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Filed 1/8/09
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COPY
IN THE
COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD
APPELLATE DISTRICT
(San
Joaquin)
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MICHAEL JAMES
TECKLENBURG,
Petitioner,
v.
THE APPELLATE
DIVISION OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY,
Respondent;
THE PEOPLE,
Real
Party in Interest.
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C055368
(Super. Ct. No. LF007847A)
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ORIGINAL
PROCEEDINGS: Petition for Writ of Review. Writ issued.
Myron Moskovitz;
Hakeen, Ellis & Marengo, Marshall & Marshall, Russell S. Humphrey; and
Markus Mueller-Dombois for Petitioner.
Edmund G. Brown,
Jr., Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Michael P. Farrell, Senior Assistant Attorney General, J.
Robert Jibson, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Raymond L.
Brosterhous II, Deputy Attorney General; James P. Willett, District
Attorney, Ronald J. Freitas, Supervising Deputy District Attorney, Janet
L. Smith, Deputy District Attorney for Respondent.
No appearance for
real party in interest.
At the direction of the California Supreme
Court, we consider two issues regarding the sufficiency of the evidence
to support defendant Michael James Tecklenburg’s misdemeanor convictions
of knowing possession or control of child pornography in violation of
Penal Code section 311.11, subdivision (a).
We conclude substantial evidence supports his convictions and affirm the
judgment.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
After a jury trial, defendant was found guilty
of six misdemeanor counts of knowing possession or control of child
pornography in violation of section 311.11.
The trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed defendant on
three years’ formal probation and ordered defendant to serve 90 days in
county jail. Defendant was also ordered, among other things, to
register as a sex offender pursuant to section 290. Defendant timely
appealed. We next describe the procedural route of the case and the
issues framed for us by the Supreme Court.
On appeal to the appellate division of the San
Joaquin Superior Court, defendant claimed (1) there was insufficient
evidence to show it was defendant who possessed the child pornography
found on the computers that were analyzed, (2) there was insufficient
evidence to show he knowingly possessed child pornography in the absence
of evidence that he knew of the existence of the computer’s temporary
Internet files, and (3) the reporter’s transcript of the trial contained
too many omissions to permit fair consideration of his appeal. The
appellate division affirmed the judgment.
Defendant petitioned the appellate division
for rehearing and applied for certification for transfer to this court.
(Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.708(c), 8.1005.)
The appellate division denied both the request for rehearing and the
application for transfer. Defendant then petitioned this court directly
for transfer. (Code Civ. Proc., § 911, rule 8.1008(b).) We denied his
petition for transfer. Rule 8.500(a)(1) expressly precluded defendant
from petitioning the California Supreme Court for review
of our decision to deny transfer.
Defendant filed an original “petition for writ
of mandate or other appropriate relief” in the Supreme Court, claiming
at this point he had no adequate remedy at law and that relief from the
Supreme Court was “his only remaining avenue for justice for himself and
a fair trial for other persons who might in the future be charged with a
violation of Penal Code § 311.11[, subd.] (a).” Defendant repeated the
same issues he raised on appeal to the appellate division and asked the
Supreme Court to direct this court to transfer his appeal to ourselves
(relief precluded by rule 8.500(a)(1)).
At the direction of the Supreme Court, the
Attorney General filed two informal oppositions to defendant’s
petition. The Attorney General argued the prerequisites for
extraordinary relief had not been met, there was substantial
circumstantial evidence to support defendant’s convictions, and the
record was adequate for review.
The Supreme Court refiled defendant’s writ of
mandate petition “as a petition for writ of certiorari sub nom.
‘Tecklenburg v. Appellate Division, Superior Court for San Joaquin
County’” and granted it as such. The Supreme Court then transferred the
cause to us with directions that we issue the writ of review
to the appellate division and decide the following questions: “(1) Was
the evidence sufficient to establish [defendant’s] personal possession
of the child pornography files on his family’s computer? (2) May
[defendant] be convicted of possessing child pornography stored in a
computer’s cache files absent some evidence that he was aware those
files existed? (See United States v. Kuchinski (9th Cir. 2006)
469 F.3d 853; Barton v. State (June 21, 2007, A07A0486) [648]
S.E.2d [660], 2007 WL 1775565.)”
After the unusual procedural route of the
case, we complied with the orders from the Supreme Court, vacated our
order denying transfer, issued the writ of review as directed and now
proceed to consider the questions posed by the Supreme Court.
We start with a review of the evidence
presented at defendant’s trial.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Home
Computer:
On September 9, 2004, the San Joaquin County
Sheriff’s Department received the hard drive from defendant’s home
computer to review in connection with another investigation. The
computer had been kept in the kitchen of defendant’s family home. The
computer was used by defendant, possibly defendant’s wife, and at least
several of his five children. The computer hard drive was given to Dale
Rogers, an examiner for the High-Tech Task Force in Sacramento.
