United States v. James Napier , 787 F.3d 333 ( 2015 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 15a0096p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                              ┐
    Plaintiff-Appellee,   │
    │
    │       No. 14-3492
    v.                                              │
    >
    │
    JAMES O. NAPIER,                                       │
    Defendant-Appellant.     │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 1:13-cr-00016—Susan J. Dlott, District Judge.
    Argued: April 28, 2015
    Decided and Filed: May 20, 2015
    Before: CLAY, KETHLEDGE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Kevin M. Schad, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Cincinnati,
    Ohio, for Appellant. Benjamin C. Glassman, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE,
    Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Kevin M. Schad, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL
    PUBLIC DEFENDER, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellant. Benjamin C. Glassman, UNITED
    STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted James O. Napier of
    twelve counts of production, transportation, distribution, and receipt of child pornography. The
    charges against Napier stemmed from his sexual molestation of an 11-month-old baby and a 9-
    year-old girl, which he filmed and then traded on the Internet with others who share child
    1
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                                Page 2
    pornography. Napier now appeals, asserting four distinct arguments: (1) the district court erred
    in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment, which was based on alleged prosecutorial
    misconduct; (2) the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal, because
    the government failed to prove an interstate commerce connection for all twelve counts of
    conviction; (3) the district court erred in admitting at trial—over Napier’s objections—various
    electronic devices as exhibits that included markings indicating the devices were manufactured
    outside of the United States and a document obtained from Time Warner Cable Company; and
    (4) the district court erred in denying his motion to vacate his conviction on the distribution-of-
    child-pornography charge, which was allegedly afflicted by a “fatal” variance and violated
    Napier’s due process rights. We AFFIRM the district court in all respects.
    I.
    A.
    James O. Napier (“Napier”) met Laura Schiele (“Schiele”) when she was 19 years old.
    Napier was over thirty at that time and, according to Schiele, went by the nicknames “J-Kid” and
    “Kid.” Napier and Schiele began dating and soon moved in together. In November 2008, the
    couple moved into an apartment on Sunset Avenue in Cincinnati, Ohio.
    Napier and Schiele each had their own computers. Schiele used an Acer computer while
    Napier used a computer tower that he got from his job. Schiele was aware that Napier used his
    computer to, among other things, look at “regular” pornography. Schiele also was aware that
    Napier had a foot fetish.
    On November 9, 2009, Schiele’s sister, Jennifer, called and asked Schiele to babysit her
    11-month-old daughter (“Victim 1”). Schiele was unable to look after her niece, so she told
    Jennifer to call Napier to ask him to babysit until Schiele got off from work. Alone with his
    girlfriend’s niece that morning, Napier raped the child and recorded the abuse in photographs
    and a video.
    Napier traded this video with other child pornographers via email. For instance, using the
    moniker “Kid James” and the email address jonapier1992@gmail.com, Napier referred to this
    video as his “anal baby rape video.” When one of these trading partners informed Napier that he
    No. 14-3492                        United States v. Napier                             Page 3
    had already received this video from another child pornographer called “Cyanide,” Napier
    responded: “[T]hat’s funny! I made this video myself and traded it with [C]yanide. [S]he’s not
    two years old she’s only one years old, but she was only 6 months when I filmed her. [I] don’t
    know why [C]yanide listed her at 2 years old[.]” Another of Napier’s trading partners wanted
    more pictures and videos of Victim 1 and also wanted to rape her himself. Over the course of
    several emails, Napier responded that he had made the video himself; had taken the photographs
    himself; and had traded the video “with a few people.” Napier also repeatedly expressed that he
    was having difficulty making a new video because he “can’t get [Victim 1] alone long enough to
    take new pics or make another movie yet.”
    One of the people with whom Napier sought to trade child pornography turned out to be
    FBI Special Agent Deidre Gotjen (“Agent Gotjen”), who was located in Phoenix, Arizona.
    Agent Gotjen is currently assigned to the Public Corruption Squad, where she works on cases
    involving violent crimes against children and human trafficking. As part of the Innocent Images
    National Initiative, Agent Gotjen worked to “combat the sexual exploitation of children on the
    [I]nternet.” In the summer of 2010, Agent Gotjen received a tip that the website “EuroDisc” was
    advertising the sale of child pornography. She explored the website and verified that it offered
    child pornography, either for free or for sale. EuroDisc also included a link called “Guestbook,”
    which “allowed . . . individuals who were on the site to communicate with one another.”
    Guestbook “recorded the date, name, time, and oftentimes the e-mail address of the individual
    posting so that they could be contacted offline.” In one Guestbook post in July 2010, a person
    posted the following message: “looking to TRADE videos and pics. [I] have nearly 100 videos
    and thousands of pics.        [G]irls and boys all ages.        [O]nly serious TRADERS reply.
    jonapier1992@gmail.com[.]” In other July 2010 postings advertising this email address, the
    poster identified himself as “Kid” and reiterated his interest in trading.
    Using an assumed email address, Agent Gotjen emailed jonapier1992@gmail.com to say
    she was “serious” about trading. “Kid James” emailed in response, “[Y]es! [L]et’s TRADE!
    [W]hat do you like?” After some back and forth, Agent Gotjen received an email from “Kid
    James” with a video file attached. The video, entitled “47.wmv,” was a compilation of movies
    No. 14-3492                        United States v. Napier                                Page 4
    depicting the sexual abuse of minors. Agent Gotjen sent back a corrupted video file; when “Kid
    James” realized he could not open the file, his communications with Agent Gotjen ended.
