United States v. Michael Gardner , 887 F.3d 780 ( 2018 )


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  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 18a0074p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                               ┐
    Plaintiff-Appellee,   │
    │
    >      No. 17-1672
    v.                                               │
    │
    │
    MICHAEL TAYLOR GARDNER,                                 │
    Defendant-Appellant.     │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 2:16-cr-20135-1—Gershwin A. Drain, District Judge.
    Decided and Filed: April 16, 2018
    Before: BATCHELDER, SUTTON, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ON BRIEF: Phillip D. Comorski, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellant. Andrew Goetz, UNITED
    STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Michael Gardner shared a cell phone with his seventeen-year-
    old girlfriend, B.H., to facilitate her “sex dates” with other men. When one of B.H.’s clients
    turned out to be an undercover officer, she agreed to let police search the phone. A jury
    convicted Gardner of trafficking a minor for sex and producing child pornography, primarily
    based on evidence recovered from the phone. On appeal, Gardner urges us to vacate his
    No. 17-1672                         United States v. Gardner                            Page 2
    convictions on the ground that the district court erroneously admitted the phone evidence during
    the trial, among other alleged errors. We decline the invitation and affirm.
    I.
    As a senior in high school, Gardner met B.H., then a freshman, and they became friends
    for a time. Three years later, they reconnected. The relationship became intimate, and more. On
    at least one occasion, Gardner used his iPhone to film them having sex. Before long, Gardner
    pressured B.H. to have sex with other men for money. She was seventeen years old, and
    Gardner knew it.
    In August 2015, Gardner began posting advertisements for sex with B.H. on
    Backpage.com, inviting potential customers to call or text her to arrange “dates” and listing
    Gardner’s phone number.       Gardner posted more than thirty advertisements for B.H., often
    attempting to attach explicit pictures of her that website administrators removed. Only Gardner
    posted the ads. But both Gardner and B.H. exchanged texts with customers to arrange details.
    When customers called, Gardner handed his phone to B.H. and told her to use the speakerphone
    so that he could hear the price. Gardner arranged the transportation for B.H.’s liaisons and gave
    her drugs to endure them. At the end of each encounter, he demanded the money the clients had
    paid her. The two of them usually stayed the night at motels, living out of the rooms where B.H.
    had liaised with clients. On days when B.H. “told him that [she] didn’t want to do anything,”
    Gardner got angry. R. 106 at 29. More than once he put his hands around her throat, warning
    that “he could hurt [her] really bad” and get away with it. 
    Id. at 30.
    Business started as usual on October 10, 2016. Gardner posted an ad for B.H. on
    Backpage.com. A customer called Gardner’s phone in response to the ad. B.H. answered and
    arranged the time, the place, and the price. Gardner asked his cousin to drive them to a Red Roof
    Inn for the “trick.” When they arrived, Gardner handed B.H. his phone and told her to call him
    after she was done. Gardner parked across the street and waited.
    Once in the motel room, the customer told B.H. that he was an undercover officer. He
    alerted task force officers, who entered the room, secured the premises, and spoke with B.H.
    Inside they found a white iPhone on a dresser next to B.H.’s purse. B.H. said it was hers, agreed
    No. 17-1672                       United States v. Gardner                              Page 3
    to let the officers search it, and provided the passcode. Meanwhile, a separate group of officers
    approached Gardner and his friends in the parked car. They asked Gardner if he had a phone.
    He said that he did, a black cell phone somewhere “in the back seat of the car.” R. 104 at 106.
    Officers never found it. They took B.H. and Gardner to the police station for interviews and
    released them that night.
    A few days later, B.H. agreed to move to Kentucky with Gardner to live with him and his
    mother. Pregnant, B.H. hoped that the two of them “were going to be able to start over” and that
    she wouldn’t have to do any more “dates.” R. 106 at 82. But within a week, Gardner pressured
    her to turn more tricks and became violent when she refused. B.H. left. She walked for an hour
    before someone picked her up and helped her return home to Detroit.