Rogers explained that a hard drive is a
storage medium for the content of the computer, that files deleted from
a computer are not gone from the computer, that such deleted files
remain in unallocated space on the hard drive until they get overwritten
in whole or in part, and that such files can be recovered forensically
from the unallocated space. Files recovered from unallocated space will
not have their file name or date/time stamps. He also explained that
computers have a folder, generally in their operating system, for
temporary Internet files (TIF). Every time a Web page is accessed on
the Internet by the computer, the computer automatically saves the
material, without any affirmative action by the computer user, in a TIF.
If the TIF storage is filled up, it will spill over into unallocated
space. Periodically, older TIF may be automatically deleted and become
unallocated. Finally, TIF may also be manually deleted. Data or images
found in unallocated space on a hard drive may, therefore, result from
deleted, saved or downloaded files or come in various ways from TIF.
There is often no way to determine the original source, but it can be
said that at some point it was on the computer screen.
When Rogers received the hard drive from
defendant’s home computer, he went through standard forensic procedures
to recover stored documents, graphics, e-mail, Internet history and
other basic files from the hard drive. In the course of his
examination, he found what he described as “pornography and incest
material.” Some of the pornographic material depicted obviously young
children. Rogers made a copy of the hard drive to document it.
Rogers testified regarding five sexually
explicit images of young girls (People’s exhibits 2-6) recovered from
unallocated cluster space on the hard drive of the home computer. There
were six representations of the image in People’s exhibit 2 on the hard
drive: three thumbnails (a small picture of the main image) and three
larger images. In his opinion, the image had appeared on the computer
screen three times. People’s exhibit 3 contained an image of the same
young girl as in People’s exhibit 2, taken from a further distance
away. On People’s exhibit 6, the image had the words “dark collection
141” embedded on the picture, indicating in Rogers’s opinion that it was
one of a series of child pornographic pictures downloaded from the
Internet.
Rogers also testified regarding a further 30
or so images recovered from the home computer’s TIF. One of these
images (People’s exhibit 7) included text identifying a specific Web
site that offers images of “little” virgins. Other sexually explicit
images were surrounded by a frame, again indicating to Rogers that they
were part of a series from a child pornography Web site. Similarly,
additional recovered images shared common characteristics indicating
they were also part of a series of photographs. Some of the images
contained references to “Lolita,” a common term used to describe
underage girls. One image included a banner that read
“age14schoolgirls.” One of the images was titled “Lola69topless.”
Another image contained text that included, among others, “daddy’s
babes,” “Lolitas with old men,” “young Lolita’s shaved,” and “exclusive
collection incest pics.” Another image apparently came from a Web site
-- which we do not identify by name -- that offers to “shock” viewers
with images of incest. A couple of the images were repeated on the hard
drive, indicating they had come in twice. Many of the images depicted
explicit sexual acts between adults and young children. All the images
came off Internet Web pages that were viewed on the home computer.
Rogers could tell a number of the images were not pop-ups
because of their size and format.
Rogers recovered several Web pages from the
home computer that had the actual words being used to search the
Internet, including incest misspelled “insest,”
multiple references to “Lolita” and “underage.” He found a search
engine -- which we do not state by name -- that identifies Web sites
offering images of “monster” “cocks.” He noted 51 Web links to sites
that appeared from their title to contain child pornography. Some of
the names on the Web searches matched the names on the recovered images
from the site.
Rogers found a “cookie” file
on the home computer with the file name of
“Michael-Tecklenburg@www.theincest[2.txt[.]” The name was taken from
the registered user of the computer. It did not necessarily indicate
who was sitting at the keyboard at the time it was downloaded.
Rogers found a search engine Web page with a
“softcom” banner at the top and the term “insest” placed in the search
box. Defendant’s e-mail address was at “softcom.net.” The e-mail
addresses of other family members were not at softcom, but used other
services such as “yahoo” and “hotmail.”
Rogers recovered a Webcam video showing
defendant sitting at the keyboard of the computer.
Rogers testified, however, that there were
multiple users of the home computer and that he could not state who
accessed the images introduced in the People’s exhibits.
San Joaquin County Sheriff Detective James
Hood interviewed defendant on September 14, 2004, about the child
pornography located on his home computer. Defendant told Hood he used
the home computer and had visited pornographic Web sites, including the
one that we have described as offering images of “monster” “cocks.”
Defendant said there was no child pornography, but according to Hood,
defendant seemed concerned. Defendant kept saying that “if it popped
up, I couldn’t help it.” After Hood stopped questioning defendant,
defendant made the spontaneous statement: “My life is over.”