    Agent Gotjen sought to determine jonapier1992@gmail.com’s identity, first by
    subpoenaing Google (from whom she learned that jonapier1992’s IP address was being accessed
    through Cincinnati Bell) and then by subpoenaing Cincinnati Bell (which led to a dead end). She
    then searched Google for the email address and variations thereof. This query led her to profiles
    on the websites FootFetishTube.com, AdultSpace.com, MySpace.com, Facebook.com, and
    Reunion.com. From these profiles, Agent Gotjen learned that jonapier1992 was most likely a
    36-year-old man living in Cincinnati named James O. Napier. Agent Gotjen ultimately obtained
    Napier’s license photo from the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles, which matched photos from the
    websites she had searched on the Internet. Agent Gotjen then packaged up her work and sent it
    to the FBI’s Cincinnati office.
    Meanwhile, Napier continued living with Schiele while trading online with other child
    pornographers. For instance, in February 2011, he sent a number of videos with sexually explicit
    titles—including one entitled “6 months old.wmv”—to someone with the email address
    “mynothing13@yahoo.uk.” In return, Napier asked, “Do you have any younger girls? (Very
    young?) (The younger the better!).”
    Napier and Schiele broke up around March 2012. When he moved out of their apartment
    on Sunset Avenue, he took his computer tower with him and Schiele kept her Acer computer.
    Napier promptly moved into the home of Candace Allen (“Allen”), the mother of his 6-year-old
    son. Also living in the home were Allen’s two other children by a different father, a 7-year-old
    boy and an 8-year-old girl (“Victim 2”).
    Shortly after Victim 2’s ninth birthday, Napier began sexually abusing her and recording
    it. The details are horrific. Victim 2 identified herself as 9 years old in several of the videos. On
    November 23, 2012, Napier emailed a fellow child pornographer who had earlier expressed
    interest in trading full-length videos.      Napier responded, “Sure[,] we can begin trading
    immediately[.] I just [sic] me a chubby 9yo[,] we’ve been having lots of fun[.]”
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 5
    By this time, agents at the FBI’s Cincinnati office had determined—after subpoenaing
    Time       Warner   Cable—that     the    person    emailing    with    Agent     Gotjen     from
    jonapier1992@gmail.com had likely done so using an IP address accessed from an apartment on
    Sunset Avenue. Neither Napier nor Schiele still lived at this address. The apartment manager,
    however, provided agents with a forwarding address, at which the agents were able to locate
    Schiele. After meeting with agents, Schiele gave them her Acer computer. Special Agent Eric
    Proudfoot (“Agent Proudfoot”) submitted the computer to forensic analyst Skip Burnham, asking
    him to “examine the computer for the presence of any images of child pornography, any
    references to the text string jonapier1992@gmail.com, and any text references to a particular file
    called 47.wmv.”
    Burnham found these references on the Acer computer. Burnham also found that several
    sequentially numbered photos taken with a Polaroid camera were missing from among the larger
    images on the computer. These images had been deleted, but traces of the images were left as
    thumbnails accessible to the computer’s operating system. Burnham was able to recover the
    missing photos among the thumbnail images. The photos were of “a small child, an infant[,]”
    with an erect penis close to her mouth. Burnham reported his findings to Agent Proudfoot, who
    in turn again met with Schiele. Schiele identified the child as her niece. The agents then sought
    an arrest warrant for Napier and a search warrant for the jonapier1992@gmail.com email
    account.
    The FBI arrested Napier on January 18, 2013. During his arrest, Napier had on his
    person two cellphones and a microSD memory card. These items, Napier’s tower computer
    (which Allen provided to authorities), and the email account from Google were submitted for
    complete forensic analysis.
    During a search of the Gmail account, Burnham found large photographs of Schiele’s
    niece that matched the thumbnails on the Acer computer. He also found the video that Napier
    had made of himself abusing Victim 1; the video “was titled three different ways: 64.wmv, six-
    month-old.wmv, and movie two-year-old girl self-made.wmv.” The account included a great
    deal of email correspondence between Napier and other child pornographers about trading child
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                                Page 6
    pornography. It also included more than a dozen emails that Napier sent to himself, each
    attaching a video file that documented his sexual abuse of Victim 2.
    The computer tower also held images matching those of the Acer thumbnails and the
    Gmail account, depicting Napier’s abuse of Victim 1. Recovered from the microSD memory
    card was a reference to the video file “6 months old.wmv.” One of the cellphones that Napier
    was carrying when he was arrested held photos matching those that Agent Gotjen had found in
    the AdultSpace.com profile for jonapier1992@gmail.com. The other cellphone used that address
    in its email inbox, and the phone contained a video, duplicative of one that Napier had emailed to
    himself in the Gmail account, depicting Napier’s abuse of Victim 2.
    B.
    According to a subsequent order of the district court, the following transpired next:
    During his initial appearance in U.S. District Court [on the day of his
    arrest, January 18, 2013], Napier was appointed a Federal Public Defender.
    Napier was detained without bond and held in the custody of the United States
    Marshal’s Service (USMS), which housed him at the Boone County Jail in
    Burlington, Kentucky. On February 6, 2013, the Government obtained the
    [original] indictment against Napier, which charged him with [twenty-three]
    counts including the production, distribution, and receipt of child pornography.
    In the meantime, on February 1, 2013, the Assistant United States
    Attorney (AUSA) assigned to Napier’s case contacted Cincinnati Police Detective
    (CPD) Kelly Best, Personal Crimes Unit, first by email and then by telephone.
    On that date, the Cincinnati Police Department opened an investigation of Napier
    based on the alleged conduct underlying the production of child pornography
    counts in the Government’s case. This resulted in criminal complaints being filed
    against Napier in Hamilton County, Ohio, on February 6, 2013. These complaints
    charged five counts of sexual conduct by Napier related to two minor victims and
    relate to the conduct charged in the original federal indictment at counts 1, 4, 7,
    11, and 18.
    Also on February 6, 2013, the AUSA assigned to Napier’s case met with
    the CPD detective and they discussed that the CPD detective would interview
    Napier. The AUSA then requested that Napier be moved from the Boone County
    Jail to the Hamilton County Justice Center. Napier was so transported the
    morning of February 7, 2013. Napier’s attorney was not notified of the request to
    transfer or the transfer itself.
