Jane Doe v. Dean Boland , 698 F.3d 877 ( 2012 )


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  •                         RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 12a0382p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    -
    JANE DOE and JANE ROE, c/o their guardians
    Plaintiffs-Appellees, --
    and next friends,
    -
    No. 11-4237
    ,
    >
    -
    Interested Party-Intervenor, -
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    -
    -
    -
    -
    v.
    -
    Defendant-Appellant. -
    DEAN BOLAND,
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
    No. 1:07-cv-2787—Dan A. Polster, District Judge.
    Argued: October 10, 2012
    Decided and Filed: November 9, 2012
    Before: SUTTON and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; BERTELSMAN, District Judge*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Dean Boland, BOLAND LEGAL, LLC, Lakewood, Ohio, for Appellant.
    Jonathan E. Rosenbaum, Elyria, Ohio, for Appellees. Anne Murphy, UNITED STATES
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Intervenor. ON BRIEF: Dean
    Boland, BOLAND LEGAL, LLC, Lakewood, Ohio, for Appellant. Jonathan E.
    Rosenbaum, Elyria, Ohio, for Appellees. Anne Murphy, Thomas M. Bondy, UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Intervenor.
    *
    The Honorable William O. Bertelsman, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern
    District of Kentucky, sitting by designation.
    1
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                          Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. To help defendants resist child-pornography charges,
    technology expert and lawyer Dean Boland downloaded images of children from a stock
    photography website and digitally imposed the children’s faces onto the bodies of adults
    performing sex acts. Boland’s aim was to show that the defendants may not have known
    they were viewing child pornography. When the parents of the children involved found
    out about the images, they sued Boland under the civil-remedy provisions of two federal
    child-pornography statutes. The district court granted summary judgment to the parents
    and awarded them $300,000 in damages. We affirm.
    I.
    In February 2004, Dean Boland downloaded images of two identifiable children,
    given the unidentifiable names Jane Doe and Jane Roe for purposes of this litigation,
    from a stock photography website. See Doe v. Boland, 
    630 F.3d 491
    , 493 (6th Cir.
    2011). Boland digitally manipulated (“morphed”) the photographs to make it look like
    the children were engaged in sex acts. In one picture, five-year-old Jane Roe was eating
    a doughnut; Boland replaced the doughnut with a penis. In another, he placed six-year-
    old Jane Doe’s face onto the body of a nude woman performing sexual acts with two
    men. In March and April 2004, Boland used the images as part of his expert testimony
    in two Ohio state-court proceedings and a federal criminal trial in Oklahoma involving
    child pornography. He displayed “before-and-after” versions of the images, testifying
    that it would be “impossible for a person who did not participate in the creation of the
    image to know [the child is] an actual minor.” R. 77-2 at 119.
    Boland’s testimony caught the attention of the FBI’s Cleveland office. Federal
    agents searched his home and seized several files from his computer. Boland, 
    630 F.3d at 494
    . In April 2007, Boland entered a pre-trial diversion agreement with the U.S.
    Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio, in which he admitted violating
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 3
    18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B) by knowingly possessing a “visual depiction [that] has been
    created, adapted, or modified to appear that an identifiable minor is engaging in sexually
    explicit conduct.” R. 73-1; 
    18 U.S.C. § 2256
    (8)(C). Boland also published an apology
    in the Cleveland Bar Journal, stating, “I do recognize that such images violate federal
    law.” R. 73-1 at 12.
    In September 2007, Jane Doe, Jane Roe and their guardians filed this lawsuit
    against Boland under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2252A(f) and 2255. Section 2252A(f) provides a
    civil remedy to “[a]ny person aggrieved” by child pornography, while § 2255 provides
    a civil remedy of at least $150,000 in damages to minor victims who suffer a “personal
    injury” from various sex crimes.
    The district court granted summary judgment to Boland on the ground that these
    two civil remedy statutes exempt expert witnesses from liability. We reversed, holding
    that the laws contain no such exemptions or any other exemption that would cover
    Boland. Boland, 
    630 F.3d at 493
    . On remand, the district court ruled for the plaintiffs
    and awarded $150,000 to Doe and $150,000 to Roe.
