United States v. Kyle Parks , 902 F.3d 805 ( 2018 )


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  •                   United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 17-1914
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Kyle Maurice Parks
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis
    ____________
    Submitted: April 12, 2018
    Filed: August 30, 2018
    ____________
    Before SMITH, Chief Judge, WOLLMAN and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
    A jury found Kyle Maurice Parks guilty of one count of transportation of a
    minor to engage in prostitution in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1591(a)(1) and (b)(2); two
    counts of attempted transportation of a minor to engage in prostitution in violation of
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1591(a)(1), (b)(2), and 1594(a); and six counts of transportation of an
    individual with intent to engage in prostitution in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2421(a).
    Parks appeals from the denial of his motion to suppress evidence. He also argues that
    the district court1 erred in admitting certain evidence and in denying his motion for
    judgment of acquittal on two of the counts. We affirm.
    I. Background
    Detective Mark Young, a Columbus, Ohio, police officer assigned to the Ohio
    Human Trafficking Task Force, received information on December 2, 2015, that
    seventeen-year-old T.S. had run away from an Ohio juvenile residential facility. The
    next day, T.S.’s mother called Young, saying that T.S. had contacted her and said that
    she was on her way to Florida with at least two other individuals. Believing that T.S.
    was in trouble, Young requested an emergency cell phone ping to determine her
    location. The ping showed that T.S.’s cell phone was located near the vicinity of a
    Red Roof Inn in St. Charles, Missouri.
    Detective Young asked the St. Charles Police Department to dispatch officers
    to the Red Roof Inn to check for any vehicles with Ohio license plates. St. Charles
    police officers went to the hotel, where they located a gray van bearing temporary
    Ohio license tags that revealed that the vehicle was registered to Parks. Upon being
    provided this information, Young responded that he was familiar with Parks and that
    T.S. was likely with him.
    In response to their inquiries, a hotel employee told the officers that there were
    two young women, R.W. and K.O., from Columbus, Ohio, who currently had rooms
    at the hotel. The officers first went to nineteen-year-old R.W.’s room. They knocked
    on the door, R.W. answered, and they informed her that they were looking for T.S.
    Although T.S. was not in R.W.’s room, the officers noticed another young woman,
    seventeen-year-old T.M., there. Officers then went to twenty-four-year-old K.O.’s
    1
    The Honorable John A. Ross, United States District Judge for the Eastern
    District of Missouri.
    -2-
    room, where they located T.S. and a fifteen-year-old girl, L.L. R.W. and K.O.
    consented to the searches of the hotel rooms, in which officers found stained and
    soiled linens, drug paraphernalia, feminine hygiene products, prepaid gift cards,
    packages of condoms, used condoms, male clothing, items bearing Parks’s name, and
    an Ohio municipal court document citing K.O. for prostitution. Officers also obtained
    a Red Roof Inn surveillance video that showed R.W., K.O., and Parks together at the
    check-in counter.
    Police transported the five young women to a locked juvenile facility in St.
    Charles, where they were interviewed by law enforcement. K.O. and T.S. both told
    the officers that they had committed acts of prostitution while at the Red Roof Inn and
    that they had given the money that they had earned to Parks. K.O. also stated that she
    had previously worked as a prostitute for Parks in Ohio.
    Officers then discovered that Parks, his van, and seventeen-year-old S.L. were
    missing. The next morning’s shift officers were briefed on Parks and the incident at
    the Red Roof Inn. An email was sent out within the department, informing officers
    that they needed to be on the lookout for Parks and his vehicle. The email also
    included a photo of Parks.
    Later that morning, Parks walked into the St. Charles County police
    headquarters and approached a police services officer who was working at the lobby
    desk. Parks gave the officer his name, said that he was from Ohio, and that he was
    there to bail out a female friend. The services officer recognized Parks and notified
    Officer Paul Yadlosky and Detective Stephanie Kaiser. When Officer Yadlosky
    arrived in the lobby, Parks walked towards the door and looked out at his van. When
    Detective Kaiser arrived, she noticed a gray van matching the email’s description in
    the parking lot.
