated all of them. That is not so, see supra Parts V.B, VI.B; but the
15 argument proves too much, because, as the dissent recognizes, the
16 jury could have considered as a first step Kopstein’s “possession of
17 the images,” Dissenting Op. at 34, which may not be a first step to
18 transporting or shipping them, and is in fact a different offense.
33
1 • The dissent sees no more than “minor” and “trifling misstatements,”
2 id. at 1, and takes them one by one to mitigate their impact: the
3 “district court might better have said” something else, id. at 24; or a
4 specific error is harmless, id. at 30 (“In essence, the inconsistency
5 favored Kopstein and therefore did not prejudice him.”); or a
6 misstatement was “corrected,” id. at 35. But a jury composed of
7 laypersons cannot be expected to perform the work done in the
8 dissent: grammatical parsing, subtle exegesis, rhetorical
9 deconstruction, and editing for harmlessness. After all, two judges of
10 this Court have found it difficult enough to follow the jury
11 instructions, and with great respect it may be said that the 41‐page
12 dissent does not much dispel the confusion.9
13
14 CONCLUSION
15 For the foregoing reasons, we vacate Kopstein’s conviction and remand for
16 a new trial.
9 Rather than attempt reconciliation of the transcript excerpts in the two
competing opinions, the interested reader is invited to proceed directly to the
transcript and to simply read the instructions aloud, in full. See Appendix at 160‐
225, United States v. Kopstein, No. 13‐417 (2d Cir. July 17, 2013), ECF No. 28.
34
1 DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
2 What the majority omits to mention is more revealing than what it says. The
3 majority identifies three supposed errors in the jury instructions on entrapment. Of
4 these, none were adequately preserved and two are sufficiently obscure as to go
5 largely or even wholly unremarked by the appellant before this Court. Indeed, the
6 principal language on which the majority focuses – and the only supposed error
7 from the charge itself, as opposed to the supplemental charge in response to jury
8 questions – was unsurprisingly complained of neither below nor even here, given
9 that the supposedly misleading language was specifically requested by the defense at
10 trial and, furthermore, comes nearly verbatim from Judge Leonard Sand’s Modern
11 Federal Jury Instructions. The language of this instruction is not error, either
12 standing alone or, as the majority would have it, in conjunction with the minor
13 misstatements in the supplemental charge on which the majority so avidly latches.
14 The stringent requirements for plain error, see United States v. Marcus, 560 U.S. 258,
15 262 (2010), have not been approached, much less satisfied.
16 Simply put, this is a vacatur in search of a justification. The majority seizes
17 on trifling misstatements in a supplemental instruction to conclude that a properly
18 instructed jury – a jury whose note revealed scrupulous attention to the written
1
1 instructions sent with it into the jury room and deemed “[o]bviously . . . correct” by
2 the defense – was somehow hopelessly confused on the issue of entrapment. The
3 majority deems these trifles prejudicial, moreover, in the face of overwhelming
4 evidence that appellant Scott D. Kopstein (“Kopstein”), convicted in the United
5 States District Court for the Eastern District of New York on three counts of
6 transporting and shipping child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2),
7 was not entrapped, but utterly predisposed.
8 In short, vacatur here is both unwarranted on the facts and inconsistent with
9 our cases. The majority’s attempt to explain its determination otherwise, moreover,
10 only confuses precedent that is otherwise clear and easily applied. Indeed, if this
11 conclusion were not evident from the arguments the majority makes – and it is – it
12 could also be inferred from another buried detail: namely, that the majority, in
13 laying out its argument for vacatur, relies on nearly as many lines of transcript from
14 a colloquy between the judge and counsel outside of the presence of the jury, as lines
15 of instruction given to the jury. This colloquy – albeit heavily relied upon by the
16 majority – is irrelevant to its conclusion that instructional error requires the jury’s
17 verdict to be set aside. See United States v. Sabhnani, 599 F.3d 215, 240 (2d Cir. 2010)
18 (“[O]ur concern on appeal is the effect of jury instructions”; thus, we consider “only”
2
1 instructions the “jury . . . heard.”). For the reasons set forth herein, I respectfully
2 dissent.
3 I
4 At the start, the majority’s austere presentation of the facts shown at trial
5 obscures evidence relevant to the strength of Kopstein’s entrapment defense, and
6 thus the question whether supposed instructional error prejudiced his trial. See
7 Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262 (noting that vacatur on plain error review requires that error
8 affect substantial rights). The following facts are drawn from the trial record.
9 According to his own signed statement, made after his arrest, Kopstein, for
10 a period of three years, chatted online with “younger girls.” The youngest of the
11 girls was “probably 9.” During these chats, Kopstein would “trade[] pictures of
12 [himself] for pictures of [the underage girls].” Kopstein collected “an estimated
13 1000 pictures [and] videos” from these chats. Kopstein also admitted to using a file‐
14 sharing service to download pornographic videos and pictures, including child
15 pornography. He saved “everything” from these chats in an untitled folder on his
16 hard drive. At the time of his arrest, DHS agents searched Kopstein’s hard drive
17 and, despite Kopstein’s attempt to delete them, agents recovered almost 200 images
18 that appeared to contain child pornography.
3
1 Kopstein’s conviction on three counts of transporting child pornography
2 stems from the events of June 12, 2009. On that date, Kopstein entered an Internet
3 chatroom looking for underage girls. Using the screen name “mikehrny,” Kopstein
4 began a conversation with Hopeinsac (actually Special Agent David Lombardi, of
5 the Department of Homeland Security) by asking for her age, sex, and location.1
6 Hopeinsac responded that she was female, twelve years of age, and lived in
7 California. Kopstein thereafter turned the conversation to sex, inquiring of
8 Hopeinsac whether she liked sex, whether she had “ever seen a dick?,” had
9 “suck[ed] it,” and whether she wanted to see his. J.A. 22‐23.
10 Less than nine minutes after commencing this conversation, Kopstein sent a
11 picture of his penis to Hopeinsac. Kopstein in turn asked Hopeinsac if she would
12 send him “pics.” Before she could do so, Kopstein sent another pornographic
13 picture to Hopeinsac, this time showing his penis in his hand. Again Kopstein asked
14 to see a picture of Hopeinsac. Agent Lombardi transmitted to Kopstein a school
15 picture of a twelve‐year‐old girl.
1
I adopt the appellant’s use of the feminine pronoun to refer to Hopeinsac, as
portrayed by Agent Lombardi, because Kopstein perceived the person with whom he was
“chatting” to be female. All chat exchanges are presented with the original spelling and
grammar, except as edited for clarity.