    II.
    To resolve Boland’s appeal, we must answer three questions: (1) did the
    plaintiffs meet the requirements for obtaining relief under § 2255; (2) does the definition
    of morphed images as “child pornography” in § 2256(8)(C) violate the First Amendment
    as applied to Boland’s conduct; and (3) does the district court’s award violate the Sixth
    Amendment’s right to counsel?
    A.
    Section 2255 allows “[a]ny person who, while a minor, was a victim” of a variety
    of sex crimes “and who suffers personal injury as a result . . . regardless of whether the
    injury occurred while such person was a minor” to sue and “recover the actual damages
    such person sustains.” Any person who meets that description “shall be deemed to have
    sustained damages of no less than $150,000 in value.” Id. One of the statutes listed in
    § 2255 is 18 U.S.C. § 2252A, and Boland admits he violated it by morphing the
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                            Page 4
    plaintiffs’ images into pornography. That act, Boland also concedes, makes Doe and
    Roe “minor” “victim[s]” under § 2255.
    That leaves the question whether the plaintiffs suffered a resulting “personal
    injury.” They did. “Like a defamatory statement,” pornography injures a child’s
    “reputation and emotional well-being,” Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coal., 
    535 U.S. 234
    , 249
    (2002), and violates “the individual interest in avoiding disclosure of personal matters,”
    New York v. Ferber, 
    458 U.S. 747
    , 759 n.10 (1982) (internal quotations omitted).
    Morphed images are of a piece, offering a difference in degree of injury but not in kind.
    Boland created lasting images of Doe and Roe, two identifiable children, purporting to
    engage in sexually explicit activity. If the point of Boland’s exercise was to demonstrate
    that the naked eye cannot distinguish morphed images of child pornography from real
    child pornography, as he claims it was, that goes a long way toward confirming that
    morphed images may create many of the same reputational, emotional and privacy
    injuries as actual pornography. And like defamation, those harms are “personal
    injuries.” See, e.g., United States v. Burke, 
    504 U.S. 229
    , 235–36 & n.6 (1992)
    (explaining that “personal injuries,” when used in the tax code, include “‘dignitary’ or
    nonphysical tort[s] such as defamation”), superseded by statute on other grounds, Small
    Business Job Protection Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-188, § 1605, 
    110 Stat. 1838
    ; see
    also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 7 (defining “injury” as “the invasion of any legally
    protected interest of another”); Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Economic
    Harm § 2, cmt. a (Tentative Draft) (“Defamation . . . is regarded as inflicting a kind of
    personal injury: harm to the plaintiff’s reputation.”); Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed.
    2009) (defining “personal injury” as “any invasion of a personal right, including mental
    suffering”). Doe and Roe suffered personal injuries under § 2255.
    That cannot be, Boland insists, because § 2255 plaintiffs must show two
    things—that they are “victims” and that they suffered a “personal injury”—suggesting
    that a plaintiff’s “personal injury” means more than showing he was a “victim.” Not
    necessarily. Courts, sure enough, generally construe statutes to avoid surplusage. See,
    e.g., Freeman v. Quicken Loans, Inc., 
    132 S. Ct. 2034
    , 2042 (2012). But Boland focuses
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 5
    on “victim” and “personal injury” at the expense of other context-illuminating words in
    the statute’s first sentence. Section 2255 requires that a person be a minor when she is
    the victim of a sex crime but allows that person to recover when she incurs an injury,
    “regardless of whether the injury occurred while such person was a minor.” In this
    instance, the plaintiffs became victims of Boland’s conduct at the same time that they
    suffered injuries, namely the moment Boland created the morphed images with their
    likenesses. But victimhood and injury need not occur simultaneously. A child abused
    through a pornographic video might have one § 2255 claim against the video’s creator
    as soon as it is produced and another against the distributor who sells a copy of the
    video twenty years later. Cast in this light, the statute’s separate references to “victim”
    and “personal injury” show only that minor victims may sue for injuries they incur later
    in life; the statute does not create one category of victims and another category of people
    who suffer personal injuries.
