This opinion is subject to administrative correction before final disposition.
Before
CRISFIELD, HOLIFIELD, and LAWRENCE
Appellate Military Judges
_________________________
UNITED STATES
Appellee
v.
Vincent D. TAMAN, Jr.
Lance Corporal (E-3), U.S. Marine Corps
Appellant
No. 201900175
Decided: 11 December 2020
Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary
Military Judge:
Mark D. Sameit
Sentence adjudged 1 February 2019 by a general court-martial con-
vened at Marine Corps Base Camp Foster, Okinawa, Japan, consisting
of officer and enlisted members. Sentence approved by the convening
authority: confinement for six months and a bad-conduct discharge. 1
1 The convening authority disapproved the reprimand adjudged by the members.
United States v. Taman, NMCCA No. 201900175
Opinion of the Court
For Appellant:
Major Mary Claire Finnen, USMC
Lieutenant Commander Kevin R. Larson, JAGC, USN 2
Lieutenant Commander Hannah F. Eaves, JAGC, USN3
For Appellee:
Lieutenant Joshua C. Fiveson, JAGC, USN
Major Kerry E. Friedewald, USMC
Judge LAWRENCE delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief
Judge Emeritus CRISFIELD and Senior Judge HOLIFIELD joined.
_________________________
This opinion does not serve as binding precedent,
but may be cited as persuasive authority under
NMCCA Rule of Practice and Procedure 30.2.
_________________________
LAWRENCE, Judge:
Appellant was convicted, contrary to his pleas, of one charge of knowingly
and wrongfully receiving and viewing child pornography and another charge
of soliciting and advising the production of child pornography, both in
violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice [UCMJ]. 4 In his sole
assignment of error [AOE], Appellant avers that this Court should use its
Article 66(c) authority to disapprove as unjust his convictions for solicitation,
receiving, and viewing child pornography of Ms. Wilson, 5 a sixteen-year-old
girl, when he could have lawfully engaged in a physical sexual relationship
with the same individual, raising for the first time on appeal that his
2 The Court granted Lieutenant Commander Larson leave to withdraw as appel-
late defense counsel on 6 August 2020.
3 The Court granted Lieutenant Commander Eaves leave to withdraw as appel-
late defense counsel on 7 October 2020.
4 10 U.S.C. § 934.
5All names in this opinion, other than those of the judges and counsel, are pseu-
donyms.
2
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Opinion of the Court
constitutional rights to free speech and privacy were violated. We find no
prejudicial error and affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Appellant met Ms. Wilson when he was a high school senior platoon
commander in Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps [JROTC] and she was
a freshman in his platoon. This shared involvement in JROTC was the extent
of their in-person or online contact until two years later when he initiated
contact with then-sixteen-year-old Ms. Wilson by way of a social media
platform. All the offenses in question took place while Appellant was a
twenty-year-old active duty Marine stationed in Okinawa, Japan.
Initially, their conversations were innocuous, but they soon turned sexual
in nature. Appellant sought to explore more than mere conversation with
Ms. Wilson. She testified that she resisted several of Appellant’s requests for
her to provide nude pictures of herself to him, but she eventually relented,
supplying him a picture of her naked buttocks on another online platform
thinking it would be “one and done.” 6 Because of Appellant’s continuing
popularity in her high school, Ms. Wilson felt she was the beneficiary of more
attention and popularity due to her online relationship with Appellant being
known to others. While she did not want to take and send nude pictures, she
knew she risked her elevated social status amongst her high school class-
mates if she did not capitulate.
Appellant persisted in requesting nude pictures of sixteen-year-old
Ms. Wilson. He asked for pictures of her exposed breasts. She refused, but
eventually relented. Then he sought pictures of her exposed vagina. She
again refused, but succumbed to his requests and sent him ten to fifteen
pictures that met his request. He then requested photographs of her digitally
penetrating her vagina. She provided those as well.
While the platform on which she had been sending Appellant the nude
photographs quickly deletes images once viewed, Appellant asked Ms. Wilson
if upon receipt he could take a screenshot to preserve these nude images of
her vagina. She gave him permission, reasoning that in doing so she “hop[ed]
that if he had them on his phone he would stop asking [her] for more.” 7 Due
6 R. at 392-94.
7 Id. at 400.
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Opinion of the Court
to a notification that returned to the other party, she knew that he had
performed a screenshot of the nude pictures she had sent.