4
1 Kopstein told Hopeinsac that this picture was “very sexy,” but that he wanted
2 more. Kopstein requested that she send him child pornography, imploring that “id
3 love to see more naughty pics[.] [S]how me where to put my cock.” J.A. 23. It was
4 thus Kopstein – not Agent Lombardi – who first raised the prospect of transporting
5 child pornography. Hopeinsac declined, stating that she did not “hav[e] any of
6 thos[e].” J.A. 24. Kopstein, not deterred, asked Hopeinsac to create child
7 pornography for him by photographing herself: “u could just take some, send them
8 and then delete them.” J.A. 24.
9 The conversation proceeded:
10 Kopstein: do you have any other pics?
11 Hopeinsac: yea...what do i get out of it????????
12 Kopstein: i got more naughty pics of me for you . . . if I can see more
13 of you
14 Hopeinsac: u hav any w a girl
15 Kopstein: none of me with a girl
16 Hopeinsac: awwwww
17 Kopstein: but i have other people with other girls
18 Hopeinsac: any good ones
19 Kopstein: yea . . . if you send me more pics . . . ill show u a[ ]lot
20
21 J.A. 24. Notably, once Hopeinsac inquired whether Kopstein possessed any “good”
22 pictures of “people with . . . girls” – a request which Kopstein argues on appeal was
23 a request for pornographic images of children – it took Kopstein only 14 seconds to
5
1 respond, “yea . . . ill show u a[ ]lot,” affirming that he would transport child
2 pornography across state lines. J.A. 24.
3 Hopeinsac next sent Kopstein another non‐pornographic picture of a young
4 girl (purportedly a picture of Hopeinsac), to which Kopstein responded: “mmmm
5 sexy body . . . id like to get under that dress.” J.A. 24. Hopeinsac told Kopstein that
6 she thought he was going to send her “some stuff.” Kopstein, for a second time,
7 affirmed his commitment to transport child pornography: “[S]end me a few more
8 pics . . . then ill send u a[ ]lot.” J.A. 25.
9 Hopeinsac declined, but nonetheless, and only seconds later, Kopstein sent two
10 additional pornographic images of himself, then also transmitted his first image of
11 child pornography. This image depicted “a nude adult white male, [lying] on his
12 back on the bed, with . . . a prepubescent nude female performing oral sex on him.”
13 J.A. 67. It took Kopstein less than eight minutes from the time Agent Lombardi
14 purportedly requested child pornography until Kopstein transported the first image.
15 Kopstein then sent a second image of child pornography, this time depicting
16 intercourse. Kopstein commented that “this is what I wanna do to you
17 [Hopeinsac].” J.A. 25. Kopstein expressed his interest in having sex with Hopeinsac
18 again: “any guy that gets to fuck you would be a really lucky guy.” J.A. 26. After
6
1 continuing this sexually explicit conversation, and without any specific request from
2 Hopeinsac, Kopstein sent two more images depicting child pornography that
3 formed the basis of Count I in the indictment. According to trial evidence, the
4 photograph entitled “daddygetsblownp[1].jpg” depicts a prepubescent nude girl,
5 no older than nine years old, performing oral sex on an adult male. The child is a
6 victim known to law enforcement and the image is part of what is known as the
7 “Helen series.” J.A. 74‐75. The photograph entitled “15 suck a thk one.jpg” depicts
8 a girl of approximately ten or eleven and is part of the “Vickie series.” J.A. 89.
9 Shortly thereafter, Kopstein sent another image that, according to testimony from
10 Agent Lombardi, depicted an adult male having intercourse with a prepubescent
11 female. J.A. 76‐77.
12 Kopstein next told Hopeinsac that he would “love to have u with another sexy
13 girl like you.” J.A. 27. Hopeninsac inquired if Kopstein had ever gone out with a
14 “gurl [her] age.” Kopstein replied, “yes,” and said that “the youngest ive had sex
15 with was 11.”2 Kopstein continued, “so id love to meet you in person one day and
2
In his post‐arrest statement, Kopstein said that he told girls with whom he chatted
“about having sex with other younger girls,” but asserted that these statements were
untrue. J.A. 21.
7
1 show u a good time.” Hopeinsac said that would be “kewl” but she lives in “cali.”
2 This did not deter Kopstein: “one day, ill come visit and make you cum.” J.A. 27.
3 Kopstein, without any additional urging from Hopeinsac, then sent two
4 additional photographs, which are the basis of Counts II and III in the indictment.
5 Both were stipulated to contain child pornography. The first of these, a photograph
6 entitled “%3Bkmcnkms%20%28162%29[1].jpg,” depicts a naked prepubescent girl,
7 between eight and twelve years old, being digitally penetrated in her vagina by a
8 male adult hand. The image is part of a series commonly referred to as the “marine
9 land series.” J.A. 85‐86. The second is a photograph entitled “09 yo 0003hard.jpg,”
10 which depicts a prepubescent girl, between the ages of ten and eleven years old,
11 holding an erect penis. The child is known to law enforcement and the image is also
12 part of the “Vickie series.” J.A. 88‐89. Kopstein sent a handful of additional
13 pornographic images to Hopeinsac, including pictures of his own tumescent and
14 then flaccid penis. J.A. 91‐93. Kopstein then ended the chat by commenting, “lets
15 do it again . . . .” J.A. 29.
16 II
17 During opening statements, Kopstein, through counsel, admitted to
18 possessing child pornography and to transporting it electronically. Kopstein rested
8
1 his defense on entrapment. His attorney, having solicited and secured a lesser
2 included offense instruction from the court, argued in closing that while the jury
3 should convict Kopstein for possessing child pornography, Kopstein was not guilty
4 of transporting and shipping child pornography because he was entrapped by
5 Agent Lombardi to commit this crime. The jury, after three jury notes and about
6 three hours of deliberation, rejected Kopstein’s entrapment defense and convicted
7 on the three charged counts of transporting and shipping.
8 In the majority’s view, supposed errors in the jury instructions regarding
9 entrapment require that the jury’s verdict be set aside. As for the main instruction,
10 however, Kopstein – who had the opportunity to review the court’s charge before
11 it was given – never even suggested below that the district court’s instructions were
12 erroneous. To the contrary, as Kopstein’s lawyer affirmed at the time of the jury
13 notes, “Obviously the [original] charge as given is correct . . . .” J.A. 211. And even
14 on appeal, Kopstein concedes that these instructions “[made] clear that, if
15 entrapment were not disproved, the jury was required to acquit on transporting and
16 shipping” – directly contrary to the majority’s position here.
17 As presently relevant, the district court initially charged the jury on
18 entrapment as follows:
9
1 The defendant asserts as a defense to the indictment[’s] three
2 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography that he was
3 entrapped into committing those offenses by the undercover
4 government agent. The defendant may not be convicted of a crime if
5 it was the Government who gave the defendant the idea to commit the
6 crime, if it was the Government who also persuaded him to commit the
7 crime, and if he was not ready and willing to commit the crime before
8 the Government agent first was in communication with him.