    Upon Napier’s arrival at the Hamilton County Justice Center, he was
    almost immediately brought to an interview room where he was met by two CPD
    No. 14-3492                              United States v. Napier                                           Page 7
    detectives, who conducted an approximately hour and a half interview of Napier.
    During the course of the interview, Napier requested an attorney approximately
    seventeen times. Regardless, the officers continued to interview him. As a result,
    Napier made inculpatory statements to the detectives.
    After the interview, Napier was moved to a cell in the Hamilton County
    Justice Center where he stayed until the next morning, February 8, 2013. On that
    date, he was removed from his cell and brought to a Hamilton County courtroom
    for a “bond hearing.” However, at the time, Napier was in federal custody, and
    no writ was obtained from either a state or federal judge in order to secure
    Napier’s appearance for the hearing. Napier was assigned a Hamilton County
    Public Defender on the morning of February 8, 2013, but that attorney had just a
    few minutes to meet with Napier before his “bond hearing” and tried
    unsuccessfully to waive Napier’s appearance in court that morning, where media
    appeared with television cameras. After the “bond hearing,” Napier was moved
    to a new cell where two investigators from the Hamilton County Children’s
    Services arrived to interview him. It was during that interview that the Federal
    Public Defender learned of the situation and went to the Hamilton County Justice
    Center to stop the interview.
    On February 15, 2013, the Government advised Napier’s Federal Public
    Defender that CPD detectives had interviewed Napier on February 7, 2013 and
    provided an audio recording of the interview. The Government subsequently
    notified Napier that it may use the contents of his inculpatory statements to the
    officers during the Government’s rebuttal at trial.
    On October 11, 2013, Napier filed a motion to sever the counts against him and three
    separate motions to dismiss the indictment.1 Relevant to this appeal is Napier’s motion to
    dismiss the indictment based on the above-recounted facts. Specifically, Napier argued that the
    above-recounted series of events, “orchestrated by the government,” “caused a substantial
    violation of his right to due process of law under the Fifth Amendment and his right to counsel
    under the Sixth Amendment” and “violated concepts of fundamental fairness and was shocking
    to the universal sense of justice.” The government responded in opposition on October 25, 2013,
    and the district court held a hearing on Napier’s allegations on November 12, 2013. The parties
    subsequently filed supplemental briefs.
    1
    Napier moved the court to sever the trial of the counts associated with his abuse of Victim 2. He also
    moved to: (1) dismiss the indictment for violation of the Speedy Trial Act; (2) dismiss the counts charging him with
    production of child pornography on the theory that (a) the statute criminalizing that offense was beyond Congress’
    power under the Commerce Clause and (b) the statute was unconstitutionally vague and overbroad; and (3) dismiss
    the indictment on the ground that the transfer of his place of pretrial detention, interview by local police, and “bond
    hearing” in state court amounted to a “shocking violation of the universal sense of justice.”
    No. 14-3492                            United States v. Napier                                       Page 8
    On January 3, 2014, the district court denied Napier’s motion to dismiss. The court first
    found:
    Napier does not cite to any cases with facts remotely analogous to those here, and
    the Court cannot conclude based on the precedent before it that the government’s
    conduct in this case—that is, as Defendant describes it, “intentionally
    participat[ing] in unlawfully transferring Mr. Napier out of federal custody and
    into state custody, interrogating Mr. Napier without counsel in a willful and
    egregious violation of Miranda and the Sixth Amendment, permitting Mr. Napier
    to appear at a state court hearing without obtaining the issuance of a writ from this
    Court or any state court judge, and parading him in front of the media circus that
    was occurring at the time surrounding this case”—rises to the level of conduct
    that warrants a dismissal of an indictment.
    The district court found, however, that “the AUSA instituted Napier’s transfer to Hamilton
    County so that CPD detectives could interview him and did not advise Napier’s appointed
    attorney of this transfer,” and that the AUSA’s actions “demonstrate[d] poor judgment . . . as it
    was certainly foreseeable that an interrogation would take place.” The district court further
    remarked “that the interview by CPD detectives, the public ‘bond hearing’ in Hamilton County
    Court, and the attempted interview by Hamilton County Children’s Services all occurred while
    Napier was in federal custody is astonishing, perplexing, and clearly inappropriate.”
    The district court concluded that the AUSA’s actions did not amount to a Fifth
    Amendment Due Process Clause violation because the AUSA “was not present during the
    interrogation during which CPD detectives did not heed Napier’s requests for counsel, and she is
    not responsible for their conduct.” But, because the AUSA’s actions “laid the groundwork” for
    the CPD’s conduct, the district court ruled that the appropriate remedy was to preclude the
    government’s use at trial of “any evidence obtained during that February 7, 2013 interview by
    the CPD detectives for any purpose[.]” The court also determined that this was a sufficient
    remedy for the alleged Sixth Amendment violation as well.
    Napier was ultimately charged, in a twelve-count superseding indictment filed on
    October 2, 2013, with nine counts of Production of Child Pornography, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (a) and (e);2 one count of Transportation of Child Pornography, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
    2
    Count 1 related to Napier’s abuse of Victim 1 on November 9, 2009. Counts 2-9 related to Napier’s abuse
    of Victim 2 in August, September, and November of 2012.
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                                Page 9
    § 2252(a)(1); and one count each of Distribution and Receipt of Child Pornography, in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2252
    (a)(2).
    Napier’s case proceeded to a four-day trial beginning on January 13, 2014. After the
    district court denied Napier’s motion for judgment of acquittal, the jury returned guilty verdicts
    against Napier on all counts. On May 13, 2014, the district court sentenced Napier to a term of
    imprisonment of 2,880 months. This represented 20 years on each of the counts to be served
    consecutively to one another, and was the sentence recommended by the presentence report. The
    district court entered judgment on May 20, 2014. Napier filed a timely notice of appeal that
    same day.
    II.