Next, Appellant asked that she engage in mutual masturbation with him
by means of an online video telephone application. She reluctantly agreed
and they did this on approximately thirty occasions. Despite being a high
school student, and to accommodate his Marine Corps working schedule in
Japan, Ms. Wilson would stay up into the wee hours of the morning at her
family home in the continental United States to send these online nude and
explicit live-streamed videos. Appellant managed the entire production of
having video sex with Ms. Wilson—from instructing her on how to mastur-
bate to light management and camera placement in order for him “to get a
better look” 8 in viewing her naked body and sexual acts.
Ultimately, this was uncovered when Ms. Wilson’s parents returned home
late one night and her father, a Service Member, noticed a light from
underneath her bedroom door. With her door locked—a violation of family
rules—and her delay in opening the door while she got dressed from what
was an in-progress explicit video call to Appellant of herself masturbating,
her father demanded her cell phones. As the result of seeing their earlier
social media messages of a sexual nature, Appellant’s demand for nude
pictures of his daughter, and a photograph of her scantily-clad buttocks and
another of her naked with bare breasts, Mr. Wilson notified his command
who put him in touch with military and then local civilian law enforcement.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Appellant challenges his conviction as unjust, invoking this Court’s statu-
tory charge under Article 66(c), UCMJ, that we must “affirm only such
findings of guilty . . . as [we] find[ ] correct in law and fact and determine[ ],
on the basis of the entire record, should be approved.” We review de novo
statutory interpretations as questions of law. 9
At the root of Appellant’s claim is his assertion that Article 134, UCMJ, is
unconstitutional as applied to the facts of his case, a matter we consider de
8 Id. at 405.
9 See United States v. Nerad, 69 M.J. 138, 142 (C.A.A.F. 2010).
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novo through conducting a fact-specific inquiry. 10 However, as neither of
Appellant’s as-applied constitutional challenges were raised during the
course of his trial, we review for plain error, granting relief “only where
(1) there was error, (2) the error was plain and obvious, and (3) the error
materially prejudiced a substantial right of [an] accused.” 11 The Court of
Appeals for the Armed Forces [CAAF] has determined that Article 134,
UCMJ, is a facially constitutional criminal statute and, as such, to succeed in
his as-applied claim, “Appellant must point to particular facts in the record
that plainly demonstrate why his interests should overcome Congress’ and
the President’s determinations that his conduct be proscribed.” 12 We will first
focus on each of his underlying constitutional claims.
B. Appellant’s Solicitation and Advice to Produce Child Pornography
and Receipt and Viewing of Child Pornography is not Protected by
the First Amendment
Appellant avers that he was in a “long-distance relationship” with
Ms. Wilson and the only means by which they could engage in consensual
sexual acts as part of their relationship was over the internet. 13 At issue is
whether Appellant’s repeated solicitation and advice to Ms. Wilson, a sixteen-
year-old “minor” 14 for purposes of Article 134, UCMJ, our child pornography
statute, seeking her production of still and video images of herself engaged in
sexually explicit conduct and his receipt and viewing of those same images
are constitutionally protected.
Appellant readily admits that “no court has expressly held that child por-
nography laws, used to prosecute people in a consensual relationship, violate
the Constitution.” 15 This Court will not be the first. We uniformly reject
Appellant’s claims that the Constitution affords protection to one in Appel-
lant’s situation engaged in the production, receipt, and viewing of child
pornography.
10 See United States v. Goings, 72 M.J. 202, 205 (C.A.A.F. 2013) (citing United
States v. Ali, 71 M.J. 256, 265 (C.A.A.F. 2012)).
11 United States v. Sweeney, 70 M.J. 296, 304 (C.A.A.F. 2011) (citation omitted).
12 Goings, 72 M.J. at 205 (citations omitted).
13 Appellant’s Brief at 2.
14Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (2016 ed.), pt. IV, ¶ 68b.c.(4) (“ ‘Minor’
means any person under the age of 18 years.”).
15 Appellant’s Brief at 6.
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In New York v. Ferber, 16 the United States Supreme Court considered a
state statute criminalizing the pornographic display of children. The New
York Court of Appeals had held the statute violated the First Amendment. In
the “first examination of a statute directed at and limited to depictions of
sexual activity involving children,” 17 the Court contrasted unprotected
obscenity from protected expression: “There are certain well-defined and
narrowly limited classes of speech, the prevention and punishment of which
have never been thought to raise any Constitutional problem.” 18 Not only was
it “implicit in the history of the First Amendment” that obscenity was “utterly
without redeeming social importance,” but legislation from the States and
Congress, and even international agreements all provided examples of its
legal proscription. 19
While the New York Court of Appeals applied the obscenity standard
from Miller v. California 20 to delineate between protected and unprotected
expression, the Supreme Court found its previous caution of the “inherent
dangers of undertaking to regulate any form of expression” 21 did not apply in
the same way to child pornography, itself an area where the government was
“entitled to greater leeway in the regulation of pornographic depictions of
children.” 22 Specifically, the Ferber Court found “compelling” the govern-
ment’s interest in “safeguarding the physical and psychological well-being of
a minor,” 23 “even when the laws have operated in the sensitive area of
constitutionally protected rights.” 24 “The prevention of sexual exploitation
16 458 U.S. 747 (1982).