    Timing is not the only sign that § 2255 does not create separate categories. Even
    if this statutory explanation did not exist, the presumption against surplusage does not
    apply to doublets—two ways of saying the same thing that reinforce its meaning.
    Freeman, 
    132 S. Ct. at
    2042–43. The U.S. Code is replete with meaning-reinforcing
    redundancies: an invalid contract is “null and void”; agency action must not be
    “arbitrary and capricious”; bureaucrats send “cease and desist” letters; a bankruptcy
    trustee can sell a debtor’s property “free and clear” of other interests; and so on. See,
    e.g., 
    16 U.S.C. § 2613
    ; 7 U.S.C. § 13b; 
    11 U.S.C. § 363
    (f). When faced with an agency
    order, to use one of these examples, how could a citizen cease but not desist? He could
    not. “Sometimes drafters do repeat themselves and do include words that add nothing
    of substance, either out of a flawed sense of style or to engage in the ill-conceived but
    lamentably common belt-and-suspenders approach.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner,
    Reading Law 176–77 (2012); see TMW Enters., Inc. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    619 F.3d 574
    , 578
    (6th Cir. 2010) (observing that “lawyers frequently say two (or more) things when one
    will do or say two things as a way of emphasizing one point”).
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 6
    Just so here. A victim by definition is someone who suffers an injury. A
    defendant convicted of a child-pornography offense must pay restitution to a “victim”:
    “the individual harmed as a result of a commission of a [child-pornography] crime.”
    
    18 U.S.C. § 2259
    (c). That definition also comports with the common understanding of
    what it means to be a “victim.” See, e.g., Webster’s Second Int’l Dictionary 2841 (1953)
    (“A person or living creature injured . . . at the hands of another person.”); Black’s Law
    Dictionary (9th ed. 2009) (“A person harmed by a crime, tort, or other wrong.”); Oxford
    English Dictionary Online (3d ed. 2012) (“One who suffers some injury, hardship, or
    loss.”). Jane Doe and Jane Roe undoubtedly were victims of Boland’s conduct. So too
    they undoubtedly suffered personal injuries by any conventional reading of that phrase.
    These injuries also suffice to establish standing under Article III. Standing
    requires a plaintiff to show an “injury in fact,” namely an “actual or imminent” invasion
    of a “concrete and particularized” legally protected interest. Lujan v. Defenders of
    Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992). Jane Doe and Jane Roe are real children with legally
    protected interests in their reputations. See Ashcroft, 
    535 U.S. at 249
    . By sharing the
    morphed images with defense counsel and court staff and displaying the images in a
    courtroom, Boland invaded those interests. Unlike plaintiffs who seek to collect for an
    abstract injury, see Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at
    563–64, Jane Doe and Jane Roe suffered injuries
    in fact. And unlike plaintiffs whose only injury is the violation of a statutory right, see
    Carter v. Welles-Bowen Realty, Inc., 
    553 F.3d 979
    , 988–89 (6th Cir. 2009); Edwards v.
    First Am. Corp., 
    610 F.3d 514
    , 517 (9th Cir. 2010), cert. dismissed as improvidently
    granted, 
    132 S. Ct. 2536
     (2012), Boland’s display of the morphed images in court
    harmed Doe and Roe. Section 2255 provides Doe and Roe relief, namely $150,000 in
    presumed damages, but it did not create the rights Boland violated.
    Boland separately argues that § 2255 requires victims of child pornography to
    show that they incurred “actual damages,” and plaintiffs offer no evidence of any such
    damages. Most tort plaintiffs, it is true, must show the amount of their damages. But
    § 2255 is no ordinary cause of action. The statute declares that any victim “shall be
    deemed to have sustained damages of no less than $150,000 in value.” 18 U.S.C.
    No. 11-4237         Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 7
    § 2255(a). Under Boland’s interpretation, victims would have to prove some amount of
    damages first, and if that amount were less than $150,000, the court would increase the
    damages to the statutory minimum. Such a reading turns § 2255 upside down. The point
    of a minimum-damages requirement is to allow victims of child pornography to recover
    without having to endure potentially damaging damages hearings. Were it otherwise,
    a fresh damages hearing might inflict fresh wounds, increasing the child’s suffering and
    increasing the compensatory damages to which she is entitled. “Congress could
    rationally conclude” that all children depicted in morphed pornography “are seriously
    injured and deserve a high threshold amount of damages.” Boland, 
    630 F.3d at 498
    .