    -3-
    Knowing that there was a missing girl who had last been seen with Parks and
    that the gray van was registered to Parks, Officer Yadlosky and Detective Kaiser
    decided to go out to the van to look for the girl. Detective Kaiser peered in the
    window and saw an older girl lying in the middle row of seats, wrapped in a blanket.
    Because the girl’s face was covered, it was difficult to determine her condition. The
    girl did not respond when the officers rapped on the van’s window. Officer Yadlosky
    then opened the van door, at which point the woman responded in a “sluggish and
    slow” manner. Officer Yadlosky testified that he could smell marijuana upon opening
    the van door and that he noticed a bag of marijuana on the floor of the van when the
    girl sat up. Officer Yadlosky seized the marijuana. The girl was later identified as
    missing seventeen-year-old S.L.
    Officer Yadlosky quickly searched the van to ensure that no one else was
    inside. In doing so, Officer Yadlosky noticed cell phones, clothing, and condoms.
    Because of the van’s cluttered condition, Officer Yadlosky requested that a K-9
    officer conduct a search for any hidden narcotics. The drug dog alerted to the driver’s
    side passenger door. Law enforcement officers thereafter conducted a full search of
    the van and seized sales receipts for prepaid gift cards, a receipt containing a
    Backpage.com (Backpage) email address, prepaid phone gift cards, eighty-eight
    condoms, and three cell phones.
    Law enforcement officers later executed a search warrant for Parks’s Ohio
    office suite, which contained several rooms, including multiple bedrooms and a
    lounge area. One of the bedrooms contained a mattress, soiled bedding, and drug
    paraphernalia. In the lounge area, officers found a mini bar, sofas, a coffee table with
    a condom case, and Parks’s XXXREC business cards advertising “nude or partially
    nude, manies, pedies, full body massages, house cleaning, and dancing.” Other items
    seized during the search included women’s clothing, a prepaid gift card, a shipping
    -4-
    box with Parks’s name on it that contained bottles of an unknown liquid advertised
    as a male enhancement, used condoms, and a DVD entitled “The Bottum.”2
    Parks’s cell phone was also searched pursuant to a warrant. A forensic
    technician discovered numerous photos of partially dressed women and multiple text
    messages in which Parks inquired about ads on Backpage, stating that he was the
    owner of XXXREC and that he could “provide [them with] in call location and safe,
    reliable out call transportation.”3
    Parks was charged in a nine-count superseding indictment with offenses related
    to sex-trafficking and prostitution. He filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized
    during the search of his van. A magistrate judge4 recommended that Parks’s motion
    be denied because the search of the van was lawful under the community caretaker
    and automobile exceptions to the warrant requirement and that the items seized
    inevitably would have been discovered during an inventory search. The district court
    overruled Parks’s objection to the recommendation, adopted the report and
    recommendation, and denied the motion to suppress.
    2
    A special agent with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Central
    Ohio Human Trafficking Task Force testified that based on his background and
    training, the term bottum typically refers to the pimp’s most loyal female who does
    not go on dates herself, but instead works directly below the pimp and helps manage
    the other women.
    3
    In the pimp-prostitution subculture, the term “in call” refers to the practice of
    the customer traveling to the prostitute to engage in commercial sex.
    4
    The Honorable John M. Bodenhausen, United States Magistrate Judge for the
    Eastern District of Missouri
    -5-
    At trial, the government presented the evidence seized from Parks’s van, office,
    cell phone, and the hotel rooms. The government called sixteen witnesses, including
    several law enforcement officers and four victims.
    L.L. testified that she had run away from an Ohio juvenile facility when T.S.
    called her and invited her to go on a road trip to Florida. L.L. agreed, and Parks
    picked her up in his van on December 2, 2015. There were five other women with
    Parks—T.S., T.M., S.L., and two women L.L. did not know, but who were later
    identified as R.W. and K.O. Parks provided the women with marijuana to smoke
    while they drove. Realizing later that they were not on their way to Florida, L.L.
    asked Parks to take her home. Parks responded that he would put her on a bus to
    Ohio, but refused to tell her when he would do so. L.L. then fell asleep and upon
    awakening learned that they were in the parking lot of the Red Roof Inn in St. Charles.