17 Id. at 753.
18 Id. at 754 (quoting Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U.S. 568, 571-72 (1942))
(internal quotation marks omitted).
19Id. (citing Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476 (1957)) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
20 413 U.S. 15 (1973).
21 Ferber, 458 U.S. at 755 (quoting Miller, 413 U.S. at 23).
22 Id. at 756.
23 Id. at 756-57 (quoting Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court, 457 U.S. 596,
607 (1982)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
24 Id. at 757 (citing Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158 (1944) (upholding a law
not allowing a child to distribute literature on the street); Ginsberg v. New York, 390
U.S. 629 (1968) (upholding law “protecting children from exposure to nonobscene
literature.”); FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978) (“the Government’s
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Opinion of the Court
and abuse of children constitutes a government objective of surpassing
importance.” 25 Moreover, the Court noted that both legislatures and profes-
sional literature found that the “use of children as subjects of pornographic
materials is harmful to the physiological, emotional, and mental health of the
child.” 26
Although Ferber involved distribution that may have exacerbated the
harm, the Court—even in that pre-digital era of film photography and well
before internet file sharing and preservation—noted the production of visual
materials formed a permanent record of the child involved in sex acts such
that they “may haunt [the child] in future years, long after the original
misdeed took place.” 27 In fact, the Court emphasized the legislature’s interest
in devising laws with real vigor concerning not only the distribution of child
pornography, but against those who produced the photographs and videos as
these persons were already difficult to flush out. The Court concluded the
Miller obscenity standard was insufficient to address the scourge of child
pornography as it “does not reflect the State’s particular and more compelling
interest in prosecuting those who promote the sexual exploitation of chil-
dren.” 28
The Court found child pornography to be “without the protection of the
First Amendment.” 29 Nonetheless, that still required the proscribed conduct
to be sufficiently defined in the law. Specifically, the Court found that the
“nature of the harm to be combated requires that the state offense be limited
to works that visually depict sexual conduct by children below a specified
age.” 30
interest in the ‘well-being of its youth’ justified special treatment of indecent
broadcasting received by adults as well as children.”)).
25 Id. at 757.
26 Id. at 758.
27 Id. at 759 n. 10 (internal citation omitted).
28 Id. at 761.
29 Id. at 764.
30 Id. (emphasis in original). Here the Court noted that states and the federal
government then defined a “child” for child pornography purposes as one being under
eighteen, seventeen, or sixteen years of age to even those who appeared under a
specified age or who appeared as a prepubescent. See id. at n.17.
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While the Court had previously overturned a law criminalizing private
possession of (adult) obscene material in Stanley v. Georgia, 31 it upheld Ohio’s
child pornography statute in Osborne v. Ohio. 32 The Court reiterated that its
holding in Stanley was narrow, distinguishing it from Osborne where the
interest of the state was far more specific: “to protect the victims of child
pornography . . . [with] hopes to destroy a market for the exploitative use of
children.” 33
The Court agreed that the legislature had a vitally important interest in
protecting child pornography subjects from suffering physiological, emotional,
and mental health harm. Therefore, it was “surely reasonable for the State to
conclude that it will decrease the production of child pornography if it
penalizes those who possess and view the product, thereby decreasing
demand.” 34 The Court found this similar to the persuasive argument in
Ferber where
[t]he advertising and selling of child pornography provide
an economic motive for and are thus an integral part of the
production of such materials, an activity illegal throughout the
Nation. “It rarely has been suggested that the constitutional
freedom for speech and press extends its immunity to speech or
writing used as an integral part of conduct in violation of a val-
id criminal statute.” 35
It also recognized that there were other factors in support of this statute:
First, as Ferber recognized, the materials produced by child
pornographers permanently record the victim’s abuse. The
pornography’s continued existence causes the child victims con-
tinuing harm by haunting the children in years to come. The
State’s ban on possession and viewing encourages the posses-
sors of these materials to destroy them. Second, encouraging
the destruction of these materials is also desirable because evi-
31 394 U.S. 557 (1969).
32 495 U.S. 103 (1990). Despite the constitutionality of the statute, the Court
reversed Osborne’s conviction as the state failed to prove the lewdness element.
33 Id. at 109 (emphasis added).
34 Id. at 109-10.
35 Id. at 110 (citing Ferber, 458 U.S. at 761-62) (quoting Giboney v. Empire Stor-
age & Ice. Co., 336 U.S. 490, 498 (1949)).