    Napier’s central argument on appeal is that the district court erred in denying his pretrial
    motion to dismiss the indictment against him with prejudice as a sanction for the prosecutor’s
    alleged misconduct. The Supreme Court has recognized that the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
    Amendment may require reversal of a criminal conviction where the governmental action
    involved “shocks the conscience” and offends “canons of decency and fairness.” Rochin v.
    California, 
    342 U.S. 165
    , 169, 172 (1952). Similarly, the Supreme Court has indicated in dicta
    that outrageous government conduct outside the grand jury process can result in dismissal on due
    process grounds if such conduct is so outrageous that it violates “fundamental fairness” or is
    “shocking to the universal sense of justice.” United States v. Russell, 
    411 U.S. 423
    , 432 (1973);
    see also United States v. Allen, 
    619 F.3d 518
    , 525 (6th Cir. 2010). This Court “reviews whether
    ‘outrageous government conduct’ is a valid basis for dismissing an indictment—a question of
    law—de novo.” United States v. Amawi, 
    695 F.3d 457
    , 483 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting United
    States v. Tucker, 
    28 F.3d 1420
    , 1421 n.1 (6th Cir. 1994)).
    In the present case, the alleged government misconduct was the participation of one of
    the AUSAs in Napier’s improper transfer out federal custody and into state custody.               By
    extension, Napier argues, the AUSA’s misconduct also includes the results of that transfer: the
    CPD’s alleged violation of Napier’s right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment and under
    Miranda when his repeated calls for counsel went unheeded.
    No. 14-3492                               United States v. Napier                                         Page 10
    Without explicitly saying so, Napier appears to argue that the AUSA’s misconduct
    included not just initiating Napier’s unlawful transfer into state custody, but also lying to the
    lower court about her role in the transfer—or, at minimum, “obfuscating” her role in the transfer.
    At Napier’s February 11, 2013 arraignment, counsel to Napier informed the magistrate judge of
    the transfer. The magistrate judge specifically asked, “[D]o you know anything about this?”
    The AUSA replied:
    [AUSA]: Yes, Your Honor. He was erroneously taken to a state court
    proceeding. He has been in federal custody since the date of his arrest, which I
    believe was the 18th of January. So it was no fault of the [M]arshals, but he was
    erroneously taken to the state court proceeding without a writ.
    Once I was notified of that—and by the time I was notified of that, it was
    already too late—I contacted the state prosecutor’s office and they’ve assured me
    that the appropriate paperwork and notation to his file is there so it won’t happen
    again. He is in federal custody and he will not be making any more state
    appearances without the appropriate paperwork, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: So he will be returned to Boone County?
    [AUSA]: Well, Your Honor, that’s—that is—he is in the [M]arshals’
    custody. They have beds in Boone, Hamilton, and Butler, and quite honestly,
    Your Honor, I could care less where he’s housed.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I was actually told by the [M]arshals that he was
    transferred from Boone County to Hamilton County at the request of the U.S.
    Attorney’s Office. So I don’t know. If the government’s in agreement with him
    going back to Boone County, that’s certainly what we’d like to have happened.
    Similarly, at a February 13, 2013 scheduling conference, the AUSA told the district court
    that the state court “made a mistake” in setting bond for Napier:
    [AUSA]: They were not supposed to take him. He has been in federal
    custody since the 18th, and he should not have been taken to a state court, to any
    state court proceeding. So that was a mistake that they made, and it will not be
    made again. He has since been moved to Boone County, I believe is what the
    [M]arshals told me, so it was their error.
    Subsequently, at the November 12, 2013 hearing on Napier’s motions to dismiss, defense
    counsel read into the record a CPD investigation report.3 The unspecified author of the report
    averred:
    3
    The report was provided to Napier during discovery. The report itself is not part of the record.
    No. 14-3492                         United States v. Napier                            Page 11
    I met with [the AUSA] to view the video of Mr. Napier and [Victim 1]. . . . I also
    received a copy of the federal indictment detailing the 19 video clips Mr. Napier
    made of himself engaging in sex acts with [Victim 2]. . . . I spoke with [the
    AUSA] regarding the transfer of Mr. Napier to Hamilton County to simplify
    matters in regards to my interviewing him and executing a search warrant for his
    buccal swabs and photos. She will request the U.S. Marshals to transport him to
    the Hamilton County Justice Center on February 7, 2013.
    Thus, Napier claims, the import of the report is that the AUSA minimized her role in Napier’s
    transfer, if not outright lied to the magistrate judge and district court about it.
    The government vehemently denies any misconduct by the AUSA. Specifically, the
    government contends that both state facilities, the Boone County Jail and the Hamilton County
    Justice Center, are under contract with the federal government to house federal pretrial detainees.
    Accordingly, the government argues, federal pretrial detainees like Napier can be summarily
    moved between such facilities, and a state writ of ad prosequendum is only required when a
    federal defendant is taken from federal custody to a state proceeding. We need not resolve this
    dispute as to precisely when a writ is required in order to effectuate this kind of transfer. Even
    assuming Napier is correct, nothing in the record supports his assertion that the charges against
    him should have been dismissed.
    First, the district court properly found, when issuing its order denying the motion to
    dismiss, that the AUSA had initiated the transfer. Thus, whatever “obfuscating” the AUSA may
    have done did not prevent the district court from making this factual finding in Napier’s favor.