When Hood went to the Web site identified in
defendant’s computer as offering images of “little” virgins, he found a
free site tour link on the home page. When he clicked on the site tour,
Hood saw a number of images that were the same as found on defendant’s
home computer. Similarly, when Hood went past the home page of the Web
site that touted sexual talk with “Lolitas,” he saw images of the same
children pictured on defendant’s home computer.
We next set forth the evidence of child
pornography found on four computers located in two separate fire
departments where defendant worked.
The Three Lodi
Fire Department Computers:
San Joaquin County Sheriff’s officers
retrieved three computers from station 1 of the Lodi Fire Department,
where defendant worked as a fire captain.
The day after defendant spoke with Hood, he
spoke with Michael Pretz, the fire chief for the City of Lodi.
Defendant told Pretz that he believed there would be something found on
the fire department’s computer. Defendant said he had viewed
pornography on department computers, without specifying which computer
specifically. Defendant did not indicate whether the pornography was
adult or child pornography.
Nicholas Moreno, Jr., a detective with the San
Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department assigned to the Sacramento Valley
High-Tech Crime Task Force, conducted the forensic analysis of the five
computer hard drives received from the Lodi and Clements fire
departments.
On the computer taken from the Lodi Fire
Department station 1 common area (Lodi common area computer), Moreno
found Web sites and pictures similar to what was found on defendant’s
home computer. When Moreno looked up some of the Web sites, he found
they contained very graphic images of young children. On the fire
captain’s computer taken from the Lodi Fire Department station 1 (Lodi
captain’s computer), Moreno found images and graphics connected to
“incest” and “Lolita.” The Lodi captain’s computer was available to
whoever was assigned the duty of captain. Moreno found nothing of
interest on the third computer from the Lodi Fire Department battalion
chief’s office.
The Two Clements Fire Department Computers:
San Joaquin Sheriff’s officers
retrieved two computers from the Clements Fire Department, where
defendant was a volunteer fire fighter. Moreno testified the Clements
dispatch computer had multiple users, while the Clements chief’s
computer was located in the chief’s locked office. Defendant could have
had access to the Clements chief’s computer before the current chief
took the office and kept it locked.
On the computer taken from the Clements Fire
Department dispatch office (Clements dispatch computer), available to
all the volunteer firemen in Clements, Moreno found Web sites similar to
sites found on defendant’s home computer, including Lolita sites and
word searches about young girls. All the child pornography Web sites
found on the Lodi Fire Department computers were also on the Clements
dispatch computer. Seven sexually explicit images found in unallocated
space on the Clements dispatch computer were introduced into evidence
(People’s exhibits 55-59, 61-62). One of the images (People’s exhibit
59) contained the same people shown in one of the images found on
defendant’s home computer (People’s exhibit 33). Moreno found common
search terms were used on the Clements dispatch computer and defendant’s
home computer.
Additional
Overlap of Images and Web sites Amongst the Computers:
On the computer taken from the Clements Fire
Department chief’s computer (Clements chief’s computer), Moreno
recovered a number of child pornography images and graphics from
unallocated space. One of the images was the same as an image found on
the Lodi common area computer. Two other duplicate pornographic images
were found, indicating they had been accessed more than once.
A specific Web site promoting incest was found
in defendant’s home computer, the Lodi common area computer, and the
Clements chief’s computer. An image from that Web site was found on the
Clements dispatch computer. Pictures from a Web site touting “Lolitas”
were found on the Clements dispatch computer, the Clements chief’s
computer, and the Lodi common area computer. The specific Web site
offering images of “monster” “cocks” was found on the Clements chief’s
computer and the Lodi common area computer. The Web site contained
pictures of teenage boys that led Moreno to think it was a child
pornography site. It had the theme of child pornography.
Moreno testified that if a person is looking
at child pornography on the Internet, a child pornography pop-up can
appear, but he has never seen child pornography pop-ups in other areas.
Hood testified that he had spent 30 to 40 hours going to the sites found
on these computers and never experienced a child pornography pop-up.
The Defense:
In defense, defendant’s two sons
testified that they had looked at pornography sites on the home
computer. Defendant’s elder son denied seeing any image of child
pornography during the time he was searching for porn. Defendant’s
younger son said he never purposefully went on the Internet to find very
young girls having sex with adult males, but he did remember clicking on
“amateur” once and also looking for “little virgins.” He did not tell
the investigating detective about this when he was interviewed because
it was embarrassing. Both of defendant’s sons and one of his daughters
testified they experienced a large number of pop-ups on the home
computer.
Defendant testified on his own behalf. He
admitted looking at adult pornography, but denied ever looking at child
pornography. He had concern when officers requested his home computer
because he knew there was going to be adult pornography on the
computer. When he spoke with Pretz, defendant said he told Pretz he had
observed porn. Defendant said he told Pretz “there’s nothing illegal.”