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dence suggests that pedophiles use child pornography to seduce
other children into sexual activity. 36
The Court clearly recognized, as do we, that the harm imposed upon a
child (or to other children) by being the subject of child pornography does not
immediately vanish upon the passage of months or years to a time when that
child is no longer a child.
Nor does lawful consent to sexual acts immunize an adult from criminal
liability for his separate act of documenting the sex and thereby creating
child pornography. In United States v. Bach, 37 the appellant argued, unsuc-
cessfully, before the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals that photos he took of a
sixteen-year-old boy masturbating and performing oral sex on him were not
criminal because the boy met the legal age of consent concerning the sexual
acts. Notably, the court detailed that while the state statute defined the age
of consent to sexual activity as sixteen, the federal child pornography
statute 38 defined a minor as one under eighteen years of age. In fact, in 1984
Congress changed from sixteen to eighteen the defined age of a minor,
expressly to avoid confusion regarding when a particular child appeared to
have entered puberty and to better enforce the child pornography law. 39
Appellant argues that the landscape of free speech protections—and by
extension his claims concerning child pornography—was “fundamentally
changed” 40 by the Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Stevens. 41 In
Stevens, the Court found the First Amendment free speech guarantees were
violated by the federal statute that criminalized not the direct cruelty to
animals, but the making, possessing, or sale of depictions of those despicable
acts through “crush videos.” “The First Amendment provides that ‘Congress
shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.’ As a general matter,
the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict
36 Id. at 111 (internal citation omitted).
37 400 F.3d 622 (8th Cir. 2005).
38 18 U.S.C. § 2256.
39 See Bach, 400 F.3d at 629 (citing H.R. Rep. No. 98-536, at 7-8 (1983), reprinted
in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 492, 498-99).
40 Appellant’s Brief at 14.
41 559 U.S. 460 (2010).
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expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its con-
tent.” 42 But the Court recognized some distinct exceptions.
From 1791 to the present, however, the First Amendment
has permitted restrictions upon the content of speech in a few
limited areas, and has never included a freedom to disregard
these traditional limitations. These historic and traditional
categories long familiar to the bar—including obscenity . . . and
speech integral to criminal conduct—are well-defined and nar-
rowly limited classes of speech, the prevention and punishment
of which have never been thought to raise any Constitutional
problem. 43
The Court noted that its earlier decision in Ferber made clear there were
“historically unprotected categories of speech” in which “the evil to be
restricted so overwhelmingly outweighs the expressive interests, if any, at
stake, that no process of case-by-case adjudication is required,” because “the
balance of competing interests is clearly struck.” 44
But the Court emphasized that there was much more at stake in child
pornography matters: “[t]he market for child pornography was “intrinsically
related” to the underlying abuse, and was therefore “an integral part of the
production of such materials, an activity illegal throughout the Nation.” 45 The
Court reinforced that “Ferber thus grounded its analysis in a previously
recognized, long-established category of unprotected speech, and our subse-
quent decisions have shared this understanding.” 46
Far from the “fundamental change” claimed by Appellant, Stevens and
Brown v. Entm’t Merchs. Ass’n, 47 decided in its next term, show a consistent
42 Id. at 468 (quoting Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union, 535 U.S. 564,
573 (2002)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
43 Id. at 468-69 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
44 Id. at 470 (quoting Ferber, 458 U.S. at 763-64).
45 Id. at 471 (quoting Ferber, 458 U.S. at 759) (internal quotation marks omitted).
46 Id. (citing Osborne, 495 U.S. at 110 (noting Ferber’s “persuasive” argument
concerning the “integral part” that the advertising and sale of child pornography
played in its unlawful production); Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, 535 U.S. 234,
249-50 (2002) (distribution and sale “were intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of
children,” the speech therefore possessing “a proximate link to the crime from which
it came”) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
47 564 U.S. 786 (2011).