9 On the other hand, if the defendant was already ready and
10 willing to commit the crime of transporting and shipping child
11 pornography, and the Government merely presented him with an
12 opportunity to do so, that would not constitute entrapment.
13 Your inquiry on this issue should first be to determine if there is
14 any evidence that the undercover agent took the first step that led to a
15 criminal act of the defendant transporting and shipping child
16 pornography. If you find there was no such evidence, there can be no
17 entrapment, and your inquiry on this defense should end there.
18 If, on the other hand, you find some evidence that the
19 undercover government agent initiated the criminal acts charged in the
20 indictment, then you must decide if the Government has satisfied its
21 burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that prior to that the
22 defendant was ready and willing to commit the crimes of transporting
23 and shipping child pornography.
24 If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was
25 predisposed, that is, ready and willing to commit transporting and
26 shipping child pornography as charged, and merely was awaiting a
27 favorable opportunity to commit those offenses, then you should find
28 that the defendant was not entrapped.
29 On the other hand, if you have a reasonable doubt that the
30 defendant would have committed the offenses charged without the
31 Government’s inducements, you must acquit the defendant of the
32 crimes of transporting and shipping child pornography.
33
34 J.A. 187‐88.
10
1 As already noted, Kopstein raised no objection to this entrapment instruction.
2 He did request, however, that the jury be charged as to possession of child
3 pornography, which Kopstein urged was a lesser included offense to the
4 transportation of such material. Over the government’s objection, the district court
5 charged:
6 In some cases, the law which a defendant is charged with
7 breaking actually covers two separate crimes. One is more serious than
8 the second, and the second is generally called a lesser included offense.
9 The indictment in this case charges the defendant with three
10 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography, and I have
11 explained to you the elements which the Government must prove
12 beyond a reasonable doubt before you may convict him of that crime.
13 If you find that the Government has not satisfied its burden of
14 proof on any of those elements, then before you may render a verdict
15 of not guilty as to transporting and shipping child pornography, you
16 must proceed to determine whether the defendant has committed the
17 lesser crime of possession of child pornography.
18 On the other hand, if you find that the Government has proven
19 the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as to each of the three
20 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography, you should
21 stop deliberating and inform the Court before you consider the lesser
22 included offense.
23 If you cannot reach a unanimous decision as to each of the three
24 counts of transporting and shipping child pornography, you should
25 likewise stop deliberating and inform the Court before you consider the
26 lesser included offense.
27
28 J.A. 188‐89.
11
1 The majority contends that the phrase “before you may render a verdict” in
2 the instruction’s third paragraph, by requesting that the jurors go on to consider the
3 lesser included offense before returning a not guilty verdict on the more serious
4 charge, could have misled the jury to “return a verdict of guilty on [the transporting
5 and shipping counts] even if the prosecution had failed to prove a necessary part of
6 its case.” Maj. Op. at 14. But Kopstein’s counsel not only raised no objection to this
7 language – he specifically requested it (language derived directly from the Sand
8 model charge):
9 [Kopstein’s counsel]: [T]he actual language from Sand says: [“]If you
10 find that the government has not satisfied the burden of proof on any
11 of the elements or if you cannot unanimously agree the defendant is
12 guilty, then before you may render a verdict of [not] guilty you must
13 proceed to determine whether the defendant has committed the lesser
14 crime.[”] . . . [W]e are asking for that language[,] if they can’t agree[,]
15 that they consider the lesser crime.
16
17 Trial Tr. 392 (emphasis added).3
18 Defense counsel did have one request in the wake of the lesser included
19 charge – that it be amended to refer specifically to Kopstein’s entrapment defense.
3
The majority erroneously characterizes this Sand instruction as only “blessed . . .
by the acquiescence of Kopstein’s counsel during the reading of the initial instructions,”
Maj. Op. 33, when in fact the instruction was specifically requested by Kopstein’s counsel
who during this request, read this very instruction to the court.
12
1 Thereafter, as defense counsel requested, the district court instructed the jury that
2 the original instruction (the text of which was provided to the jurors in the jury
3 room) should be amended as follows:
4 It should read on 44 and again on 59: If you find that the Government
5 has not satisfied its burden of proof on any of those elements
6 [concerning transportation and/or shipping], or if you find that the
7 Government has not disproved the defendant’s defense of entrapment, then
8 you must go on to consider the lesser included offense of child –
9 possession of child pornography.
10 J.A. 203 (emphasis added). The court reiterated: “All right. Ladies and gentlemen,
11 that will appear again on page 59, and I instruct you that the same rules apply.”
12 About one hour after deliberations began, the jury sent out two notes. The
13 first note requested the transcript of the chat between Kopstein and Hopeinsac, as
14 well as the images Kopstein transmitted to Hopeinsac. The second alerted the court
15 that the jury “need[ed] clarifications on the Judge’s instructions on page 44.” J.A.
16 206. The court brought the jury back into the courtroom and asked for more detail
17 regarding what was confusing to the jury. After returning to the jury room, the jury
18 provided an explanatory third note:
19 Please clarify[:]
20
21 p[.]42 “If you find there was no such evidence there can be no
22 entrapment and your inquiry on this defense should end there”
13
1 p[.]44 “or if the government has not disproved the defense of
2 entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt, then before you may
3 render a verdict of not guilty”
4
5 If we find in favor of the page 42 instruction do we consider the
6 instruction on page 44 and if so what does it mean to “disprove the
7 defense of entrapment”?
8
9 J.A. 225.
10 Read in context, the meaning of this note is clear. Page 42 of the instructions
11 addressed the requirement that a defendant, to make out an entrapment defense,
12 present credible evidence of inducement. See Mathews v. United States, 485 U.S. 58,
13 63 (1988) (“[A] valid entrapment defense has two related elements: government
14 inducement of the crime, and a lack of predisposition on the part of the defendant to
15 engage in the criminal conduct.”). Specifically, the jury was instructed on page 42
16 that its inquiry as to entrapment “should first be to determine if there is any evidence
17 that the undercover agent took the first step that led to the criminal act of the
18 defendant transporting and shipping child pornography.” J.A. 187. The jury was
19 then advised that “[i]f you find there was no such evidence, there can be no
20 entrapment, and your inquiry on this defense should end there.” J.A. 187 (emphasis
21 added).
14
1 The jury note thus obviously concerned the relationship between this
2 instruction (that the jury should wholly discontinue consideration of the entrapment
3 defense in the absence of evidence of government inducement) and the later
4 instruction, on page 44, that it should consider the lesser included offense of
5 possession of child pornography if the government failed to disprove entrapment.
6 Given that the instruction on page 42, correctly read, advised jurors that absent
7 evidence of inducement, they were never to reach the question whether entrapment
8 had been disproved, the jurors’ question as to the relationship between this
9 instruction and the instruction on page 44 (to consider the lesser included offense if
10 entrapment was disproved) makes perfect sense. Indeed, it suggests that the jurors
11 closely scrutinized and understood the written instructions.