    L.L. testified that Parks directed R.W. and K.O. to pay for two hotel rooms. He
    then assigned each of the girls to a hotel room. L.L. stayed in a room with T.S., K.O.,
    and Parks. Parks told the women that they could sleep for a few hours in their rooms.
    When he woke them up, he told them to shower and get dressed because they were
    going to “post up.” L.L. did not know what this meant, but she saw Parks on his
    phone with a card, and then he started taking pictures of the women. Parks asked to
    take L.L.’s picture, but she told him no and that she was only fifteen. L.L. then
    witnessed the young women going back and forth between rooms, having sex, and
    giving Parks some of their money. She also witnessed K.O. using heroin while in the
    hotel room.
    T.S. testified that Parks approached her as she walked down a street in
    Columbus, Ohio, after her flight from the juvenile facility. He told her about
    Backpage and that he wanted her to go on dates—but that she did not have to have
    sex—and in return, he would give her “anything that [she] wanted.” Parks drove T.S.
    to his office, where she met T.M., S.L., and K.O. Parks gave T.S. marijuana and K.O.
    -6-
    heroin. Later that night, Parks arranged for T.S. to go on a “date” at his office. T.S.
    went into a bedroom with a man and had sex. Parks took the money the man had paid
    her. The next day, T.S. left with Parks and the other young women, believing that
    Parks was going to take them to Florida.
    Once they arrived in St. Charles, T.S. went to sleep in the hotel room. She
    woke up to Parks’s telling her that she needed to get up so that she could make some
    money. Parks then helped T.S. post an advertisement on Backpage, with the
    expectation that she would give Parks the money she earned by having sex with men.
    Parks gave T.S. condoms and set up a price schedule for her—$80 for fifteen minutes,
    $180 for thirty minutes, and $200 for one hour. T.S. went on one one-hour date later
    that night. The man paid her $197 for the sexual encounter, which she gave to Parks.
    Parks then gave $60 back to T.S., keeping the rest for himself. T.S. later refused
    Parks’s request that she have sex with him.
    S.L. testified that she met Parks on November 29, 2015. The next day, Parks
    drove S.L. to her boyfriend’s funeral and then brought her and her friend, T.M., back
    to his office. Once there, Parks gave S.L. marijuana and asked her to have sex with
    him. He also told S.L. that he needed money to go out of town and asked her to have
    sex with a man for money. S.L. was scared, but agreed to the request because she had
    witnessed Parks “put his hand” on her friend. Parks arranged for a man to come to his
    office. The man had sex with S.L. and paid her $100, which she gave to Parks. The
    next morning S.L. traveled with Parks and the other women to St. Charles. During the
    drive, S.L. told Parks that she was seventeen years old.
    Upon arriving in St. Charles, Parks gave S.L. condoms and told her to take
    photos of her body so that she could make some money. One man came to see S.L.
    that night, saying to her, “You look like you are scared. You look like you don’t want
    to do this.” S.L. responded, “I got to, because I’m far from home.” The man
    responded that she did not have to do anything and gave her the money without
    -7-
    requiring her to have sex with him. Parks later asked S.L. for the money that she had
    made. Parks and S.L. then left the hotel to get food.
    Parks and S.L. returned to the hotel and saw that both hotel room doors were
    open and that the police were there. S.L. told Parks that she wanted to go back to
    Ohio, but Parks told her that he was going to “try to get the girls out.” The two
    thereafter smoked marijuana and S.L. fell asleep in the back of Parks’s van. S.L.
    testified that she had difficulty waking up when she heard police rapping on the
    window.