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approach to First Amendment and content restriction analysis. In Brown, the
Court considered a First Amendment challenge to a California law prohibit-
ing sales or rentals of “violent” video games to minors and special packaging
to reinforce this requirement. The Court reiterated that the general rule was
that legislatures could not “restrict expression because of its message, its
ideas, its subject matter, or its content.” 48 But, citing Stevens, it reminded
that from the ratification of the First Amendment, content of speech has
permissibly been restricted “in a few limited areas, and has never included a
freedom to disregard these traditional limitations.” 49 Specifically, “[t]hese
limited areas . . . represent ‘well-defined and narrowly limited classes of
speech, the prevention and punishment of which have never been thought to
raise any Constitutional problem.’ ” 50
The legislation failed in both Brown and Stevens because it impermissibly
imposed content-based restrictions on speech without establishing that these
restrictions targeted a “well-defined and narrowly limited class[ ] of speech”
that had been historically proscribed. The Brown Court noted that in Stevens,
there was a long history against the commission of animal cruelty, but none
criminalizing its visual representation and sale. So, too, in Brown where the
Court posited that there was no long national history proscribing representa-
tions of violent behavior to minors. “[W]ithout persuasive evidence that a
novel restriction on content is part of a long (if heretofore unrecognized)
tradition of proscription, a legislature may not revise the judgment of the
American people, embodied in the First Amendment, that the benefits of its
restrictions on the Government outweigh the costs.” 51
Dissenting in Brown, Justice Breyer believed the statute provided only a
limited rather than a categorical restriction on speech and should be upheld:
No one here argues that depictions of violence, even extreme
violence, automatically fall outside the First Amendment’s pro-
tective scope as, for example, do obscenity and depictions of
child pornography. We properly speak of categories of expres-
48 Id. at 790-91 (quoting Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union, 535 U.S. at
573) (internal quotation marks omitted).
49 Id. at 791 (quoting Stevens, 559 U.S. at 468) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted).
50 Id. (quoting Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U.S. 568, 571-72 (1942)).
51 Id. at 792 (quoting Stevens, 559 U.S. at 470) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted).
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sion that lack protection when, like “child pornography,” the
category is broad, when it applies automatically, and when the
State can prohibit everyone, including adults, from obtaining
access to the material within it. 52
Regarding Appellant’s lament that he and Ms. Wilson were merely
“show[ing] each other mutual affection in one of the few ways they could” 53
and reiterating that “he never shared or gave the photos to anyone,” 54 we find
persuasive United States v. Hotaling, 55 in which the Second Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected the appellant’s assertion that he created and maintained
possession of child pornography solely to further his own sexual fantasies
without display to others or distribution of the images. The court emphasized
that “[t]hese are not mere records of the defendant’s fantasies, but child
pornography that implicates actual minors and is primed for entry into the
distribution chain.” 56 Not only had the Supreme Court recognized in Osborne
that an underground network had been created, but Congress in the PRO-
TECT Act of 2003 57 found that greater protections were necessary given that
the computer age had spawned new clandestine means to maintain and
circulate child pornography between individual traffickers. 58
52 Id. at 842 (Breyer, J., dissenting) (emphasis in original).
53 Appellant’s Brief at 10.
54 Id. at 11. See also Appellant’s admission that he “never shared the videos with
his friends, nor did he distribute or post them online so others could see.” Id. at 12.
55 634 F.3d 725 (2d Cir. 2011).
56 Id. at 730 (citing Osborne, 495 U.S. at 110).
57Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children
Today Act of 2003.
58 Hotaling, 634 F.3d at 730 (citing the PROTECT Act of 2003, Congressional
Findings, Pub. L. No. 108-21, 117 Stat. 650). See also United States v. Williams, 553
U.S. 285, 307 (2008) (“Child pornography harms and debases the most defenseless of
our citizens. Both the State and Federal Governments have sought to suppress it for
many years, only to find it proliferating through the new medium of the Internet.”
Although the Court previously held the preceding statute to be unconstitutionally
overbroad concerning the possession and distribution of material pandered as child
pornography, without regard to whether it was in fact child pornography, “Congress
responded with a carefully crafted attempt to eliminate the First Amendment
problems we identified.”)
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In Doe v. Boland, 59 the appellant—for his expert testimony as an attorney
in child pornography cases—morphed pictures of actual children’s faces onto
the bodies of adults performing sexual acts. The Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals found that “the First Amendment offers no sanctuary” from certain
forms of speech, to include child pornography. 60 The court rejected the
appellant’s theory that the harm in child pornography was reliant on
distribution to others that was done when that child was still a minor and
then only if the depicted child actually suffered psychological harm, reiterat-
ing that “[i]n today’s digital world, any image is primed for entry into the
distribution chain of underground child pornographers.” 61 Ultimately, the
court found that, even absent any display or transmission beyond the
courtroom, Boland’s “creation and initial publication of the images itself
harmed Jane Doe and Jane Roe, and that is enough to remove Boland’s
actions from the protections of the First Amendment.” 62
In United States v. Laursen, 63 the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed
the appellant’s conviction on production and possession of child pornography
under federal law despite the state law allowing for consensual sexual
relations between the appellant and a sixteen-year-old girl. Similar to
Ms. Wilson’s testimony in this case, 64 the girl in Laursen testified that she
took the “selfie” photographs with her own cell phone even though she “did
not like taking pictures like that,” but did so at the behest of the appellant. 65
As the court stated, “the prohibited conduct engaged in by Laursen was
producing pornographic material involving [the girl], not simply engaging in
a sexual relationship with her. And the Supreme Court has made it crystal
clear that child pornography is not constitutionally protected.” 66 Further, it is
59 698 F.3d 877 (6th Cir. 2012).