12 After discussion with the lawyers, the district court provided supplemental
13 oral instructions to address the issue identified by the jury – oral instructions that
14 concededly contain the minor misstatements onto which the majority latches. At the
15 same time, however, these instructions address with clarity the issue about which the
16 jurors actually requested assistance. The court answered the first question posed by
17 the jurors in its explanatory note as follows:
18 So look at page 42. Initially, make a determination whether there
19 is some evidence of inducement, that is, that the Government agent
15
1 took the first step to have defendant transport and/or ship child
2 pornography.
3 Now, with regard to the instructions here, if you decide there is
4 no inducement, disregard the instructions on entrapment, and then you
5 go on to the next step, which is to decide whether or not the
6 Government has proven each and every element of the transporting
7 and shipping of child pornography beyond a reasonable doubt.
8
9 J.A. 218. The district court then moved on to the second question:
10 So let’s review for a moment.
11 On page 42, the first inquiry you make is whether or not there is
12 some evidence of . . . inducement . . . . If you find there is some
13 evidence that the Government agent took the first step to have the
14 defendant transport or ship child pornography, then you go on to
15 consider the other elements as to whether or not the Government has
16 proven entrapment and has disproven entrapment [sic] beyond a
17 reasonable doubt.
18 First off, is there some evidence of inducement?
19 If you find there is some evidence of inducement, you go on to
20 consider whether or not the Government has disproven beyond a
21 reasonable doubt that the other elements of entrapment which I’ve
22 listed here apply.
23 In other words, if the defendant was already ready and willing
24 to commit the crime of transporting and shipping child pornography,
25 and the Government merely presented him with an opportunity to do
26 this, . . . [t]hen there’s no entrapment.
27
28 J.A. 219‐20. The district court then summarized its answers to both questions posed
29 by the jury:
30 First, look if there is some evidence of inducement. If you find
31 there is no evidence of inducement, that stops the inquiry on
16
1 entrapment. If you find there is some evidence of inducement in that
2 first step, then you go on to decide whether or not the Government has
3 proven to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was
4 already ready, willing and able to commit the crime of transporting
5 child pornography, and if the Government merely presented him with
6 an opportunity to do so, that wouldn’t constitute entrapment.
7 If you decide this issue of entrapment, you go on to decide
8 whether or not the Government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt
9 the three elements – or the elements that I’ve outlined for you for
10 transporting and shipping child pornography. If all those elements are
11 met beyond a reasonable doubt, then you should convict the defendant
12 and report your verdict.
13
14 J.A. 220.
15 After these supplemental instructions, defense counsel asserted: (1) that the
16 court may have misspoken at one point and indicated that even if the jury “found
17 inducement or . . . some evidence of inducement, and then after applying the
18 reasonable doubt standard . . . found there was entrapment,” it could “still go on to
19 consider transporting and shipping”; and (2) that the court also “may have said the
20 Government has proven entrapment” when it meant to say “disprove.” J.A. 221‐22.
21 With regard to the former point, however, as the majority states, defense counsel
22 “backed down” when the court, after reviewing the instructions, stated that this was
23 not the “sense” of them. Maj. Op. 26 (citing J.A. 222‐23). Regarding the latter point,
17
1 defense counsel himself stated that counsel suspected the jurors realized the error,
2 if it in fact occurred. Shortly thereafter, the jury returned its guilty verdict.
3 III
4 The majority identifies three “sources of confusion” in the entrapment
5 instructions that, it concludes, require vacatur. To secure vacatur based on a flawed
6 jury instruction, however, even a defendant who preserves his objection – and
7 Kopstein did not even attempt to preserve the great bulk of the supposed
8 instructional flaws on which the majority relies – “must demonstrate both error and
9 ensuing prejudice.” United States v. Quinones, 511 F.3d 289, 313‐14 (2d Cir. 2007).
10 Moreover, “[w]e emphatically do not review a jury charge ‘on the basis of excerpts
11 taken out of context,’ but in its entirety to determine whether considered as a whole,
12 ‘the instructions adequately communicated the essential ideas to the jury.’” Sabhnani,
13 599 F.3d at 237 (quoting United States v. Mitchell, 328 F.3d 77, 82 (2d Cir. 2003); United
14 States v. Tran, 519 F.3d 98, 105 (2d Cir. 2008)) (internal citations omitted); see also Cupp
15 v. Naughten, 414 U.S. 141, 146‐47 (1973) (“[A] single instruction to a jury may not be
16 judged in artificial isolation, but must be viewed in the context of the overall
17 charge.”). Judged by these standards, none of the three supposed errors identified
18
1 by the majority, either singly or in conjunction, justify its determination to set aside
2 the jury’s work.
3 A. Lesser Included Offense Charge
4 The majority first finds error in the lesser included offense instruction
5 contained in the principal charge. The majority asserts that the district court’s use of
6 the phrase “before you may” on two occasions (“before you may render a verdict of not
7 guilty”) is an “instruction to put off acquittal” that “could have misled” the jury to
8 convict on transporting and shipping even if the prosecution did not prove its case.
9 The majority concludes that this supposed error, considered in conjunction with the
10 other two, requires vacatur. Respectfully, I disagree.
11 At the start, this supposed error is not properly considered by this Court. For
12 as already noted, Kopstein requested the lesser included offense instruction in its
13 specific form: his counsel read the precise phrase onto which the majority latches,
14 “before you may render a verdict,” in his request to charge in the district court. See
15 Trial Tr. 392. Kopstein then affirmed his agreement to the charge, as further
16 amended at his own request.4 Later, Kopstein conceded in the district court that
4
At sidebar, after the instructions were initially read, Kopstein requested that the
lesser included offense instruction be modified. Kopstein raised no objection to the
“before you may render a verdict” phrase, however, having specifically asked for this
19
1 “[o]bviously, the [original] charge as given is correct . . . .” And even here he admits
2 that “the original instruction” made “clear that if entrapment were not disproved, the
3 jury was required to acquit on transporting and shipping . . . .” Appellant’s Br. 33 &
4 n.7. Accordingly, Kopstein has waived the opportunity to challenge the instruction
5 on appeal. See Quinones, 511 F.3d at 321 (“A finding of true waiver applies with even
6 more force when, as in this case, defendants not only failed to object to what they
7 now describe as error, but they actively solicited it . . . .”); United States v. Giovanelli,
8 464 F.3d 346, 351 (2d Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (“[I]f a party invited the charge . . . , she
9 has waived any right to appellate review of the charge.”); United States v. Young, 745
10 F.2d 733, 752 (2d Cir. 1984) (holding that “not even the plain error doctrine permits
11 reversal on the ground that the trial court granted a defendant’s request to charge”);
12 see also United States v. Polouizzi, 564 F.3d 142, 153 (2d Cir. 2009) (“[B]y agreeing that
13 the [modified] instruction [proposed by the district court following an objection] was
14 satisfactory, [defendant] waived the right to challenge the instruction on appeal.”).