    Once a child has shown she was the victim of a sex crime, there is little point in forcing
    her to prove an amount of damages, only to have the court disregard that figure and
    award the statutory minimum. The district court did not err in awarding Doe and Roe
    the minimum statutory amount without proof of “actual damages.”
    Section 2255, we recognize, was not the only cause of action plaintiffs filed, but
    it was all they needed to succeed. The plaintiffs also sued under § 2252A(f), which
    allows “[a]ny person aggrieved by” child pornography to “commence a civil action.”
    Unlike § 2255, however, § 2252A(f) contains no threshold damages provision. Under
    § 2252A(f)(2)(B), a court may award “compensatory and punitive damages” to a
    plaintiff. Because the plaintiffs did not try to show the exact amount of their damages,
    see R. 72, the district court could not have based its award on this cause of action. The
    district court’s award of the statutory minimum under § 2255—$150,000 to each
    plaintiff—confirms that the plaintiffs prevailed on that statute alone, and, as we have just
    shown, they did so permissibly.
    B.
    This damages award does not run afoul of the First Amendment, which says that
    “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.” Not all speech,
    whether verbal or visual, receives First Amendment protection. Obscenity, defamation,
    fraud, incitement and solicitation of crime are all examples of communication for which
    the speaker must take responsibility and from which the First Amendment offers no
    No. 11-4237         Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 8
    sanctuary. See United States v. Stevens, 
    130 S. Ct. 1577
    , 1584 (2010). Child
    pornography is the same. Ferber, 
    458 U.S. at
    763–64. The “evil” of child pornography
    “so overwhelmingly outweighs the expressive interests, if any, at stake” in this form of
    communication that it lies categorically beyond constitutional protection, meaning that
    “no process of case-by-case adjudication is required” to uphold restrictions on it. 
    Id.
    The rationale is straightforward: Governments have a compelling interest in protecting
    children from abuse, the value of using children in pornography is non-existent, and the
    market for child pornography is “intrinsically related” to the underlying abuse. 
    Id. at 759
    .
    All of this would make a free-speech challenge to a criminal or civil penalty
    imposed for actual child pornography easy to reject. 
    Id. at 763
    . But what of morphed
    images like the ones Boland created? The relevant statute defines “child pornography”
    to include morphed images, as it covers a “visual depiction [that] has been created,
    adapted, or modified to appear that an identifiable minor is engaging in sexually explicit
    conduct.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 2256
    (8)(C). In addressing a First Amendment challenge to this
    definition and one found in related statutes, Ashcroft struck down a ban on
    “virtual”—entirely computer-generated—child pornography and pornography that
    “appears to” depict children. 
    535 U.S. at 258
    . That opinion did not resolve the validity
    of a ban on morphed images, but it did note that those images “implicate the interests of
    real children” and thus bear a closer similarity to actual child pornography than to virtual
    or simulated child pornography. 
    Id. at 242
    . Jane Doe and Jane Roe are real children.
    Their likenesses are identifiable in Boland’s images. That Doe and Roe were real
    victims with real injuries offers one reason for rejecting Boland’s First Amendment
    challenge.
    The relatively weak expressive value of morphed images offers another.
    Morphed child pornography is indistinguishable from actual child pornography, which
    itself has “exceedingly modest, if not de minimis,” First Amendment value. Ferber,
    
    458 U.S. at
    762–63. And unlike pornography that “appears to” depict children, morphed
    images are never necessary to achieve an artistic goal. See Ashcroft, 
    535 U.S. at
    247
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                             Page 9
    (discussing how the “appears to be” ban might prohibit a version of Romeo and Juliet
    that used adult actors to portray the star-crossed teenage lovers). Virtual children or
    actual adults create the same visual effect as a morphed image, yet do no harm to the
    interests of identifiable minors.