    A grand jury indicted Gardner. Count 1 charged him with trafficking a minor for sex.
    18 U.S.C. § 1591(a)(1). Count 2 charged him with producing child pornography. 
    Id. § 2251(a).
    Before trial, Gardner asked the district court to suppress any evidence from his phone because
    officers seized it in violation of the Fourth Amendment and to exclude any photographs showing
    his gang affiliation. The district court denied both motions. It ruled that B.H. consented to let
    officers search the phone and that she had actual and apparent authority to do so. And it ruled
    that the photographs were relevant to show an element of the sex trafficking charge—whether
    B.H. feared that Gardner would cause her “serious harm” if she refused to prostitute herself. 
    Id. § 1591(e).
    The jury found Gardner guilty on both counts, and the court sentenced him to concurrent
    240-month sentences.
    II.
    Motion to Suppress. Gardner argues that the district court should have suppressed his
    phone because B.H. lacked apparent authority to consent to a warrantless search. But to prevail
    on appeal, Gardner needs to show that B.H. lacked actual authority too. He does not even try to
    do so. That is a mistake because we “review[] judgments, not opinions.” Texas v. Hopwood,
    
    518 U.S. 1033
    , 1034 (1996). Even if we found that B.H. lacked apparent authority, that would
    not necessarily suffice to alter the judgment. That possibility is not hard to imagine. Officers
    No. 17-1672                          United States v. Gardner                              Page 4
    could obtain information at the scene that initially suggests a lack of apparent authority (the
    woman says the phone is her brother’s and she stole his passcode) and obtain more information
    later that establishes actual authority (the woman admits that she lied and the phone is hers). See
    Illinois v. Rodriguez, 
    497 U.S. 177
    , 188–89 (1990). Gardner forfeited any challenge to the
    court’s suppression ruling.
    Gardner would lose the argument anyway. We appreciate that cell phones have become
    singular instruments with singular importance to many people, maybe most people. Riley v.
    California, 
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    , 2484 (2014). But the third-party consent exception to the warrant
    requirement applies to cell phones all the same, just like other essential “effects” protected by the
    Fourth Amendment. United States v. Matlock, 
    415 U.S. 164
    , 171 (1974).
    The question, then, is whether a reasonable officer could believe that B.H. had authority
    over the phone based on the facts available to them at the time. 
    Rodriguez, 497 U.S. at 188
    . We
    think so. Consider all of the information that points in that direction. B.H. used the phone to
    speak with the customer. She used it throughout the day to arrange the details of the get-
    together. She had the phone, and only that phone, in her possession during the date. She knew
    the phone’s passcode. And she gave it to the officers. Any reasonable officer would have
    thought B.H. controlled the phone. See United States v. Wright, 
    838 F.3d 880
    , 887–88 (7th Cir.
    2016) (desktop computer); United States v. Thomas, 
    818 F.3d 1230
    , 1241–42 (11th Cir. 2016)
    (same).
    Gardner offers a few rejoinders. Each fails.
    The officers, he says, should have known he owned the phone or at least inquired further
    because he didn’t have a phone when they encountered him outside. But when officers asked
    him where his phone was, Gardner told them his “black cell phone” was somewhere in his
    cousin’s car. R. 104 at 106. Nothing he said put officers on notice that the white iPhone in the
    motel room was his.
    Even if that is the case, Gardner adds, B.H. was too frightened to consent voluntarily. He
    points out that she initially gave officers a fake name and that Detective Shock threatened to get
    a warrant if she did not consent. But the apprehension of “get[ting] in trouble” presents itself in
    No. 17-1672                        United States v. Gardner                               Page 5
    every consent-to-search investigation into illegal conduct. R. 60 at 18. Plus, Shock did not
    engage in any improper conduct or otherwise bend her will. See United States v. Salvo, 
    133 F.3d 943
    , 954 (6th Cir. 1998). B.H. acted voluntarily.