15 Even if this were not the case, however, vacatur is still wholly inappropriate,
language the day before. He requested only that the instruction be altered to “include a
situation” in which the jury found the defendant not guilty of the transporting and
shipping charges “by reason of the defense of entrapment.” J.A. 201. This modification
was made and Kopstein raised no further complaint.
20
1 pursuant to the plain error standard. See Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262. As already noted,
2 the phrase identified by the majority – “before you may render a verdict” – was
3 derived verbatim from the lesser included offense charge in Sand’s Modern Federal
4 Jury Instructions. In fact, other than specifying the particular offenses at issue and
5 including reference to the entrapment defense at Kopstein’s request, the instruction
6 is identical, word for word, to Judge Sand’s model instruction. Compare Sand et al.,
7 Modern Federal Jury Instructions, Criminal Instruction 9‐10 (“If you find that the
8 government has not satisfied its burden of proof on any of those elements . . . , then,
9 before you may render a verdict of not guilty, you must proceed to determine [the
10 lesser included offense].”), with J.A. 189 (“If you find that the Government has not
11 satisfied its burden of proof on any of those elements, then before you may render
12 a verdict of not guilty as to transporting and shipping child pornography, you must
13 proceed to determine [the lesser included offense].”). There is nothing erroneous
14 about this pattern provision, much less does it constitute plain error.
15 The majority, cherry‐picking the word “may” from the instruction, argues that
16 the lesser included charge could suggest “that the jury should not automatically return
17 a verdict of not guilty as to transporting and shipping even if the government failed
18 to sustain its burden,” either as to the elements or in disproving the entrapment
21
1 defense. Maj. Op. 15. With respect, I disagree. This contention simply ignores the
2 extensive jury instructions given before the lesser included offense charge, thereby
3 failing to read this language in context and as a whole, as our precedent requires. See
4 United States v. Quattrone, 441 F.3d 153, 177 (2d Cir. 2006) (noting that instructions are
5 reviewed as a whole “to see if the entire charge delivered a correct interpretation of
6 the law” (internal quotation marks omitted)); accord Sabhnani, 599 F.3d at 237.
7 Although wholly ignored by the majority, the district court had previously
8 instructed the jury numerous times that the government must prove each element of
9 the crime and also disprove entrapment, all beyond a reasonable doubt. In fact, no
10 fewer than seven times did the district court make clear that the defendant must be
11 acquitted if: (1) the government did not prove the elements of shipping and
12 transporting beyond a reasonable doubt;5 or (2) if the defendant’s entrapment defense
5
The court’s instructions requiring the government to prove the elements of
shipping and transporting beyond a reasonable doubt included:
• “I will instruct you as to . . . the specific elements that the Government must
prove beyond a reasonable doubt to warrant a finding of guilt . . . .” J.A. 160.
• “If you have a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant, you should
not hesitate for any reason to find a verdict of acquittal for the defendant.”
J.A. 167.
• “The burden is always upon the Government to prove guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. This burden never shifts to the defendant, for the law
22
1 was successful.6 Given this context, the natural way to read the term “may” – as used
2 both by the district court and in the Sand model instruction requested by Kopstein
never imposes upon a defendant in a criminal case the burden or duty of
calling any witnesses or producing any evidence.” J.A. 168.
• “[Y]ou must be satisfied of the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable
doubt before you may convict.” J.A. 171.
• “In order to prove the defendant guilty of transporting child pornography,
the Government must prove each of the following elements beyond a
reasonable doubt. . . . The first element which the Government must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant knowingly transported or
shipped . . . a visual depiction. . . . The second element which the
Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the visual
depiction was mailed or transported . . . . The third element which the
Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the production
of the visual depiction involved the use of a minor engaging in sexually
explicit conduct . . . . The fourth element that the Government must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant knew both that the
production of the visual depiction involved the use of a minor engaging in
sexually explicit conduct and that it portrayed a minor engaged in that
conduct.” J.A. 181‐83, 186.
6
The court’s instructions requiring the jury to acquit if doubt remained as to
whether the defendant was entrapped included:
• “The defendant may not be convicted of a crime if it was the Government
who gave the defendant the idea to commit the crime . . . .” J.A. 187.
• “[I]f you have a reasonable doubt that the defendant would have committed
the offenses charged without the Government’s inducements, you must
acquit the defendant of the crime of transporting and shipping child
pornography.” J.A. 188.
23
1 – is as a term of abeyance. If the jury found that the government did not prove all of
2 the elements or did not disprove entrapment, then the jury was required to enter a
3 verdict of not guilty, but not until it considered the lesser included offense. Indeed, this
4 reading is so natural that Kopstein’s counsel admitted below that it was correct and
5 concedes in his brief on appeal that the original instructions made clear that “if
6 entrapment were not disproved, the jury was required to acquit on transporting and
7 shipping.”
8 The majority seeks to avoid this result by seizing upon language, not from the
9 main instruction, but from the supplemental one. It urges that language in the
10 supplemental charge “compounded the problem” supposedly created by the
11 requested model instruction by “increas[ing] the jury’s already considerable
12 confusion” with the suggestion that entrapment was not a dispositive defense. Maj.
13 Op. 26‐27. Again, I disagree.
14 The challenged language from the supplemental instruction is in italics:
15 First, look if there is some evidence of inducement. If you find
16 there is no evidence of inducement, that stops the inquiry on
17 entrapment. If you find there is some evidence of inducement in that
18 first step, then you go on to decide whether or not the Government has
19 proven to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was
20 already ready, willing and able to commit the crime of transporting
24
1 child pornography, and if the Government merely presented him with
2 an opportunity to do so, that wouldn’t constitute entrapment.
3 If you decide this issue of entrapment, you go on to decide whether
4 or not the Government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt the three
5 elements – or the elements that I’ve outlined for you for transporting
6 and shipping child pornography.
7
8 J.A. 220. Granted, the district court might better have said, in the supplemental
9 charge, that if the jury decided the entrapment issue in favor of the Government, it
10 should go on to address whether each element had been shown. But for the reasons
11 stated above, the premise of the majority’s argument for vacatur – that the failure to
12 use such language somehow “compounded” a preexisting problem in the main
13 instruction – is simply false. The original instructions, as requested by Kopstein, did
14 not cause, and the jury’s note did not reveal, any preexisting “considerable
15 confusion” as to entrapment that the supplemental instruction could “increase.” And
16 without any preexisting confusion, the majority is left with one phrase in the
17 supplemental instruction that was not as precise as it could have been. Considering
18 that the instructions previously made clear that entrapment was a complete defense
19 to transporting and shipping, this single phrase could not have produced confusion.