60 Id. at 883 (citing Stevens, 559 U.S. 460; Ferber, 458 U.S. at 763-64).
61 Id. at 884 (quoting Hotaling, 634 F.3d at 730) (citing Osborne v. Ohio, 495 U.S.
103, 110 (1990)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
62 Id.
63 847 F.3d 1026 (9th Cir. 2017).
64 See R. at 392-96, 400, 402-03.
65 Laursen, 847 F.3d at 1030 (internal quotation marks omitted).
66 Id. at 1034 (citing Ferber, 458 U.S. at 763).
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clear that “protecting children from sexual abuse and exploitation constitutes
a particularly compelling interest of the government.” 67
In United States v. Rouse, 68 the appellant was convicted under the federal
child pornography statute when he recorded his sexual exploits with his
sixteen-year-old partner on his cell phone and sent this video to her, and she
responded to him with sexually explicit photographs she had taken of herself.
Under his mistaken view of Stevens, Rouse asserted that absent a separate
and unlawful sexual act with one under the age of consent, his sexual
intercourse with a legally-consenting sixteen-year-old girl could not consti-
tute abuse. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected his argument,
reiterating Ferber’s conclusion that child pornography is “without the
protection of the First Amendment.” 69
In State v. Barr, 70 the New Hampshire Supreme Court rejected a claim of
protected freedom of speech raised by the appellant who legally engaged in a
consensual sexual relationship with a sixteen-year-old girl, but was convicted
of manufacturing and possessing images of child sexual abuse with that same
girl. “Stevens did not disturb the Supreme Court’s previous holdings that
producing and possessing images of an actual child engaged in sexual activity
are unprotected by the First Amendment, regardless of whether the underly-
ing sexual activity was legal.” 71 The court recognized that “[t]he criminal
conduct underlying child pornography [was] not statutory rape, but recording
a child engaged in sexual conduct.” 72 “Consenting to sexual intercourse and
consenting to having that act memorialized, potentially forever, are decisions
of different degrees, with corresponding consequences of different magni-
tudes.” 73
Appellant argues by way of law review articles that “sexting” is merely
commonplace youthful expression between those under eighteen that should
not be criminalized and that his and Ms. Wilson’s preexisting platonic
67 Id.
68 936 F.3d 849 (8th Cir. 2019).
69 Id. at 851 (quoting Ferber, 458 U.S. at 764) (internal quotation marks omitted).
70 233 A.3d 341 (N.H. 2019).
71 Id. at 349 (citing Osborne, 495 U.S. at 111; Ferber, 458 U.S. at 765; Rouse, 936
F.3d at 852).
72 Id. at 350 (citing Stevens, 559 U.S. at 471).
73 Id. (citing United States v. Fletcher, 634 F.3d 395, 403 (7th Cir. 2011)).
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relationship within a high school JROTC program blossomed into a long-
distance relationship in which their options to “show[ ] each other mutual
affection” narrowed to this video and photographic medium. 74 We easily reject
the first as it merely advocates for future legislation in the face of statutes in
place that have passed constitutional muster. We also note that, unlike those
sixteen and seventeen years of age, Appellant was a twenty-year-old adult
throughout the entirety of his offenses and a United States Marine subject to
the UCMJ. 75 As to his second argument, we need not opine on the develop-
ment of any relationship they shared. Appellant knew Ms. Wilson was a
sixteen-year-old high school student living with her parents. Ms. Wilson
testified and other evidence showed that Appellant persistently overcame her
protestations, instructed her on lighting and camera position, and taught her
how to masturbate and provide him with video and still images of her
engaging in sexually explicit conduct that he received and viewed.
Under the UCMJ, Appellant could indeed legally have had sex with a
consenting sixteen-year-old. However, his separate acts as an adult to solicit
and advise in the production of and to receive and view images of sexually
explicit conduct from this or any other sixteen-year-old minor constitute a
criminal offense whether he was stationed in Japan, or even if he was
recording the minor while directly engaged in sexual acts with her. His
claims of a dating relationship and limitations on their means to share their
affection outside of this video and photographic medium do not alter the
criminality of his actions. In no way were his actions protected as speech or
expression by the First Amendment; rather, they were proscribed under
Article 134, UCMJ, as child pornography.