    Further, if one accepts that the AUSA initiated the transfer (and even assumes the AUSA lied to
    the court about it), Napier has not demonstrated that AUSA’s conduct rises to the “outrageous,”
    “conscience shocking” level necessary to warrant the extraordinary remedy of dismissing the
    charges against him with prejudice—as the district court determined. The district court properly
    found that even though it was “certainly foreseeable than an interrogation would take place”
    while Napier was in Hamilton County, the AUSA could not be held accountable for alleged
    constitutional violations committed by state agents and there was no record evidence that she
    personally participated in these alleged violations. Further, Napier cites no authority for the
    proposition that a federal prosecutor can be held accountable for the misconduct of state agents,
    even when the prosecutor “la[ys] the groundwork” for that misconduct. Napier also has cited no
    No. 14-3492                             United States v. Napier                                       Page 12
    authority for the proposition that such attenuated misconduct should result in the dismissal with
    prejudice of previously instituted criminal charges. The AUSA’s own conduct—facilitating a
    transfer that may or may not have required a state writ of ad prosequendum, not notifying
    Napier’s court-appointed counsel about the transfer, and allegedly lying to the court about it—
    was inappropriate, but it was not “conscience shocking.” See Breithaupt v. Abram, 
    352 U.S. 432
    , 435 (1957) (reiterating that conduct “shocks the conscience” where it is “so ‘brutal’ and
    ‘offensive’ that it did not comport with traditional ideas of fair play and decency”) (citing
    Rochin, 
    342 U.S. at 174
    ); see also Whitley v. Albers, 
    475 U.S. 312
    , 327 (1986) (same).
    Second, even though the district court did not find either a Fifth or Sixth Amendment
    violation, the court still took appropriate steps to sanction the “poor judgment on the part of the
    AUSA.”4 That sanction amounted to suppression of all evidence obtained by the CPD during
    Napier’s February 7, 2013 interview. Suppression, not dismissal of charges with prejudice, is the
    remedy traditionally employed by courts to correct and deter the misconduct of government
    agents. See, e.g., Massiah v. United States, 
    377 U.S. 201
     (1964).
    Indeed, the remedy fashioned by the district court actually went further than the law
    requires. Supreme Court precedent establishes that when an inculpatory statement is obtained in
    violation of the Sixth Amendment, it may not be used as part of the government’s substantive
    evidence at trial, but may be used to impeach a defendant’s false or inconsistent testimony. See
    Michigan v. Harvey, 
    494 U.S. 344
    , 345-46 (1990). Here, the district court not only precluded the
    government from using Napier’s statements as substantive evidence, but also as impeachment
    evidence. This remedy was particularly apropos in light of the government’s earlier indication to
    Napier that it would potentially use the contents of his inculpatory statements to the CPD officers
    during its rebuttal at trial. Suppression of this evidence thus eliminated the “substantial threat”
    of prejudice that Napier complained about in his motion to dismiss.                             Napier has not
    demonstrated—or, in fact, even argued—that the relief provided by the district court was
    4
    Napier incorrectly argues that “[t]he district court found all of [the AUSA’s] conduct to be ‘astonishing,
    perplexing, and clearly inappropriate.’” Napier misconstrues the district court’s order. The court stated: “Further,
    that the interview by CPD detectives, the public ‘bond hearing’ in Hamilton County Court, and the attempted
    interview by Hamilton County Children’s Services all occurred while Napier was in federal custody is astonishing,
    perplexing, and clearly inappropriate.”
    No. 14-3492                         United States v. Napier                              Page 13
    insufficient to remedy the potential violation of his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights for the
    purposes of his federal prosecution.
    Third, and most importantly, Napier has not demonstrated any actual prejudice as a result
    of the AUSA’s conduct. See United States v. Morrison, 
    449 U.S. 361
    , 365 (1981) (holding that,
    assuming arguendo that the Sixth Amendment was violated, “absent demonstrable prejudice, or
    substantial threat thereof, dismissal of the indictment is plainly inappropriate, even though the
    violation may have been deliberate”) (footnote omitted). Napier conceded at oral argument that
    there is no compelling evidence of prejudice in this case. Napier has not pointed to anywhere in
    the record where the government used against him evidence obtained during his February 7,
    2013 interview. Additionally, Napier does not argue that the evidence obtained during the
    interview has been admitted against him in the still-pending state-court proceedings. Even if the
    evidence has been admitted against him, this is an issue for Napier to litigate in the context of his
    state criminal case. Further, this issue is separate and distinct from the overwhelming evidence
    presented against him at his federal trial.
    Finally, all of the cases Napier has cited in support of his position merely stand for the
    proposition that dismissal of the indictment may be an appropriate remedy in some
    circumstances. See, e.g., Rochin, 
    342 U.S. at 172
     (finding conscience-shocking conduct where
    deputy sheriffs illegally entered the open door of a house, forced open the door to the accused’s
    bedroom, forcibly attempted to extract capsules that the accused swallowed, and directed a
    physician to pump the accused’s stomach so that the capsules were vomited); cf. Russell,
    
    411 U.S. at 431-32
     (“While we may some day be presented with a situation in which the conduct
    of law enforcement agents is so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the
    government from invoking judicial processes to obtain a conviction, the instant case is distinctly
    not of that breed.”) (citation omitted). But the problem for Napier on appeal is the same as it was
    before the district court: “Napier does not cite to any cases with facts remotely analogous to
    those here, and the Court cannot conclude based on the precedent before it that the government’s
    conduct in this case . . . rises to the level of conduct that warrants a dismissal of an indictment.”
    This Court has never sanctioned the remedy requested by Napier for any pretrial conduct by a
    federal prosecutor, and this case will not be the first.
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 14
    III.
    Napier next contends that the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of
    acquittal, which was premised on his assertion that the government failed to prove the interstate
    commerce element of the crimes charged.           Each of the twelve charges—nine counts of
    production of child pornography, and one count each of transportation, distribution, and receipt
    of child pornography—included an element requiring an interstate commerce connection.
    See 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2251
    (a), 2252(a)(1), 2252(a)(2). The district court, consistent with Napier’s
    request at trial, instructed the jury that this element could be satisfied by proof that “the visual
    depiction or the production or transmission materials crossed a state line.” In denying Napier’s
    motion for judgment of acquittal, the district court explained: “[T]he Court finds that taking the
    evidence and the inferences most favorably to the government, a reasonable mind could fairly, if
    not conclusively, find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. I think there was just overwhelming
    evidence by the government of everything, including the interstate commerce elements.”