    T.M. was the final victim to testify, saying that she had met Parks in Ohio
    through a friend in the fall of 2015. Parks drove T.M. and her friend to a house, where
    T.M.’s friend went inside for twenty minutes and then returned to the car and handed
    Parks money. T.M. met Parks for the second time when he drove her and S.L. to his
    office after S.L.’s boyfriend’s funeral. T.M. stated that when they arrived at the
    office, Parks gave her marijuana and told her that she was going to go with him on a
    trip for Backpage and that she would be “basically prostituting.” Parks knew that
    T.M. was seventeen years old.
    T.M.’s friend, R.W., went with her on the trip to St. Charles. T.M. testified that
    Parks had told R.W. that she would go on the trip for Backpage. After arriving in St.
    Charles, Parks told the girls that it was time to post on Backpage and thereafter helped
    T.M. and R.W. create advertisements.
    Parks then testified on his own behalf. He stated that he owned an adult
    entertainment company, which included escorting, nude modeling, exotic dancing,
    adult conversation, and manicures, pedicures, or massages by nude or partially nude
    attendants. Parks also ran a video-calling service, which allowed men to call in and
    watch young women masturbate, as well as a 1-900 service for men to call and have
    adult conversations with young women. Additionally, Parks stated that he traveled
    -8-
    often because of another business and that he would bring exotic dancers on his trips
    because he would get paid for arranging them to perform at clubs. He admitted that
    he had transported all six of the victims from Ohio to Missouri, but said that the only
    woman he had invited on the trip was K.O. He also testified that he did not know the
    true ages of the women or that they were posting on Backpage. He later admitted,
    however, that he had told his daughter that he “had a little escort service [in Missouri],
    and they busted it.”5
    Following a four-day jury trial, the jury returned guilty verdicts on all nine
    counts charged against Parks. The district court sentenced Parks to 300 months’
    imprisonment, to be followed by a lifetime term of supervised release.
    II. Discussion
    A. Motion to Suppress Evidence
    Parks argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress
    evidence obtained during the warrantless search of his van. We review de novo the
    district court’s denial of a motion to suppress evidence and “the factual determinations
    underlying the district court’s decision for clear error.” United States v. Harris, 
    747 F.3d 1013
    , 1016 (8th Cir. 2014).
    “Searches conducted without a warrant are per se unreasonable, subject to a few
    well-established exceptions.” United States v. Hill, 
    386 F.3d 855
    , 858 (8th Cir. 2004).
    “One such exception applies when police officers engage in a community caretaking
    function.” United States v. Smith, 
    820 F.3d 356
    , 360 (8th Cir. 2016) (citing Cady v.
    Dombrowski, 
    413 U.S. 443
    , 441 (1973)). Under this exception, an officer may enter
    5
    Detective Derek Stigerts testified that escort is “a fancy term for prostitution.”
    If used as a noun, then it refers to the actual prostitute, but if used as a verb, then it
    refers to working as a prostitute.
    -9-
    a property without a warrant when “the officer has a reasonable belief that an
    emergency exists requiring his or her attention.” 
    Id. (quoting United
    States v.
    Quezada, 
    448 F.3d 1005
    , 1007 (8th Cir. 2006)). To determine whether an officer had
    such reasonable belief, we look to the facts known to the officer at the time of the
    decision to enter the property. 
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted); see also 
    Quezada, 448 F.3d at 1007
    (holding that reasonable belief under the community caretaker warrant
    exception “is a less exacting standard than probable cause” (citing Maryland v. Buie,
    
    494 U.S. 325
    , 336-37 (1990))).
    Based on the facts that Officer Yadlosky knew at the time he opened the van
    door, an officer in his position could have a reasonable belief that there was an
    emergency that required his attention. He was aware of Parks’s suspected prostitution
    activities at the Red Roof Inn, that law enforcement was looking for a gray van with
    temporary Ohio license tags, and that there was a missing girl who was likely with
    Parks. Parks had told Officer Yadlosky his name and that he was from Ohio. It was
    with this knowledge that Officer Yadlosky and Detective Kaiser went to the van in
    search of the missing girl.
    Officer Yadlosky developed probable cause to search the van under the
    automobile warrant exception when he opened the door and smelled marijuana, saw
    suspected marijuana on the van floor, and observed an apparently comatose young
    woman therein. See 
    Hill, 386 F.3d at 858
    (holding that the automobile exception to
    the warrant requirement authorizes officers to search a vehicle if they have probable
    cause to believe that “the vehicle contains evidence of criminal activity” (citing
    United States v. Wells, 
    347 F.3d 280
    , 287 (8th Cir. 2003))); see also United States v.
    Daniel, 
    809 F.3d 447
    , 449 (8th Cir. 2016) (“Probable cause exists when the facts
    available to an officer would warrant a person of reasonable caution to believe that
    contraband or other evidence of a crime is present.” (citing Florida v. Harris, 
    568 U.S. 237
    , 243 (2013))). Because both the entrance into and the search of the van were
    lawful, the district court did not err in denying Parks’s motion to suppress.
    -10-
    B. Evidence of Parks’s Other Acts
    Parks argues that the district court erred in admitting evidence that Parks asked
    S.L. and T.S. to have sex with him and that he provided drugs to the young women.
    We review a district court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.6 United States
    v. Thomas, 
    760 F.3d 879
    , 883 (8th Cir. 2014).
    Parks argues that because he was not charged with any crime relating to the
    solicitation of sex or to drugs, the evidence is irrelevant and therefore should not be
    admissible. We disagree. “Res gestae, also known as intrinsic evidence, is ‘evidence
    of wrongful conduct other than the conduct at issue . . . offered for the purpose of
    providing the context in which the charged crime occurred.’” United States v.
    Campbell, 
    764 F.3d 880
    , 888 (8th Cir. 2014) (quoting United States v. Johnson, 
    463 F.3d 803
    , 808 (8th Cir. 2006)). “Such evidence is admitted to complete the story or
    provide a total picture of the charged crime.” 
    Id. (alterations and
    internal quotation
    omitted).
    The district court did not err in admitting the testimony as res gestae evidence.
    Detective Derek Stigerts, an expert witness from the FBI’s Child Exploitation Task
    Force, testified about how pimps often recruit, coerce, and control prostitutes.
    Detective Stigerts discussed how a “finesse pimp” will often control and manipulate
    women through love, affection, drugs, and other non-violent methods. Specifically,
    he explained that pimps often recruit minors who are runaways without a place to go
    by offering the young women a place to stay and at times a “boyfriend/girlfriend type
    of relationship.” Once the victim agrees, the pimp may attempt to get her addicted to
    drugs, and then threaten to withhold the drugs if the victim does not agree to do what
    the pimp demands. In light of these circumstances, Parks’s requests for sex from the
    6
    Parks did not object when the government questioned T.S. regarding Parks’s
    request to have sex with her. We therefore review this claim for plain error. See
    United States v. Novak, 
    866 F.3d 921
    , 923 (8th Cir. 2017) (standard of review).
    -11-
    victims, as well as his offering of drugs, provided context to the prostitution crimes
    with which he was charged, thus rendering the evidence admissible.
    Parks further contends that the district court erred in admitting the evidence
    under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) because the potential prejudice of the evidence
    outweighed its probative value. Other acts evidence may be admissible for purposes
    of “proving motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity,
    absence of mistake, or lack of accident.” Fed. R. Evid. 404(b)(2). To admit such
    evidence, the government must show that “(1) it is relevant to a material issue, (2) it
    is similar in kind and not overly remote in time to the charged offense, (3) it is
    supported by sufficient evidence, and (4) its potential prejudice does not substantially
    outweigh its probative value.” United States v. Ellis, 
    817 F.3d 570
    , 579 (8th Cir.
    2016). We will reverse a district court’s ruling “only when the evidence clearly had
    no bearing on the case and was introduced solely to show defendant’s propensity to
    engage in criminal misconduct.” United States v. Farish, 
    535 F.3d 815
    , 819 (8th Cir.
    2008).
    Parks argues that the evidence portrayed him as a statutory rapist and drug
    dealer and thus “lured [the jury] into declaring guilt.” Appellant’s Br. 44. To convict
    Parks under 18 U.S.C. § 1591, the jury had to find that he “knowingly . . . recruit[ed],
    entic[ed], harbor[ed], transport[ed], provid[ed], obtain[ed], advertis[ed], maintain[ed],
    patroniz[ed], or solicit[ed] by any means . . . [a] person to engage in a commercial sex
    act.” 18 U.S.C. § 1591. Both Parks’s knowledge and his intent were thus called into
    question during trial. See 
    Campbell, 764 F.3d at 889
    (citing United States v. Jarrett,
    
    956 F.2d 864
    , 867 (8th Cir. 1992)). The probative value of the evidence accordingly
    outweighed the danger of potential prejudice because it showed Parks’s intent to
    solicit, entice, and maintain these women so that they would engage in commercial
    sex acts. The district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence regarding
    Parks’s solicitation of sex from S.L. or T.S. or his providing drugs to the young
    women.
    -12-
    C. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Parks argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions that
    he transported K.O. and R.W. from Ohio to Missouri for the purposes of prostitution.
    “We review the sufficiency of the evidence de novo, viewing evidence in the light
    most favorable to the government, resolving conflicts in the government’s favor, and
    accepting all reasonable inferences that support the verdict.” United States v.
    Hamilton, 
    332 F.3d 1144
    , 1148 (8th Cir. 2003) (citation omitted). “Our role is not to
    reweigh the evidence or to test the credibility of the witnesses, because questions of
    credibility are the province of the jury.” United States v. Vanover, 
    630 F.3d 1108
    ,
    1116 (8th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (internal quotations and alterations omitted).
    A defendant violates 18 U.S.C. § 2421 if he “knowingly transports any
    individual in interstate or foreign commerce . . . with intent that such individual
    engage in prostitution. . . .” 18 U.S.C. § 2421(a). Parks does not dispute that he drove
    K.O. and R.W. from Ohio to Missouri. Rather, he argues that the evidence was
    insufficient to prove that he intended for the women to engage in prostitution.
    Evidence showed Parks, K.O., and R.W. checking into the hotel together. K.O.
    admitted to law enforcement that she had committed acts of prostitution while she had
    been in Missouri and that she had given the money she earned to Parks. She also
    stated that she had previously worked as a prostitute for Parks in Ohio. Additionally,
    T.M. testified that Parks told R.W. that they were going on a trip for Backpage, that
    Parks provided R.W. with condoms, and that he helped R.W. set up an advertisement
    on Backpage after they arrived in Missouri. The four testifying victims each said that
    Parks awoke the women at the hotel by telling them they needed to get up so they
    could make money by posting on Backpage. Finally, Parks admitted that he told his
    daughter that he had been running an escort service in Missouri, but that it had gotten
    “busted.” When viewed in light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence was
    sufficient to enable a reasonable jury to find that Parks transported all six
    women—including K.O. and R.W.—in interstate commerce with the intent to have
    -13-
    them engage in prostitution. See United States v. Jones, 
    16 F.3d 275
    , 278 (8th Cir.
    1994) (“Each element of a crime, including intent, may be proven by circumstantial
    evidence.”).
    Parks has raised a number of issues in a pro se brief. “We generally do not
    accept pro se motions or briefs when an appellant is represented by counsel,” and we
    decline to do so here. See United States v. Donnell, 
    596 F.3d 913
    , 925-26 (8th Cir.
    2010). Parks has also submitted claims of ineffective assistance of counsel and
    prosecutorial misconduct. “[B]ecause such claims usually involve facts outside of the
    existing record and are therefore best addressed in postconviction proceedings,”
    United States v. Jones, 
    586 F.3d 573
    , 576 (8th Cir. 2009), we decline to address them
    in this proceeding.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    ______________________________
    -14-