C. The 5th Amendment Likewise Affords Appellant’s Actions no
Protection
Appellant additionally argues he enjoyed a right to privacy in the images
of Ms. Wilson. 76 He points to the Supreme Court’s groundbreaking ruling in
74 Appellant’s Brief at 10.
75 See United States v. Shea, No. ACM 39158, 2018 CCA LEXIS 160, *9 (A.F. Ct.
Crim. App. Mar. 26, 2018) (unpublished) (“On appeal, Appellant [a twenty- and
twenty-one-year-old E-3 at the time of his offenses] refers to commentaries on the
prevalence of ‘sexting’ among teenagers; however, Appellant was not a fellow
teenager or high school student.”).
76 See Appellant’s Brief at 11.
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Opinion of the Court
Lawrence v. Texas 77 where it found a Texas statute criminalizing same-sex
intimate sexual conduct to be in violation of the Due Process Clause. There,
the Court considered the police response to a report of a weapons disturb-
ance. That prompted police to enter Lawrence’s apartment, finding him
engaged in anal sex—what the Texas statute considered “deviate sexual
intercourse,” even when conducted in private with a consensual, same-sex
partner.
The Court sought to determine “whether the petitioners were free as
adults to engage in the private conduct in the exercise of their liberty.” 78
Concluding that the law proscribing consensual sodomy was violative of the
liberty interest of Lawrence and his partner “to engage in their conduct
without intervention of the government,” the Court made clear that:
The present case does not involve minors. It does not in-
volve persons who might be injured or coerced or who are situ-
ated in relationships where consent might not easily be re-
fused. It does not involve public conduct or prostitution. It does
not involve whether the government must give formal recogni-
tion to any relationship that homosexual persons seek to enter.
The case does involve two adults who, with full and mutual
consent from each other, engaged in sexual practices common
to a homosexual lifestyle. 79
Ultimately, the Court found the statute unconstitutional as it “furthers no
legitimate state interest which can justify its intrusion into the personal and
private life of the individual.” 80
In light of Lawrence, in United States v. Marcum, 81 the CAAF was asked
to consider the constitutionality of Article 125, UCMJ, 82 at that time the
enumerated offense of sodomy. The CAAF noted that Article 125 forbade all
forms of sodomy, regardless of consent, and without regard to the location or
gender of the participants. As Marcum, an E-6, was acquitted by a panel of
members of forcible sodomy, he argued that his conviction of consensual
77 539 U.S. 558 (2003).
78 Id. at 564 (emphasis added).
79 Id. at 578.
80 Id.
81 60 M.J. 198 (C.A.A.F. 2004).
82 10 U.S.C. § 925 (2000).
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Opinion of the Court
sodomy with an adult, an E-4 whom he supervised and rated, violated the
very liberty interest announced in Lawrence.
The CAAF found that “Lawrence requires [a] searching constitutional
inquiry” that “argues for contextual, as applied analysis, rather than facial
review . . . [that] is particularly apparent in the military context.” 83 Service
Members, the CAAF reiterated, “do not leave constitutional safeguards and
judicial protection behind when they enter military service.” 84 Yet, by virtue
of the military being a “specialized society,” 85 we must also “specifically
address[ ] contextual factors involving military life.” 86 In addressing an as-
applied constitutional challenge, the CAAF crafted a three-part analysis:
First, was the conduct that the accused was found guilty of
committing of a nature to bring it within the liberty interest
identified by the Supreme Court? Second, did the conduct en-
compass any behavior or factors identified by the Supreme
Court as outside the analysis in Lawrence? Third, are there ad-
ditional factors relevant solely in the military environment that
affect the nature and reach of the Lawrence liberty interest? 87
Much like the CAAF, even if we assumed without deciding that the first
prong was satisfied, Appellant’s claim unravels on the second prong. We
quickly encounter the same distinctions posed in Lawrence and reiterated in
Marcum—“did the conduct involve minors? Did it involve public conduct or
prostitution? Did it involve persons who might be injured or coerced or who
are situated in relationships where consent might not easily be refused?” 88
While the CAAF interpreted the latter disqualifying question to apply to
Marcum as the supervising noncommissioned officer, here we have
Ms. Wilson who—by definition of the statute—was a minor. 89 Her maturity,
83 Marcum, 60 M.J. at 205.
84 Id., citing United States v. Mitchell, 39 M.J. 131, 135 (C.M.A. 1994) (quoting
Weiss v. United States, 510 U.S. 163, 194 (1994) (Ginsburg, J., concurring)).
85 Id. (citation omitted).
86 Id. (citation omitted).
87 Id. at 206-07.
88 Id. at 207.
89 See Goings, 72 M.J. at 207 (citing Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 578) (“Lawrence did
not establish a presumptive constitutional protection for all offenses arising in the
context of sexual activity”—in particular, pointing out that minors and those coerced
were not part of their consideration in that case.); United States v. Meakin, 78 M.J.