    “We review de novo a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a criminal
    conviction.” United States v. Carson, 
    560 F.3d 566
    , 579 (6th Cir. 2009). In evaluating a
    sufficiency-of-the-evidence claim, we must determine “whether, after viewing the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    ,
    319 (1979). “‘In undertaking this analysis, this court neither independently weighs the evidence,
    nor judges the credibility of witnesses who testified at trial.’” United States v. Howard, 
    621 F.3d 433
    , 460 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting United States v. Talley, 
    164 F.3d 989
    , 996 (6th Cir. 1999)).
    “[T]he defendant bears a heavy burden when making a sufficiency of the evidence challenge.”
    Carson, 
    560 F.3d at 580
    .
    We find there is sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that the government
    established the interstate commerce nexus. There is no support for Napier’s contention that the
    government “failed to present any evidence on this element.” During closing, the government
    devoted substantial time to outlining which of the government’s exhibits and which witness
    testimony supported each of the twelve counts of conviction. Generally speaking, this evidence
    and testimony established that Napier was in Ohio when he recorded his sexual abuse of both
    No. 14-3492                              United States v. Napier                                        Page 15
    Victim 1 and Victim 2 (Counts 1-9). The interstate commerce requirement for each count was
    satisfied in at least one of three different ways. First, Napier shared the child pornography he
    created, through email, with other child pornographers and with Agent Gotjen. These recipients
    were all located outside of Ohio: as established either by direct testimony (in the case of Agent
    Gotjen) (Count 11), or by the technical features of the recipient’s email communications (such as
    the timestamp) (Counts 1 and 10). At least some of these videos were taken using a cellphone,
    labeled as made in Taiwan, which had travelled in interstate commerce (Counts 2-9). Second, in
    one instance, Napier received child pornography from someone whose web domain and the
    content of his email suggested he was outside the United States (Count 12). Third, Napier
    emailed this pornography to himself from the Eastern Time Zone to the Pacific Time Zone
    (Counts 1-10).5
    Simply put, the interstate commerce requirement is not as strenuous as Napier seems to
    think it is. The distribution count (Count 11) is the simplest to address, because there was direct
    testimony from Agent Gotjen establishing that she was based Phoenix at the time of her
    communications with Napier and there has been no suggestion by the defense that Napier was
    ever anywhere but Ohio. The other eleven counts rely on circumstantial evidence of interstate
    travel.
    For each of the production counts (Counts 1-9) and the transportation count (Count 10),
    the government relies on email timestamps to prove interstate travel between the Eastern Time
    Zone and the Pacific Time Zone. Napier argues, without support, that “[t]he mere time stamp
    told the jury nothing, as a phone, computer[,] or other device can be set to any time zone in the
    world.” This argument is unpersuasive. First, Burnham testified that the emails were sent from
    the Eastern Time Zone to the Pacific Time Zone, and that Ohio is not in the Pacific Time Zone.
    5
    The government also asks this Court to consider a fourth avenue for establishing the federal jurisdictional
    nexus: Google recovered the child pornography Napier produced in Ohio from a search of computer servers in
    California. We will not address this argument for two reasons. First, we need not reach this argument in light of all
    the other evidence establishing an interstate commerce connection in this case. Second, an interstate commerce
    connection must be part of the offense itself, not something unilaterally created by the government after the fact.
    The government cannot claim the federal jurisdictional requirement is met simply because of actions the government
    itself took during the course of its investigation—here, directing a search warrant to Google for information
    regarding Napier’s email account, and Google then accessing Napier’s email communications through its servers
    and providing those emails to the government. The fact that Google was able to access Napier’s emails in California
    is not convincing proof that the emails travelled in interstate commerce when Napier sent them. It merely
    establishes the unsurprising fact that Google can access all emails sent using its own servers. Further, the
    government has cited no cases for the proposition that its own investigatory conduct is sufficient to meet the
    jurisdictional requirement.
    No. 14-3492                             United States v. Napier                                      Page 16
    Napier, however, did not cross-examine Burnham6 and did not present his own computer
    forensic expert. In the absence of any rebuttal evidence from Napier—such as proof that the
    time zone on the email account was incorrectly set by the recipient, as Napier now argues—the
    jury was entitled to credit Burnham’s testimony. See United States v. Torres-Ramos, 
    536 F.3d 542
    , 556 (6th Cir. 2008) (noting that a reviewing court’s analysis of a defendant’s sufficiency-of-
    the-evidence claim “does not require the removal of every hypothesis except that of guilt”).
    At trial, the government also presented evidence that some, if not all, of the Victim 2
    videos that Napier emailed were taken using a cellphone whose label indicated it was made in
    Taiwan (Counts 2-9).7 Courts have held that the use of materials manufactured outside of the
    United States is sufficient to establish an interstate nexus. See, e.g., United States v. Grzybowicz,
    
    747 F.3d 1296
    , 1306-07 (11th Cir. 2014) (finding sufficient evidence of the interstate commerce
    element of production and possession of child pornography offenses where defendant’s
    cellphone and laptop, which both contained pornographic images of children, were both
    manufactured outside the United States; the defendant took the pornographic images of the
    victim on his foreign-made cellphone; the defendant used the Internet to send the photographs to
    his email account; and the defendant downloaded at least two of the photographs onto his
    foreign-made computer); United States v. Strausbaugh, 534 F. App’x 178, 184 (3d Cir. 2013),
    cert. denied, 
    135 S. Ct. 99
     (2014) (finding sufficient evidence supported defendant’s conviction
    for possession of child pornography where the camera the defendant used to take photographs
    was manufactured in Korea); United States v. Koch, 
    625 F.3d 470
    , 479 (8th Cir. 2010) (finding
    government had established that child pornography possessed by defendant on his computer and
    flash drive had been transported in interstate commerce or produced using such materials by
    showing that defendant’s computer and flash drive had been manufactured in China).