    Gardner separately claims that B.H. told the officers that her boyfriend owned the phone.
    That’s not what the arresting officers remember.        But even if this were true, B.H. by all
    reasonable appearances had “joint access or control.” 
    Matlock, 415 U.S. at 171
    n.7 (emphasis
    added). Because consent to search “does not rest” exclusively “upon the law of property,” that is
    all that matters. 
    Id. Motion in
    Limine. Over Gardner’s objection, the trial court admitted photographs of him
    brandishing guns and displaying his membership in the Traveling Vice Lords, a violent Detroit
    gang. Gardner still objects, claiming that the photographs were irrelevant and unduly prejudicial
    to boot. He is wrong. As to relevance, the government needed to prove that Gardner coerced
    B.H. into engaging in commercial sex by threatening her with “serious harm.” 18 U.S.C.
    § 1591(a), (e)(2)(B), (e)(4). B.H.’s testimony that she saw the photographs had a “tendency to
    make [it] more or less probable” that she believed Gardner was the kind of person who would
    harm her. Fed. R. Evid. 401(a). As to prejudice, the district court permissibly ruled that the
    photographs would not cause “unfair prejudice.” Fed. R. Evid. 403. At this point in the trial, the
    jury would not have had tender eyes, easily shocked by images not seen every day. After all,
    they saw other evidence that “had far greater inflammatory potential,” like the video of Gardner
    smacking B.H. while he had sex with her. United States v. Mandoka, 
    869 F.3d 448
    , 459 (6th Cir.
    2017). And the district court carefully circumscribed the evidence, admitting only photographs
    that B.H. had seen during and around the prostitution. No abuse of discretion occurred.
    Rebuttal Evidence.    Gardner argues that the district court abused its discretion by
    permitting the government to call Orin King in rebuttal when it could have called him during its
    case in chief. But he barks up the wrong tree. A party’s opportunity to introduce rebuttal
    evidence “is not limited by the fact that [it] could have introduced the proffered evidence in [its]
    case-in-chief.” United States v. Caraway, 
    411 F.3d 679
    , 683 (6th Cir. 2005). The government
    called King for a permissible reason—“to rebut new evidence . . . proffered in the defendant’s
    case-in-chief.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    Once on the stand, Gardner suggested for the first time
    No. 17-1672                        United States v. Gardner                                Page 6
    that his only involvement in B.H.’s prostitution was encouraging her to stop because he “didn’t
    approve of it.” R. 107 at 16. In response, King explained that he had met Gardner in prison,
    where Gardner told him: that Gardner knew B.H. was seventeen; that he began a sexual
    relationship with her to encourage her to prostitute herself; that he posted ads for her on
    Backpage.com; that he directed his cousin to steal her phone; that he monitored her calls; that on
    October 10, he arranged travel to her date, gave her his phone to use, and parked across the street
    to wait for her; and that he pressured her to begin prostituting again after they moved to
    Kentucky. All of this was permissible rebuttal evidence. And the government had ample
    justification to introduce it after Gardner’s testimony opened wide the door to its relevance.
    Sufficiency of the Evidence. Gardner claims that insufficient evidence supports the jury’s
    verdict on Count 2 because the government failed to show that the pornographic video crossed
    state lines. But a forfeiture hangs over the argument. Although Gardner moved for a judgment
    of acquittal after the government’s case-in-chief, he did not renew the motion after his own. See
    United States v. Penney, 
    576 F.3d 297
    , 315 (6th Cir. 2009). Gardner errs in making the
    argument even now in any case. The statute does not require the government to show that the
    depiction crossed state lines.    It suffices that the “visual depiction was produced . . . using
    materials that have been mailed, shipped, or transported in . . . interstate or foreign commerce.”
    18 U.S.C. § 2251(a). Gardner proved this element himself by stipulating that his iPhone had
    been manufactured in China.
    We affirm.