20 Cf. Brown v. Greene, 577 F.3d 107, 111‐12 (2d Cir. 2009) (collecting cases upholding
21 jury charges containing imprecise language regarding burden of proof, because the
25
1 charges as a whole made clear that the cases were governed by the “beyond a
2 reasonable doubt” standard); United States v. Locascio, 6 F.3d 924, 941 (2d Cir. 1993)
3 (ambiguous summary of an element of a crime did not warrant reversal where earlier
4 discussion of the element was clear). Accordingly, it is no basis for vacatur – a point
5 the majority implicitly concedes by conflating this supposed error in the
6 supplemental charge with a nonexistent error in the main instruction, based on
7 language specifically requested by the defendant himself.
8 B. Supplemental Charge
9 The majority next determines that vacatur is required because the
10 “supplemental instructions regarding inducement and the ‘first step’ were
11 inconsistent and problematic given the facts of this case.” Maj. Op. 27. There was no
12 objection on this ground below, however, and the majority concedes that the plain
13 error standard applies. It has not been satisfied.
14 As already noted, the district court’s supplemental instruction addressed both
15 of the questions posed in the jury’s third note with precision.7 As to the first, the jury
7
Again, the third jury note reads as follows:
Please clarify[:]
p[.]42 “If you find there was no such evidence there can be no entrapment
and your inquiry on this defense should end there”
26
1 wanted to know whether, if the jury found no inducement (i.e., in favor of the
2 instruction providing for no inducement), jurors then needed further to consider the
3 entrapment defense. The district court accurately answered this question in the
4 negative three separate times. See J.A. 218 (noting that if the jury found no evidence
5 of inducement, it should “forget about entrapment and disregard any mention of
6 entrapment”).8 The district court then answered the second question regarding
7 disproving entrapment (although this was arguably unnecessary, given that the
p[.]44 “or if the government has not disproved the defense of entrapment
beyond a reasonable doubt, then before you may render a verdict of
not guilty”
If we find in favor of the page 42 instruction do we consider the instruction
on page 44 and if so what does it mean to “disprove the defense of
entrapment”?
J.A. 225.
8
The two additional occasions where the district court answered this question
correctly are set forth here:
[I]f you decide there is no inducement, disregard the instructions on
entrapment, and then you go on to the next step, which is to decide whether
or not the Government has proven each and every element of the
transporting and shipping of child pornography beyond a reasonable doubt.
J.A. 218.
First, look if there is some evidence of inducement. If you find there is no
evidence of inducement, that stops the inquiry on entrapment.
J.A. 220.
27
1 jurors wished to know “what . . . it mean[s] to ‘disprove the defense of entrapment’”
2 only if they were required to consider entrapment in the absence of inducement,
3 which they were not). The district court answered this second question accurately
4 and completely two separate times.9
5 As we have said, “[a] supplemental charge is not defective where it responds
6 adequately to the jury’s request for clarification.” United States v. Velez, 652 F.2d 258,
7 262 (2d Cir. 1981) (citing United States v. Viserto, 596 F.2d 531, 539 (2d Cir. 1979)).
8 Accordingly, because the district court did answer the jury’s third note accurately
9 and completely, the cases relied on by the majority to justify vacatur – cases
9
The court correctly instructed as follows:
If you find there is some evidence of inducement, you go on to consider
whether or not the Government has disproven beyond a reasonable doubt
that the other elements of entrapment which I’ve listed here apply.
In other words, if the defendant was already ready and willing to
commit the crime of transporting and shipping child pornography, and the
Government merely presented him with an opportunity to do this, all right.
Then there’s no entrapment.
J.A. 219‐20.
[D]ecide whether or not the Government has proven to you beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant was already ready, willing and able to
commit the crime of transporting child pornography, and if the Government
merely presented him with an opportunity to do so, that wouldn’t constitute
entrapment.
J.A. 220.
28
1 involving supplemental instructions that failed to address the issue with which the
2 jury was concerned, or that did so poorly, further confusing it – are simply
3 inapposite. See Maj. Op. 8‐9 (citing United States v. Rossomando, 144 F.3d 197, 202‐03
4 (2d Cir. 1998) (vacating conviction because initial charge was erroneous and
5 supplemental charge failed to fix the problem); United States v. Hastings, 918 F.2d 369,
6 371‐73 (2d Cir. 1990) (vacating conviction because the district court failed to answer
7 the jury’s question whether knowledge was required to convict the defendant of
8 illegal firearm possession)).
9 The majority seizes upon a supposed problem with the inducement instruction
10 – a problem not raised in the jury note – to avoid this conclusion. The majority
11 asserts that the supplemental inducement instruction was inconsistent as to the
12 evidence necessary to satisfy the inducement requirement. United States v. Bala, 236
13 F.3d 87, 94 (2d Cir. 2000) (noting that defendant bears the burden of presenting
14 “credible evidence of government inducement”). Specifically, although the court
15 twice noted in the supplemental instruction (consistent with its advice in the main
16 instruction) that the inducement inquiry involved the question whether “there is
17 some evidence that the Government agent took the first step to have the defendant
18 transport or ship child pornography,” J.A. 218‐19, the majority asserts that elsewhere
29
1 in the supplemental instruction the court “took for granted that Kopstein took the
2 ‘first step,’” – as in the instruction that “there must be some evidence of inducement
3 on the part of the Government agent that this inducement caused the defendant to take
4 the first step,” Maj. Op. 28 (quoting J.A. 217) (emphases altered).
5 But Kopstein, in addition to not objecting below, admits before this Court that
6 his counsel “did not object when the variations referring to Kopstein’s first step were
7 delivered” because “it was clear throughout that it was the agent who had to do the
8 inducing and that it was Kopstein who had to be induced.” Appellant’s Br. 37. In
9 essence, the inconsistency favored Kopstein and therefore did not prejudice him. The
10 instructions (according to the majority) should have consistently required the jury to
11 determine, as the main instruction charged, whether “there is any evidence that the
12 undercover agent took the first step that led to a criminal act of the defendant
13 transporting and shipping child pornography.” E.g., J.A. 187. But the instructions
14 as given allowed the jury to find inducement if either (1) “the Government agent took
15 the first step,” J.A. 218, or (2) “inducement on the part of the Government agent . . .
16 caused the defendant to take the first step,” J.A. 217 – thus permitting the jury to find
17 inducement in support of Kopstein’s defense even if the government did not take the
18 first step, as long as the government agent induced the defendant to do so. This
30
1 instruction thus expanded Kopstein’s entrapment defense, causing him no prejudice
2 and certainly failing to affect his substantial rights, as required in plain error review.
3 See Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262.
4 The majority resists this conclusion, asserting first that a confusing jury
5 instruction on the defendant’s sole defense ipso facto constitutes plain error. Maj. Op.