    Nonetheless, Napier argued during closing, and argues again on appeal, that the
    government must prove where the recipient of any particular email was physically located when
    the email transmission was received. This is not the relevant inquiry. The relevant inquiry is
    whether there is enough circumstantial evidence that these electronic communications were
    6
    Napier’s counsel did repeatedly raise the interstate commerce issue at sidebar during Burnham’s
    testimony, which ultimately led to the district court qualifying Burnham as an expert witness.
    7
    Conversely, Burnham testified that the Victim 1 video was made using a Polaroid camera.
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                             Page 17
    transmitted through interstate wires. Given the omnipresent nature of the Internet, this is not a
    difficult burden for the government to satisfy. See United States v. Mellies, 329 F. App’x 592,
    605-07 (6th Cir. 2009); see also United States v. MacEwan, 
    445 F.3d 237
    , 244 (3d Cir. 2006)
    (“[W]e conclude that because of the very interstate nature of the Internet, once a user submits a
    connection request to a website server or an image is transmitted from the website server back to
    user, the data has traveled in interstate commerce.”); United States v. Hilton, 
    257 F.3d 50
    , 54-55
    (1st Cir. 2001) (“[P]roof of transmission of pornography over the Internet . . . satisfies the
    interstate commerce element of the offense,” which the government satisfied through testimony
    from a computer forensics agent that images had “likely” been downloaded from the Internet
    because the storage disk “contained software used in conjunction with Internet chat rooms.”);
    United States v. Runyan, 
    290 F.3d 223
    , 239 (5th Cir. 2002) (joining the First Circuit in holding
    that “[t]ransmission of photographs by means of the Internet is tantamount to moving
    photographs across state lines and thus constitutes transportation in interstate commerce”)
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted); United States v. Harris, 548 F. App’x
    679, 682 (2d Cir. 2013) (same); United States v. White, 2 F. App’x 295, 298 (4th Cir. 2001) (per
    curiam) (same). In the present case, we find that Napier’s use of the Internet, coupled with the
    varying timestamps indicated on his emails, is sufficient to satisfy the federal jurisdictional
    nexus.
    The same analysis holds true for the receipt charge (Count 12), which concerned child
    pornography Napier received on September 13, 2010, from someone using the email address
    DirtyHarry@o2email.co.uk. The relevant inquiry is not, as Napier argued at trial, whether the
    government proved that “Dirty Harry” was physically located in the United Kingdom. The
    relevant inquiry is whether Dirty Harry’s email address is sufficient circumstantial evidence that
    Dirty Harry’s email communications to Napier were transmitted through foreign and interstate
    wires. Given that Dirty Harry’s email address indicates that Dirty Harry’s cellular or internet
    service is provided by O2—a telecommunications company whose service is not available in the
    United States but is widely available in the United Kingdom—the jury could reasonably find the
    government had satisfied the jurisdictional requirement on this count.
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 18
    IV.
    Napier next argues that the district court erred in admitting the following evidence at
    trial: (1) a document from Time Warner Cable, obtained pursuant to a government subpoena,
    showing that the email address jonapier1992@gmail.com was accessed at the Sunset Avenue
    address and that Napier was the subscriber of the account; and (2) the two cell phones, microSD
    card, and Schiele’s Acer computer—all of which bore markings indicating they were
    manufactured outside of the United States. On appeal, Napier contends admission of the Time
    Warner document and the electronic devices violated his rights under the Confrontation Clause.
    At trial, however, Napier objected to the devices’ admission solely on hearsay grounds. The
    district court found the Time Warner document was not hearsay, and was only being admitted to
    demonstrate the FBI’s investigation. The court also immediately provided a limiting instruction
    to the jury to that effect. As to the electronic devices, the district court found the markings were
    not hearsay, and that the relevant witnesses were only reading what the markings said (which the
    jury could do for itself).
    We review a district court’s evidentiary rulings under the abuse of discretion standard,
    United States v. White, 
    492 F.3d 380
    , 398 (6th Cir. 2007), and find the district court correctly
    admitted the Time Warner document. The Confrontation Clause prevents the government from
    relying on out-of-court, testimonial statements to establish the truth of the matter asserted.
    Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 50-51, 59 n.9, 68 (2004). The document here was not
    offered for the truth of the matter asserted. Rather, the document was plainly offered during the
    testimony of Special Agent Pamela Kirschner to demonstrate how the Cincinnati Office of the
    FBI located Napier. They first received Agent Gotjen’s investigatory file, and then subpoenaed
    Time Warner Cable. Time Warner’s response (the document in question) then led the agents to
    the Sunset Avenue address, which led them to the apartment manager, who gave them Schiele’s
    forwarding address, where the agents located Schiele, who gave them her computer, which led to
    the recovery of images of child pornography, which led to Schiele identifying her niece in these
    images, which led to Napier’s arrest. Thus, this exhibit was offered for the limited purpose of
    showing the course of the agents’ investigation, and the district court properly gave a limiting
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 19
    instruction to that effect. It was not, as Napier claims, “offered for the truth that Napier resided
    at the residence during the relevant time period.”
    We also find that admission of the two cell phones, microSD card, and Acer computer
    did not violate the Confrontation Clause. The district court presumed the government was not
    offering the manufacturer labels on these devices as proof of travel in interstate commerce. The
    government’s reference to the phones’ country of manufacture during closing, however, would
    seem to call into question the district court’s presumption. At trial, Napier framed admission of
    this evidence as a violation of the rule against hearsay. Napier’s hearsay objection was itself a
    restatement of his general argument that the government had failed to establish the federal
    jurisdictional requirement. On appeal, Napier attempts to reframe this issue as a violation of the
    Confrontation Clause.      We find Napier’s hearsay objection insufficient to preserve the
    constitutional claim he is now asserting, and therefore apply plain error review. See United
    States v. Hadley, 
    431 F.3d 484
    , 498 (6th Cir. 2005) (“Because Defendant raised only a hearsay
    objection to these statements at trial, and did not challenge their admissibility on constitutional
    grounds, our review here is governed by the plain error standard.”).