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Opinion of the Court
the quality of their relationship, geographical hardship, or ability to separate-
ly consent to sexual acts is immaterial to the crimes for which Appellant was
charged and convicted.
Several Federal, State, and Service courts of criminal appeal have reject-
ed assertions that Lawrence extends privacy protection to criminal images of
minors that arose from consensual sex acts. 90 We find those holdings persua-
sive. The same applies in our present case. An adult United States Marine,
Appellant reached back from Japan via the relative stealth of the internet to
a girl from his former high school with whom he had last interacted when he
was a senior and she was a freshman in high school. Even were we to assume
they were indeed a couple and mutually consenting to a sexual relationship,
Ms. Wilson’s age made her a minor with regard to the Article 134, UCMJ,
punitive article for child pornography. Separate from any sexual relationship
itself, Appellant’s actions to solicit and advise the production of child pornog-
raphy and to receive and view the same were proscribed by statute and not
subject to protection under Lawrence.
D. Article 66(c), UCMJ
Following our complete review, we find that Congress made clear both in
Title 18 and in the UCMJ that it had no tolerance for the criminal exploita-
tion of children in pornography. The courts have rejected similar arguments
of adults who did or could have engaged in a physical relationship, but were
396, 403 (C.A.A.F. 2019) (quoting Seegmiller v. LaVerkin City, 528 F.3d 762, 771
(10th Cir. 2008)) (“Lawrence did not purport to include any and all behavior touching
on sex within its purview, and did not ‘conclude that an even more general right to
engage in private sexual conduct would be a fundamental right.’ ”).
90 See Bach, 400 F.3d at 629 (The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the
appellant’s liberty and privacy arguments, noting that Lawrence made clear that its
protections were limited to consenting adults conducting their activities in private
whereas Bach had consensual sex with a minor and the pictures he possessed and
transmitted were of that minor who only relented to pose nude after refusing many of
Bach’s earlier requests.); Ortiz-Graulau v. United States, 756 F.3d 12 (1st Cir. 2014)
(Rejecting the appellant’s Fifth Amendment claim that he was immune from criminal
sanction under the child pornography statute when the photographs merely
documented the couple’s consensual sexual relationship.); State v. Senters, 699
N.W.2d 810, 816 (Neb. 2005) (“When a law regulates sexual conduct involving a
minor, Lawrence is inapplicable.”); Shea, 2018 CCA LEXIS at *5 (“The right of
competent, consenting adults to engage in private sexual activity recognized in
Lawrence does not extend to protect Appellant’s possession of images of 16- or 17-
year-old minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct.”).
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Opinion of the Court
held criminally liable for their acts involved with producing or receiving and
viewing child pornography.
We too explicitly reject Appellant’s invitation to disregard an abundantly
clear law and the intent of its drafters, or to find his convictions were not
just. Indeed, we side with the numerous courts which have found on similar
facts that satisfaction of the age of consent for a physical sexual relationship
does not bar the government from properly legislating against the evils of
pornography, defining the victim as one below the age of majority.
The intent of Congress and the President in criminalizing pornography
involving a child under the age of eighteen years is clearly expressed in
Article 134, UCMJ. Appellant has failed to elicit any facts that show why he,
an adult Marine, should not be held criminally liable for his actions concern-
ing sixteen-year-old Ms. Wilson. 91
Appellant’s argument, then, takes the form of an equitable plea or prayer
for clemency that is beyond the purview of this Court. 92
III. CONCLUSION
After careful consideration of the record and briefs of appellate counsel,
we have determined that the approved findings and the sentence are correct
in law and fact and that there is no error materially prejudicial to Appellant’s
substantial rights. 93 Accordingly, the findings and the sentence as approved
by the convening authority are AFFIRMED.
Chief Judge Emeritus CRISFIELD and Senior Judge HOLIFIELD concur.
91 See Goings, 72 M.J. at 205 (citations omitted).
92 See Nerad, 69 M.J. at 140 (C.A.A.F. 2010) (quoting United States v. Oakland
Cannabis Buyers’ Coop., 532 U.S. 483, 497 (2001)) (“[W]hile Article 66(c), UCMJ,
affords a [Service Criminal Court of Appeal, or CCA] broad powers, when faced with
a constitutional statute a CCA ‘cannot, for example, override Congress’ policy
decision, articulated in a statute, as to what behavior should be prohibited.’ ”).
93 UCMJ arts. 59, 66.
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Opinion of the Court
FOR THE COURT:
RODGER A. DREW, JR.
Clerk of Court
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