    Other circuits have reached the same conclusion in rejecting First Amendment
    challenges to § 2256(8)(C) criminal prosecutions since the 2002 Ashcroft decision. The
    Second Circuit explained that the “underlying inquiry” is whether “an image of child
    pornography implicates the interests of an actual minor.” United States v. Hotaling,
    
    634 F.3d 725
    , 729 (2d Cir. 2011). Morphed images of this sort fit the bill. By using
    identifiable features of children, they place “actual minors” “at risk of reputational
    harm” and are thus “not protected expressive speech under the First Amendment.” 
    Id.
    at 729–30. The Eighth Circuit followed a similar path. Because a morphed image
    “implicates the interests of a real child,” it creates “the type of harm which can
    constitutionally be prosecuted under [Ashcroft v.] Free Speech Coalition and Ferber.”
    United States v. Bach, 
    400 F.3d 622
    , 632 (8th Cir. 2005).
    The New Hampshire Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Zidel, 
    940 A.2d 255
    (2008), says nothing to the contrary. That decision invalidated a statute barring
    possession of morphed images because the state child-pornography laws aimed only to
    “combat the harm resulting to children from the distribution of depictions of sexual
    conduct involving live performance[s] or visual reproduction of live performances by
    children.” Zidel, 
    940 A.2d at 263
    . A morphed image, the state court reasoned, does not
    involve a live sexual performance. 
    Id.
     The federal child-pornography statutes, by
    contrast, target “computers and computer imaging technology” that can “invade the
    child’s privacy and reputational interests” by “alter[ing] innocent pictures of children to
    create visual depictions of those children engaging in sexual conduct.”              Child
    Pornography Prevention Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-208, § 121(1)(6), (7), 
    110 Stat. 3009
     (1996). The legitimate government interest in avoiding “injury to [a] child’s
    reputation and emotional well-being,” Ashcroft, 
    535 U.S. at 249
    , allows Congress to
    prohibit morphed images.
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                          Page 10
    Boland adds that morphed images harm children only “if the person in the image
    becomes aware of the image’s existence and if that person is a minor at the time of
    learning of the image’s existence and if becoming aware of the image’s existence
    causes psychological harm to the minor.” Appellant’s Br. at 26. Yet the same might be
    said of possession of actual child pornography. Under Boland’s theory, the collector of
    child pornography only causes harm if he distributes the images to others, if he does so
    while the children depicted are still minors and if the children actually suffer a
    psychological harm. In today’s digital world, any image is “primed for entry into the
    distribution chain” of underground child pornographers. Hotaling, 
    634 F.3d at
    730
    (citing Osborne v. Ohio, 
    495 U.S. 103
    , 110 (1990)). Even if Doe and Roe never see the
    images, the specter of pornographic images will cause them “continuing harm by
    haunting [them] in years to come.” Osborne, 
    495 U.S. at 111
    . As a result, it is
    immaterial that Boland never displayed these images outside of a courtroom and never
    transmitted them electronically. The 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.
    C.
    In claiming that § 2256(8)(C) violates the Sixth Amendment rights of current and
    future litigants, Boland faces a serious impediment. He recently raised the same
    argument before another panel and lost. Boland v. Holder, 
    682 F.3d 531
    , 536–37
    (6th Cir. 2012).
    ***
    This $300,000 award undoubtedly amounts to tough medicine for Boland. When
    he created morphed images, he intended to help criminal defendants, not harm innocent
    children. Yet his actions did harm children, and Congress has shown that it “means
    business” in addressing this problem by creating sizeable damages awards for victims
    of this conduct. Boland, 
    630 F.3d at 495
    . Nor was this Boland’s only option for trying
    to help his clients.    He could have shown the difficulty of distinguishing real
    pornography from virtual images by transforming the face of an adult onto another, or
    No. 11-4237        Doe et al. v. Boland                                         Page 11
    inserting a child’s image into an innocent scene. If he felt compelled to make his point
    with pornography, he could have used images of adults or virtual children. Instead, he
    chose an option Congress explicitly forbade: morphed images of real children in sexually
    explicit scenes. That choice was not protected by the First Amendment, and the children
    therefore are entitled to the relief Congress offered them.
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm.