United States v. Anthony Atkins ( 2022 )


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  •                    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 21-3166
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Anthony Atkins, also known as Forever
    Defendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Central
    ____________
    Submitted: September 23, 2022
    Filed: November 2, 2022
    ____________
    Before GRUENDER, SHEPHERD, and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
    A jury found Anthony Atkins guilty of sex trafficking of a minor in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a). Atkins raises several issues on appeal. First, he argues that
    the district court violated his Sixth Amendment right to self-representation by
    denying his requests to proceed pro se. Second, he contends that the evidence at
    trial was insufficient to sustain his conviction. Third, he argues that the district court
    admitted unfairly prejudicial evidence. Finally, he submits that two of the special
    conditions of supervised release imposed by the district court are impermissibly
    vague and overbroad. We affirm the conviction but remand for clarification of the
    two special conditions.
    I.
    In April 2018, L.D.’s parents reported to the police that their seventeen-year-
    old daughter had run away from home. In June 2018, in an effort to locate L.D.,
    Detective Raymond Koonce, an undercover police officer, responded to an online
    advertisement titled “Exotic white girl, text me, (501) 902-4029.”                  The
    advertisement was published on CityXGuide.com, a website which has since been
    shut down by the federal government. Detective Koonce exchanged text messages
    with the listed phone number and arranged to pay $180 for a thirty-minute date with
    the advertised female. When Detective Koonce arrived at an agreed-upon location,
    a girl, later identified as L.D., entered his car. L.D. indicated that she would engage
    in sex acts with Detective Koonce and discussed prices. The two then drove to a
    nearby gas station to purchase a condom, where L.D. was promptly arrested. After
    L.D.’s arrest, Detective Koonce continued to receive phone calls and text messages
    from the listed phone number, including one that asked “is my daughter [with] you.”
    Investigators eventually determined that the phone number was associated with
    Anthony Atkins. In September 2018, Atkins was indicted for sex trafficking of a
    minor in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a). He pleaded not guilty.
    At a pretrial hearing, Atkins requested to represent himself. Atkins repeatedly
    insisted that he “waived [his] appearance” and told the court, “As pro pro se [sic] I
    do not go to trial at all as a sovereign citizen.” When the district court asked Atkins
    whether he understood that he was charged with a crime and facing trial, he
    answered, “I know with them giving me a charge and me being a citizen of the state,
    the charge I can charge it to my account” and stated that “[t]he trial is not going to
    happen.” The district court then engaged in a colloquy under Faretta v. California,
    
    422 U.S. 806
     (1975), to evaluate whether Atkins’s request was made “knowingly,
    voluntarily, and intelligently.” During a lengthy exchange in which he repeatedly
    -2-
    spoke out of turn and had to be told to sit down, Atkins indicated that he was not
    familiar with the Federal Rules of Evidence or with other important aspects of
    criminal proceedings. The district court nonetheless allowed Atkins to proceed pro
    se with standby counsel available. Later in the hearing, however, the district court
    began to doubt that Atkins’s request was sufficiently unequivocal, and the court
    eventually concluded that Atkins was “simply trying to obstruct the proceedings”
    and thus “waiving his right to represent himself.”
    At a subsequent pretrial conference, Atkins made a series of outbursts in
    which he accused the court of “not functioning within an appointed manner of
    righteousness” and declared that he “hold[s] grand sheikh status” and did not “have
    to discuss a charge.” He stated that his attorneys “won’t be representing me as
    counsel” and continued to insist that he was “pro pro se.”
    Later, the district court held another pretrial conference and again considered
    Atkins’s request to represent himself. After multiple attempts to complete a Faretta
    colloquy, the court explained that it would “give [Atkins] one more chance to make
    an unequivocal request” but that “[i]f [Atkins] sa[id] something other than yes,” the
    court would deny his request. When asked for his final answer, Atkins told the court,
    “Yes, I’m pro par se [sic]. I will not be going to trial as a grand sheikh.” As before,
    the district court determined that Atkins’s request was “essentially an attempt to
    obstruct the proceedings,” which “in and of itself [was] a reason to deny [it].” The
    case proceeded to trial with Atkins represented by counsel.
    At trial, Atkins was repeatedly disruptive, especially during the testimony of
    L.D. He interrupted her more than ten times, including by “objecting” to her
    testimony, accusing her of lying, and announcing his “jurisdiction as Allah, grand
    sheikh.” More than once, the court had to ask the jury to exit the courtroom so that
    Atkins could be admonished.
    L.D. testified that Atkins first reached out to her in April 2018 through
    Instagram when he requested her phone number and asked, “how often do you travel
    -3-
    sexiface?” Shortly after the two began text messaging one another, L.D. told Atkins
    that she was seventeen years old and sent him a photograph of her birth certificate
    so that he could verify her age. Atkins and L.D. also had in-person conversations
    about her age. At one point, he told her that her age was “a liability” to him that
    could “get him in trouble.” On another occasion, he instructed her not to wear
    clothing that indicated the name of her school “because he didn’t want anybody
    knowing that [she] was in high school.” By early June 2018, L.D. had moved in
    with Atkins. Atkins allowed her to live with him on the condition that she “work for
    him” by selling herself for sex through online advertisements that he published.
    Over Atkins’s objection, the district court allowed the Government to
    introduce into evidence two short videos recovered from Atkins’s cellphone. Both
    videos were recorded by Atkins in the three months preceding L.D.’s arrest. The
    first depicted Atkins speaking to the camera about “n-----s’ ho’s stables” and
    remarking that he would “knock that b---h out of [her] New Balances and put her
    into these fresh, Giuseppe red-bottom heels.” 1 The second depicted Atkins flashing
    and counting cash while speaking to the camera and stating, among other things, that
    he is creating “generational wealth,” that it is “all up to [the viewer]” if they want to
    “get this [cash] together,” and that “any b---h with me [is] goin’ to the top.” The
    district court also admitted, over Atkins’s objection, a compilation of cellphone
    screenshots indicating that Atkins had shared the second video through Instagram.
    The district court admitted each of these three exhibits under Federal Rule of
    Evidence 404(b) as evidence of Atkins’s motive, intent, or plan to engage in sex
    trafficking.
    The jury found Atkins guilty of sex trafficking of a minor. The district court
    sentenced Atkins to the statutory minimum of 120 months’ imprisonment with an
    additional 15 years’ supervised release. The court imposed multiple special
    conditions of supervised release, including one that prohibited Atkins from
    1
    In his testimony, Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Aaron Hurst
    defined a “stable” as “a group of girls owned or worked by a particular pimp” and
    described “Giuseppe red-bottom heels” as “expensive luxury shoes.”
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    “view[ing] or possess[ing] any visual depiction . . . of sexually explicit content . . .
    or any other material that would compromise [his] sex specific treatment.” Another
    special condition prohibited Atkins from “enter[ing] adult bookstores, strip clubs, or
    adult-themed entertainment businesses or any establishments where such materials
    or entertainment is available.” Atkins appealed.
    II.
    We begin with Atkins’s argument that the district court impermissibly denied
    his request to represent himself at trial. We review de novo a district court’s denial
    of a criminal defendant’s request to proceed pro se. United States v. Smith, 
    830 F.3d 803
    , 809 (8th Cir. 2016).
    The Sixth Amendment grants a criminal defendant the right to represent
    himself at trial without the assistance of counsel. Faretta, 
    422 U.S. at 819
    . To
    invoke the right to self-representation, a defendant must “clearly and unequivocally
    declare[]” to the trial court that he wishes to proceed pro se. Smith, 830 F.3d at 808.
    This right, however, “is not absolute,” United States v. Kelley, 
    787 F.3d 915
    , 917
    (8th Cir. 2015), and can be outweighed by “the government’s interest in ensuring
    the integrity and efficiency of the trial,” Martinez v. Ct. of Appeal of Cal., 
    528 U.S. 152
    , 162 (2000). Thus, even if a defendant clearly and unequivocally requests self-
    representation, a court may deny the request when the defendant “engages in serious
    and obstructionist misconduct,” see Kelley, 787 F.3d at 917 (internal quotation
    marks omitted), or seeks to use the right “as a tactic for delay, for disruption, for
    distortion of the system, or for manipulation of the trial process,” United States v.
    Mosley, 
    607 F.3d 555
    , 558 (8th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “[S]elf-representation is not a license to abuse the dignity of the courtroom.”
    Faretta, 
    422 U.S. at
    834 n.46; cf. Illinois v. Allen, 
    397 U.S. 337
    , 343 (1970) (“The
    flagrant disregard in the courtroom of elementary standards of proper conduct should
    not and cannot be tolerated. . . . [T]rial judges confronted with disruptive,
    contumacious, stubbornly defiant defendants must be given sufficient discretion to
    meet the circumstances of each case.”).
    -5-
    Atkins maintains that the district court should have allowed him to proceed
    pro se at trial because he clearly and unequivocally invoked his right to self-
    representation when he repeatedly stated in his pretrial hearings that he was “pro pro
    se” and that his lawyers “won’t be representing me as counsel.” According to
    Atkins, although his sovereign-citizen beliefs “might be unorthodox,” they are not
    “necessarily the product of a mind incapable of waiving rights knowingly and
    voluntarily.” See United States v. Preston, 
    50 F.4th 681
    , 685 (8th Cir. 2022).
    Moreover, Atkins argues, a self-representation request cannot be denied merely
    because a defendant advances sovereign-citizen arguments that the court considers
    meritless. See United States v. Taylor, 
    21 F.4th 94
    , 102 (3d Cir. 2021) (“[C]ourts
    have repeatedly concluded that ‘sovereign citizens’ may represent themselves
    despite their frivolous beliefs about the law.”); see also Smith, 830 F.3d at 810
    (“[Self-representation] may require the trial court to tolerate numerous nonsensical
    pleadings, even occasionally wacky behavior, so long as the defendant is not
    disruptive or defiant. Repeated, frivolous challenges to the court’s jurisdiction . . .
    are not disruptive or defiant in this sense—unless they threaten to forestall pretrial
    or trial proceedings.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Atkins’s arguments miss the point. Even assuming his requests were clear
    and unequivocal, the district court did not err in denying them because Atkins’s
    pretrial behavior was “serious and obstructionist.” See Kelley, 787 F.3d at 917.
    At multiple hearings, when the district court attempted to carry out a Faretta
    colloquy, Atkins consistently demonstrated his unwillingness to participate in the
    proceedings by interrupting and arguing with the court, refusing to provide
    responsive answers, and insisting that “[t]he trial is not going to happen.” His
    conduct was at times “unruly,” and, at least once, resulted in his removal from the
    courtroom. According to the district court, after observing and interacting with
    Atkins at a hearing for more than six hours, it appeared that his disruptive behavior
    and refusal to participate in the proceedings was “volitional and tactical or strategic
    in nature” and “done for effect.” Thus, it was Atkins’s improper conduct—not the
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    frivolity of the sovereign-citizen beliefs Atkins proclaimed—that led the district
    court to conclude that he was “simply trying to obstruct the proceedings” and thereby
    “waiving his right to represent himself.” A court faced with such obstructive
    conduct does not violate the right to self-representation by denying a defendant’s
    request to proceed pro se. See Mosley, 
    607 F.3d at 559
     (affirming the denial of a
    self-representation request where the defendant refused to respond to questions or
    otherwise participate in pretrial proceedings); see also United States v. Mabie, 
    663 F.3d 322
    , 329 (8th Cir. 2011) (affirming the revocation of self-representation where
    the defendant threatened to abuse the court’s subpoena power and “repeatedly
    disrupted the proceedings and was openly hostile, disrespectful to the court, and
    inattentive” in pretrial hearings).
    Further, we disagree with Atkins that the district court’s denials were
    premature. Although a defendant’s pretrial conduct will warrant a denial of self-
    representation “only if it affords a strong indication that the defendant will disrupt
    the proceedings in the courtroom,” see Smith, 830 F.3d at 810, Atkins’s pretrial
    conduct undoubtedly rose to this level. When the district court provided Atkins
    opportunities to request self-representation properly, Atkins chose to divert the
    proceedings by arguing with the court, propounding jurisprudential and religious
    theories, and “talk[ing] . . . about everything but []his case.” See Mosley, 
    607 F.3d at 559
    . Atkins’s disruptive behavior during his pretrial hearings therefore threatened
    to forestall the proceedings, see Smith, 830 F.3d at 810, and gave the district court
    “good cause to believe” that Atkins would continue to obstruct if allowed to
    represent himself at trial, see Mosley, 
    607 F.3d at 559
    . Indeed, the district court’s
    concerns proved justified: at trial, Atkins continued his obstructionist tactics by
    interrupting witnesses, flouting rulings, and forcing the court to excuse the jury
    multiple times. Accordingly, the district court did not err in denying Atkins’s
    requests to represent himself.
    -7-
    III.
    We turn next to Atkins’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument. “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. Maurstad, 
    35 F.4th 1139
    , 1144 (8th Cir. 2022). We will affirm the verdict unless “no reasonable jury
    could have found [Atkins] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
    Atkins was charged with sex trafficking of a minor under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a),
    which provides, in relevant part:
    Whoever knowingly—
    (1) . . . recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, obtains,
    advertises, maintains, patronizes, or solicits by any means a person
    ...
    knowing, or, except where the act constituting the violation of
    paragraph (1) is advertising, in reckless disregard of the fact, that . . .
    the person has not attained the age of 18 years and will be caused to
    engage in a commercial sex act, shall be punished . . . .
    On appeal, Atkins challenges only whether the Government established
    beyond a reasonable doubt that he knew or recklessly disregarded that L.D. was
    under the age of eighteen. He contends that the Government failed to meet its burden
    because the only evidence presented as to his knowledge of L.D.’s age came from
    L.D. herself. L.D.’s testimony was “implausible,” Atkins says, because she
    discussed text-message conversations between her and Atkins that were never
    recovered despite a thorough search of Atkins’s electronic devices. In addition,
    Atkins maintains that the evidence was insufficient to show that he recklessly
    disregarded that L.D. was less than eighteen years old because, at the time he and
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    L.D. interacted, L.D. “was a few months shy of her 18th birthday, she looked
    between the ages of 18 and 22, and she was not in school.” We are not persuaded.2
    L.D.’s testimony, by itself, was sufficient evidence from which a reasonable
    jury could conclude that Atkins knew or recklessly disregarded her age. See
    Maurstad, 35 F.4th at 1144-45; United States v. Lopez, 
    443 F.3d 1026
    , 1031 (8th
    Cir. 2006) (explaining that a reviewing court must defer to the jury’s determination
    of witness credibility when considering the sufficiency of the evidence). L.D.
    testified that she told Atkins in a text message that she was seventeen years old and
    that she even sent him a photograph of her birth certificate to prove it. Although
    these text messages were not recovered by the Government, L.D. further testified
    that she and Atkins had in-person conversations about her age and that Atkins told
    her that her age was “a liability to him and that it could get him in trouble.” She also
    testified that Atkins told her not to wear a t-shirt with her school’s name on it
    “because he didn’t want anybody knowing that [she] was in high school.”
    Accordingly, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government
    and accepting all reasonable inferences that support the verdict, a reasonable jury
    could have found that Atkins knew or recklessly disregarded that L.D. was less than
    eighteen years old—regardless of whether L.D. was attending school or “looked” at
    least eighteen years old to Atkins when they interacted. See Unites States v. Phea,
    
    755 F.3d 255
    , 261 (5th Cir. 2014) (“Facts other than the victim’s appearance or
    behavior may support a finding of reckless disregard of a victim’s age, such as
    2
    The district court instructed the jury that, if the Government established that
    Atkins recruited, enticed, harbored, transported, provided, obtained, maintained,
    patronized, or solicited L.D., then the Government did not need to prove that Atkins
    knew or recklessly disregarded that L.D. was under the age of eighteen so long as it
    proved that Atkins “had a reasonable opportunity to observe L.D.” See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (c). Atkins argues that the “reasonable opportunity to observe” standard is
    unconstitutionally vague. His argument, raised for the first time on appeal, is
    foreclosed by our precedent. See United States v. Koech, 
    992 F.3d 686
    , 690 (8th
    Cir. 2021).
    -9-
    information from the victim, or others, or documentation that would cause a
    reasonable person to question whether the victim was actually eighteen years old.”).
    IV.
    We now consider Atkins’s argument that the district court erred in admitting
    under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) the two cellphone videos recorded in the
    months prior to L.D.’s arrest and the cellphone screenshots indicating that Atkins
    shared one of the videos through Instagram. We review a district court’s evidentiary
    rulings for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Wright, 
    993 F.3d 1054
    , 1061 (8th
    Cir. 2021).
    Rule 404(b) permits the admission of evidence of a criminal defendant’s
    “crime, wrong, or act” to prove the defendant’s “motive, opportunity, intent,
    preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake, or lack of accident.”
    Fed. R. Evid. 404(b). Such evidence must be (1) “relevant to a material issue”; (2)
    “similar in kind and not overly remote in time to the crime charged”; and (3)
    “supported by sufficient evidence.” United States v. Contreras, 
    816 F.3d 502
    , 511
    (8th Cir. 2016). In addition, Rule 404(b) evidence is subject to Rule 403, 
    id.,
     which
    provides that even relevant evidence may be excluded “if its probative value is
    substantially outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice.” Fed. R. Evid. 403.
    Evidence is unfairly prejudicial when it has “an undue tendency to suggest decision
    on an improper basis” or “is so inflammatory on its face as to divert the jury’s
    attention from the material issues in the trial.” Wright, 993 F.3d at 1061.
    Atkins claims that the cellphone videos and screenshots were unfairly
    prejudicial under Rule 403 because they depict him using “highly misogynistic and
    disparaging language, including . . . the N-word.” He contends that this language
    had the tendency to sway the jury to convict him regardless of his actual guilt.
    To be sure, Atkins uses quite derogatory language in the videos. In one, he
    references “n-----s’ ho’s stables” and promises to “knock that b---h out of [her
    -10-
    shoes].” In the other, he says that “n----s gonna hate” and that “any b---h with me
    [is] goin’ to the top.” Depictions of a defendant using vulgar or inflammatory
    language like this can present Rule 403 concerns. See United States v. Moore, 
    639 F.3d 443
    , 448 (8th Cir. 2011). Nonetheless, we are not convinced that the admission
    of this evidence was an abuse of discretion. See Wright, 993 F.3d at 1061.
    The videos and screenshots were highly probative of Atkins’s plan to recruit
    women, such as L.D., for prostitution. In the videos, Atkins discusses his efforts to
    employ women by promising money, status, and luxury footwear. His liberal use of
    words like “ho” and “stable” was particularly relevant because, according to expert
    testimony presented by the Government, these are common terms used by those
    involved with sex trafficking. Further, these videos were recorded within mere
    months of when L.D. claims that Atkins reached out to her and allowed her to live
    with him so long as she sold herself for sex. Given the evidence’s direct relevance
    to the sex trafficking offense with which Atkins was charged, any unfair prejudice
    arising from Atkins’s choice to discuss his plan in inflammatory terms did not
    outweigh—much less substantially outweigh—the evidence’s probative value. See
    Wright, 993 F.3d at 1061-63 (explaining that a reviewing court affords “great
    deference to the district court’s balancing of the probative value and prejudicial
    impact of the evidence” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Moreover, the district
    court’s limiting instructions prior to the introduction of this evidence further allayed
    any Rule 403 concerns. See Contreras, 816 F.3d at 512. Accordingly, the district
    court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence.
    V.
    Finally, we consider Atkins’s argument that the district court erred in
    imposing two of the special conditions of supervised release. Atkins maintains that
    Special Condition 2, prohibiting him from “view[ing] or possess[ing] . . . material
    that would compromise [his] sex specific treatment,” is unconstitutionally vague and
    that Special Condition 3, prohibiting him from “enter[ing] . . . adult-themed
    entertainment businesses or any establishments where such materials or
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    entertainment is available,” is overbroad. Ordinarily, we review the terms and
    conditions of a defendant’s supervised release for an abuse of discretion, United
    States v. Phillips, 
    785 F.3d 282
    , 284 (8th Cir. 2015), but “when a defendant
    challenges a special condition on constitutional grounds[,] . . . we review de novo,”
    United States v. Washington, 
    893 F.3d 1076
    , 1081 (8th Cir. 2018).
    Although a sentencing judge has “broad discretion” when imposing terms of
    supervised release, we have said that a special condition of supervised release is
    unconstitutionally vague when it “fails to convey sufficiently definite warning as to
    the proscribed conduct . . . when measured by common understanding and
    practices.” 
    Id.
     (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted). Similarly, a special
    condition is impermissibly overbroad when “its overbreadth is real and substantial
    in relation to its plainly legitimate sweep.” United States v. Bordman, 
    895 F.3d 1048
    , 1059-60 (8th Cir. 2018) (“[T]he conditions must not constrain the defendant’s
    liberty more than reasonably necessary to deter criminal conduct, protect the public,
    and promote [the defendant’s] correctional needs.” (second alteration in original)).
    As the Government concedes, Atkins is correct that the two special conditions
    are unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, respectively. In United States v.
    Cooper, No. 21-2158, 
    2021 WL 6101251
    , at *2 (8th Cir. Dec. 21, 2021)
    (unpublished), we held that a condition identical to Special Condition 2 was
    impermissibly vague because a prohibition on “material that would compromise the
    defendant’s sex offense-specific treatment” affords “insufficient notice as to the
    proscribed conduct.” Consequently, we directed that the condition be amended on
    remand to include the following clarifying phrase: “ . . . if the defendant is so notified
    by the probation office.” 
    Id.
     Similarly, in United States v. Adams, 
    12 F.4th 883
    , 889
    (8th Cir. 2021), we held that a condition identical to Special Condition 3 was
    impermissibly overbroad because it “would prohibit [the defendant] from entering
    businesses like convenience stores and book stores.” We therefore directed the
    district court to amend the language on remand so that the prohibition would “be
    limited to establishments whose primary business involve[s] sex-themed material or
    entertainment.” 
    Id.
    -12-
    While the Government does not object to a limited remand to correct Special
    Conditions 2 and 3 in light of Cooper and Adams, Atkins insists that the conditions
    be vacated. We do not agree with Atkins that full vacatur is needed; rather,
    consistent with our past decisions, we will remand for the narrow purpose of
    amending the written judgment as it relates to Special Conditions 2 and 3. See
    Adams, 12 F.4th at 889.
    VI.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Atkins’s conviction for sex trafficking
    of a minor, but we remand for clarification of Special Conditions 2 and 3 in a manner
    consistent with this opinion.
    ______________________________
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