6 27 n.6. But even if the inconsistency challenged here was confusing – a doubtful
7 proposition, given that the district court’s written instructions were consistent in this
8 regard – potential confusion, standing alone, does not permit vacatur on plain error
9 review. In United States v. Marcus, the Supreme Court said (reversing this Court) that
10 an appellate court:
11 may, in its discretion, correct an error not raised at trial only where the
12 appellant demonstrates that (1) there is an error; (2) the error is clear or
13 obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute; (3) the error affected
14 the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the ordinary case means it
15 affected the outcome of the district court proceedings; and (4) the error
16 seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
17 proceedings.
18
19 560 U.S. at 262 (emphasis added) (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted).
20 And “[l]ower courts,” the Supreme Court has reminded us, “must apply [the plain
21 error rule] as this Court has interpreted it.” Id. It is thus not enough to assert that a
22 supplemental instruction is inconsistent or even confusing in some respect. Having
31
1 declined to object below, Kopstein must demonstrate that the inconsistency matters
2 by satisfying each criterion required for plain error review. He has not done so – not
3 even close.
4 The majority disagrees, arguing that the supplemental instruction was not
5 merely inconsistent as to the first step (whether the government must take the first
6 step or induce the defendant to do so). Even worse, the instruction left the “first
7 step” undefined. But the Sand model instruction given in the main charge and
8 deemed “[o]bviously . . . correct” by the defense leaves “first step” undefined. Sand
9 et al., Modern Federal Jury Instructions, Criminal Instruction 8‐7. Moreover, our
10 Court has specifically endorsed the Sand instruction on inducement. In United States
11 v. Dunn, Judge Feinberg, writing for a unanimous panel, noted that instructions on
12 entrapment “should be simplified” so as to “focus the jury’s attention on the central
13 issue presented by a claim of entrapment: Was the defendant ‘ready and willing to
14 commit the offense if given an opportunity to do so?’” 779 F.2d 157, 160 (2d Cir.
15 1985). To reach this central issue, the Court counseled, “there need only be some
16 evidence of government initiation of the illegal conduct.” The Court further advised,
17 “[f]or a clear and concise instruction embodying this approach, see 1 L. Sand, J.
18 Siffert, W. Loughlin, S. Reiss, Modern Federal Jury Instructions 8‐24 (1984) (§ 8.07 –
32
1 Entrapment).” Id. And more recently, we stated in United States v. Brand, “Our
2 conclusion that the district court did not err in defining entrapment is supported by
3 the fact that the charge mirrors the model language from Sand’s Modern Federal Jury
4 Instructions – language we have previously approved.” 467 F.3d 179, 205 (2d Cir.
5 2006) (citing United States v. Han, 230 F.3d 560, 565 (2d Cir. 2000)).
6 The majority cites no case law to support its suggestion that this instruction is
7 deficient, for failing to specify what counts as government initiation of illegal
8 conduct. To the contrary, it cites the same Sand instruction as “proper.” Maj. Op. 28.
9 There is thus no “clear and obvious” error here that arises from this lack of
10 specification. See Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262 (noting that, among other requirements,
11 error must be “clear or obvious” to constitute plain error). Nor is there any impact
12 on the appellant’s substantial rights. According to the majority, the district court was
13 required to “ma[k]e clear that the critical inquiry concerned inducement of the
14 transport and shipment, and not inducement of other conduct, however
15 reprehensible.” Maj. Op. 30. But this is precisely what the district court did – and
16 without any need to define “first step.” The court, in fact, aided the jury by making
17 clear four separate times in the supplemental instruction alone that it was the transport
18 and shipment of child pornography that the government must induce, not merely the
33
1 possession of child pornography or other reprehensible conduct. See J.A. 217
2 (referring to “the first step in committing the criminal act of transporting child
3 pornography and shipping child pornography”); J.A. 218 (“the first step to have the
4 defendant transport . . . and/or ship child pornography”); id. (“the first step to have
5 defendant transport and/or ship child pornography”); J.A. 219 (“the Government
6 agent took the first step to have the defendant transport or ship child pornography”).
7 Finally, even if the district court were required to say what the first step in
8 transporting child pornography was – although undoubtedly it was not – the failure
9 to do so here was not prejudicial, let alone plainly erroneous. The majority lists the
10 possible first steps about which it believes the jury was confused:“the initiation of the
11 chat”, the “sexual references”, the proposal that child pornography be transported
12 or shipped – or even possession of the images. Maj. Op. 17.10 But choosing any one
13 of these steps would not have changed the outcome here because it was Kopstein, not
14 Agent Lombardi, who initiated each of them. Kopstein took up the chat and first
15 referenced sexual matters. See J.A. 22. He possessed the images. And it was also
16 Kopstein who first proposed that child pornography be transported or shipped – a
10
The majority asserts that the agent requested Kopstein to “transmit an image of
a child being raped.” Maj. Op. 17. No such thing occurred.
34
1 detail the majority overlooks. After sending multiple adult pornographic photos to
2 a person he believed to be a child, Kopstein solicited Hopeinsac to send to him a
3 “naughty pic[ ]” that would “show me where to put my cock.” J.A. 22. Thus, even
4 if the district court had instructed the jury that one of these particular steps was the
5 step the government agent had to undertake, for inducement to be found, the result
6 would not have been different. The district court’s election not to specify the first
7 step – consistent with the case law and the better approach to entrapment – was not
8 error, much less plain error prejudicing the defendant’s substantial rights.
9 C. Burden Regarding Entrapment
10 In a single sentence, the majority contends, finally, that the supplemental
11 instructions created a “problem” by inconsistently pronouncing “on whether the
12 government was required to ‘prove’ entrapment or ‘disprove’ entrapment.” Maj.
13 Op. 30. The majority itself appears embarrassed to deem this error, and for good
14 reason. The “problem” at issue relates to a single line in the supplemental
15 instruction:
16 On page 42, the first inquiry you make is whether or not there is
17 some evidence of . . . inducement . . . . If you find there is some
18 evidence that the Government agent took the first step to have the
19 defendant transport or ship child pornography, then you go on to
20 consider the other elements as to whether or not the Government has
35
1 proven entrapment and has disproved entrapment beyond a reasonable
2 doubt.
3
4 J.A. 219 (emphasis added). The district court here made a misstatement, which it
5 recognized and promptly corrected – though the majority refuses to make this
6 simple inference from the transcription of the proceedings before us. Moreover, the
7 majority fails to mention that the supplemental instructions correctly placed the
8 burden of disproving entrapment on the government at least five times. Indeed,
9 even Kopstein’s attorney acknowledged that any error was inconsequential:
10 referring to this slip of the tongue, defense counsel stated just thereafter that “I think
11 there was [a] place, also, where you may have said the Government has proven
12 entrapment. And I think what you meant to say was disprove. But I suspect that
13 [the jurors] realize that.” J.A. 221‐21. Indeed Kopstein – but not the majority –
14 continues to maintain this position on appeal, conceding that the district judge here
15 “immediately corrected herself.” Appellant’s Br. 22.