    “Under this standard, we may correct a purported error that was not raised at trial only if
    there is ‘(1) error, (2) that is plain, and (3) that affect[s] substantial rights.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 467 (1997)) (alteration in original). The Confrontation
    Clause bars the “admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial
    unless he was unavailable to testify, and the defendant had a prior opportunity for cross-
    examination.” Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 53-54
     (emphasis added). Thus, “[t]o trigger a violation of
    the Confrontation Clause, an admitted statement must be testimonial in nature, and must be
    hearsay—that is, a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or
    hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” United States v. Deitz,
    
    577 F.3d 672
    , 683 (6th Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Regardless of whether the manufacturer labels are hearsay, they are at most non-
    testimonial statements, which are not barred by the Confrontation Clause.            A testimonial
    statement is (1) “[a] solemn declaration or affirmation made for the purpose of establishing or
    proving some fact,” Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 51
     (alteration in original) (quoting 2 N. Webster, An
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 20
    American Dictionary of the English Language (1828)); (2) “made under circumstances which
    would lead an objective witness reasonably to believe that the statement would be available
    for use at a later trial,” 
    id. at 52
     (quoting Brief for National Association of Criminal Defense
    Lawyers et al. as Amici Curiae at 3, Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
     (2004) (No. 02-9410),
    
    2003 WL 21754961
    , at *3); and (3) having “a primary purpose of creating an out-of-court
    substitute for trial testimony” or “establish[ing] or prov[ing] past events potentially relevant to
    later criminal prosecution,” Michigan v. Bryant, 
    131 S. Ct. 1143
    , 1155, 1165 (2011) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Here, the labels on these electronic devices bear none of these
    hallmarks of testimonial statements.
    Accordingly, Napier has not established any plain error in the district court’s admission
    of these exhibits.
    V.
    Finally, Napier argues that his conviction on the distribution charge (Count 11)—relating
    to the compilation of child pornography Napier sent to Agent Gotjen on July 25, 2010—should
    be vacated because “the [g]overnment relied on evidence wholly different that that passed upon
    by the grand jury.” Napier claims that, because the petit jury heard different evidence on the
    distribution charge than did the grand jury, either a due process violation or a “fatal” variance
    resulted.
    Napier’s argument is difficult to follow. He argued at trial—in the context of his motion
    for judgment of acquittal—and now again on appeal that the evidence presented to the grand jury
    was somehow “different,” but provides little elucidation as to what that evidence was or how it
    differed from the evidence presented at trial. Napier’s argument appears to be that the evidence
    the government presented at trial—the “47.wmv” compilation video—was never presented to the
    grand jury. Rather, Napier alleges, the government argued before the grand jury that on June 25,
    2010, he traded child pornography on RapidShare.com. The district court understood Napier’s
    argument as follows: “It seems to me that what you’re saying is that . . . when the government
    proves probable cause in front of the grand jury, it has to present its entire case there; and if it
    deviates in any way from its case between the grand jury and the petit jury . . . th[en] there is a
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                               Page 21
    problem.” The district court rejected this argument, finding it “irrelevant” what evidence the
    government produced before the grand jury. (Id.)
    Napier did not raise his due process argument before the district court. The panel
    therefore reviews for plain error. Hadley, 
    431 F.3d at 498
    . Napier cites no evidence that the
    offense charged in the indictment is different from the offense charged at trial. Instead, Napier
    offers nothing but his own unsupported factual allegations. This is insufficient under any
    standard of review, and especially so under plain error review. But even assuming Napier is
    correct, and that the evidence does not “match,” this does not undermine the validity of the
    indictment or the jury’s conviction. And, as the district court noted, Napier cites no authority for
    the proposition that due process requires that the evidence at trial exactly match the evidence
    presented to the grand jury.
    Napier implicitly argues that he committed more than one distribution offense on June
    25, 2010. From this he concludes that, because the evidence allegedly does not “match,” he “has
    no ability to plead [d]ouble [j]eopardy as to either offense under this record.”           Napier’s
    contention is illogical. As the government argues: “If, as he seems to suggest, he committed two
    different violations of the same statute on the same day but was tried for only one of them, the
    violation for which he was convicted is the one for which he cannot be tried again.” Further, as
    the district court noted, Napier could have asked for a bill of particulars in order to clarify his
    confusion. He did not do so.
    Conversely, Napier did raise his “fatal” variance argument before the district court.
    Accordingly, we review de novo whether there was a variance between the indictment and the
    proof offered at trial. See United States v. Bearden, 
    274 F.3d 1031
    , 1039 (6th Cir. 2001).
    Variances “are not per se prejudicial,” United States v. Budd, 
    496 F.3d 517
    , 521 (6th Cir. 2007),
    or “fatal” in Napier’s parlance. Rather, reversal is warranted only where a defendant proves
    (1) that a variance occurred, and (2) that the variance affected the defendant’s substantial rights.
    United States v. Prince, 
    214 F.3d 740
    , 757 (6th Cir. 2000). A variance “occurs when the
    charging terms [of the indictment] are unchanged, but the evidence at trial proves facts
    materially different from those alleged in the indictment.” 
    Id. at 756-57
     (alteration in original)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The substantial rights of the defendant “are affected only
    No. 14-3492                       United States v. Napier                             Page 22
    when the defendant shows prejudice to his ability to defend himself at trial, to the general
    fairness of the trial, or to the indictment’s sufficiency to bar subsequent prosecutions.” United
    States v. Hynes, 
    467 F.3d 951
    , 962 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Barrow, 
    118 F.3d 482
    , 488-89 (6th Cir. 1997)). Here, Napier has identified no difference between the indictment’s
    terms and the evidence at trial. Moreover, he has not identified any prejudice.
    Accordingly, we find there was neither a due process violation nor a prejudicial variance.
    VI.
    Based on the foregoing analysis, we AFFIRM Napier’s convictions in all respects.