16 In the face of all this, the majority fails to identify the standard of review
17 (plain error), the prejudice to the defendant (none), the error that is plain (none), or
18 how the plain error, assuming there was one, seriously affects the fairness, integrity,
19 or public reputation of judicial proceedings (it would not). As we have repeatedly
36
1 said, jury charges are not to be read “on the basis of excerpts taken out of context,”
2 but in their entirety, to see whether the instructions “adequately communicated the
3 essential ideas to the jury.” Sabhnani, 599 F.3d at 237 (internal quotation marks
4 omitted). By the majority’s reasoning, any misspoken portion of a sentence by a
5 district judge – even if “immediately corrected” and, sensibly, not objected to –
6 could constitute a reason to grant a defendant a new trial. There was no error here,
7 much less error justifying vacatur.
8 IV
9 Although not necessary to my conclusion, I note, finally, that the supposed
10 errors on which the majority relies were utterly harmless – so that even assuming,
11 contrary to the record, that these errors were properly preserved, vacatur is still
12 inappropriate.11 United States v. Naiman, 211 F.3d 40, 51 (2d Cir. 2000) (noting that
13 a conviction will be set aside for error in jury instructions only “if the instructions,
14 viewed as a whole, caused the defendant prejudice”); see also United States v. Ekinci,
15 101 F.3d 838, 843 (2d Cir. 1996) (noting that prejudice is examined in light of the
11
Vacatur on plain error review is similarly barred because there was no effect on
Kopstein’s substantial rights. See Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262.
37
1 evidence and the “erroneous instruction in the context of the instructions as a
2 whole”).
3 To succeed on his affirmative defense of entrapment, Kopstein was first
4 required to “present[ ] credible evidence of government inducement.” Bala, 236 F.3d
5 at 94. Provided this element was shown, the prosecution then was required to prove
6 predisposition beyond a reasonable doubt, in order to disprove entrapment. United
7 States v. Al‐Moayad, 545 F.3d 139, 153 (2d Cir. 2008). No rational jury, applying this
8 law, would have found that Kopstein was entrapped.
9 As to inducement (and as noted already), the defendant need only point to
10 credible evidence of inducement, a burden we have properly characterized as
11 “relatively slight.” United States v. Mayo, 705 F.2d 62, 67 (2d Cir. 1983). But as we
12 have also said, this obligation “should not be treated as a hollow requirement,” and
13 a defendant “cannot simply point to the government’s use of an undercover agent”
14 to satisfy it. Brand, 467 F.3d at 190. Here, contrary to the majority’s implication that
15 it was the government who initiated Kopstein’s crimes by first suggesting the
16 electronic transmission of child pornography, Kopstein first suggested this crime by
17 requesting that a purported twelve‐year‐old send him a photograph showing him
18 “where to put my cock.” Thus (and by any of the definitions of “first step” to which
38
1 the majority points) the evidence overwhelmingly shows that Kopstein was not
2 induced and that any supposed error in the inducement instructions was harmless.
3 Even if this were not the case, however, any rational jury would find that the
4 government proved that Kopstein was predisposed in light of (1) his existing course
5 of criminal conduct prior to the crime charged and (2) his ready willingness to
6 commit the crime, as evidenced by his prompt response to Agent Lombardi’s
7 supposed inducement. See United States v. Salerno, 66 F.3d 544, 547 (2d Cir. 1995).
8 As to his existing course of conduct, Kopstein admitted to possessing child
9 pornography and to having numerous sexual chats with girls as young as nine over
10 a three‐year period. He admitted both to sending these girls images of himself and
11 to requesting that they send him images. Nearly two hundred images depicting
12 apparent child pornography were recovered from his computer.
13 All this is in addition, moreover, to the evidence that Kopstein (1) sought out
14 Hopeinsac; (2) turned their conversation to sex within minutes of encountering her;
15 (3) repeatedly sent her unsolicited images of his penis; and (4) within fifteen minutes
16 of beginning their encounter, implored her to create and transmit to him a
17 pornographic image of herself showing him “where to put my cock.” This conduct
39
1 took place before any suggestion by the agent that Kopstein transmit images of
2 underage girls.
3 The majority is thus reduced to claiming that a rational jury could conclude
4 that Kopstein, who solicited the transport of child pornography in the early part of
5 his conversation with Hopeinsac, was not predisposed to commit the offense
6 moments thereafter. The majority is wrong. Kopstein’s request that Hopeinsac
7 engage in sexually explicit conduct and produce and transport visual depictions of
8 such conduct – “take some, send them and then delete them,” J.A. 24 –
9 overwhelmingly establishes his predisposition to transport child pornography and,
10 indeed, to engage in an even more serious crime (production of child pornography)
11 requiring a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment. See 18 U.S.C.
12 § 2251(a); see also United States v. Broxmeyer, 708 F.3d 132, 139 (2d Cir. 2013) (Jacobs,
13 J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc) (“[U]nder 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a), by
14 asking [the victim] (without success) to take nude photos of herself, [the defendant]
15 became guilty of attempting to [cause a minor to] ‘engage in . . . sexually explicit
16 conduct for the purpose of producing [a] visual depiction of such conduct.’”).
17 Kopstein also readily acceded to what he asserts was the government
18 inducement here – namely, the agent’s inquiry whether Kopstein possessed “good”
40
1 pictures of any “girls.” Kopstein agreed to commit the criminal conduct of
2 transmitting child pornography within fourteen seconds of the moment he asserts he
3 was induced, and began transmitting child pornography to a purported twelve‐
4 year‐old girl minutes thereafter. See Jacobson v. United States, 503 U.S. 540, 550 (1992)
5 (“Had the agents in this case simply offered petitioner the opportunity to order child
6 pornography through the mails, and petitioner – who must be presumed to know
7 the law – had promptly availed himself of this criminal opportunity, it is unlikely
8 that his entrapment defense would have warranted a jury instruction.”). Thus,
9 Kopstein’s course of criminal conduct was not, as the majority would have it,
10 consistent with the theory that Kopstein had “no predisposition or inclination” to
11 transport child pornography. No rational jury would find otherwise.
12 CONCLUSION
13 In sum, I disagree with the majority’s analysis and with its conclusion. The
14 majority fails to read the instructions in context and as a whole. It neglects to
15 explain how any properly preserved error prejudiced Kopstein and it wholly
16 disregards the Supreme Court’s admonition in Marcus that we are to apply the plain
17 error rule “as [the Supreme Court] has interpreted it,” and not as we see fit. 560 U.S.
18 at 262. There is no basis for vacatur. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
41