Defendant testified he was not at home for at least two of the dates
connected to material found on the home computer’s TIF. Several defense
witnesses corroborated defendant’s alibi for those dates. Another one
of the Lodi Fire Department captains testified 56 firefighters and some
of their children had access to the Lodi common area computer. The
Clements Fire Department chief testified 26 firefighters volunteer for
the Clements department. Defendant presented his own computer expert
witness.
DISCUSSION
I.
There Is Substantial Evidence Defendant Personally Possessed the
Child Pornography on the Family Computer
The first question the Supreme Court has
directed us to consider is: “(1) Was the evidence sufficient to
establish [defendant’s] personal possession of the child pornography
files on his family’s computer?” We conclude it was.
“‘“To determine the sufficiency of the
evidence to support a conviction, an appellate court reviews the entire
record in the light most favorable to the prosecution to determine
whether it contains evidence that is reasonable, credible, and of solid
value, from which a rational trier of fact could find the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”’ [Citation.] The pertinent inquiry
is ‘whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’
[Citation.]” (People v. Romero (2008) 44 Cal.4th 386, 399.) “If
the verdict is supported by substantial evidence, we are bound to give
due deference to the trier of fact and not retry the case ourselves.
[Citations.] . . . It is the exclusive function of the trier of fact to
assess the credibility of witnesses and draw reasonable inferences from
the evidence. [Citations.]” (People v. Sanchez (2003) 113
Cal.App.4th 325, 330.) Here we are focused on one element of the crime:
identity.
Numerous images of child pornography,
graphics, and Web site addresses were found on the home computer. Some
of the images were found both in thumbnail and normal size. The size
and format did not match that of a pop-up. Some of the images were
found multiple times on the hard drive, indicating the images had been
accessed multiple times. A number of the images appeared to be part of
a series or collection of related child pornography. Some of the images
matched images found on a site tour of a child pornography Web site;
other images matched images found on another child pornography site
after going past the home page. Evidence was found of multiple Internet
word searches for terms commonly connected with child pornography. Some
of the word searches matched the names on the recovered images from the
Web site.
Thus, the child pornography found on the home
computer did not appear to be the result of accidental or mistaken
Internet use or involuntary computer pop-ups. Defendant was one of the
users of the home computer. He was the registered owner of that
computer. This, of course, would not be sufficient alone to show he was
the person who had entered the word searches or Web site addresses or
accessed the Internet images and graphics found on the home computer.
There was, however, more.
Amongst the material found on the home
computer was a search engine Web page with a “softcom” banner at the top
and the term “insest” placed in the search box. “Insest” misspelled was
specifically identified as a way to get child pornography past computer
filters and firewalls. Out of the family users, only defendant’s e-mail
address was at “softcom.net.”
When defendant was interviewed by Hood about
the child pornography located on his home computer, defendant told Hood
he had visited pornographic sites. One of them that defendant
identified by name was the Web site offering images of “monster”
“cocks.” That Web site was later determined to have a child pornography
theme. Moreover, while defendant denied accessing child pornography,
defendant kept saying that “if it popped up, I couldn’t help it.” And
after Hood stopped questioning defendant, defendant made the spontaneous
statement: “My life is over.” A jury could reasonably infer a
consciousness of guilt from defendant’s statements.
The jury could also have reasonably inferred a
consciousness of guilt from defendant’s prompt phone call to his boss
Pretz alerting him to the fact pornography would be found on the Lodi
Fire Department computers. The jury did not have to believe defendant
that he assured Pretz “it was nothing illegal.”
Then there is the astonishing amount of
evidence of similar child pornography found on the Lodi and Clements
Fire Department computers. These four computers contained not only Web
sites, images, and Internet search terms similar to those on defendant’s
home computer, but some of the same Web sites and at least one
image of the same children as pictured in one of the defendant’s
home computer images. All of the child pornography Web sites on the
Lodi Fire Department computers were located on the Clements dispatch
computer. At least three child pornography Websites were common to the
home computer and computers from Lodi and Clements. Defendant was a
fire captain at the Lodi fire station and a volunteer firefighter at
Clements.
Defendant makes much of the fact that there
were 56 firefighters with access to the Lodi common area computer, more
than 20 firefighters with access to the Clements dispatch computer, that
Hood did not interview each of these firefighters, and that Hood did not
examine any of the other firefighters’ home computers. Defendant
apparently would have us believe computer browsing of child pornography
is common among firefighters -- so much so that it is unreasonable,
without forensic examination of the computers of all the other
firefighters, to infer from the evidence of child pornography on the
fire department computers that it was defendant who was on those
computers and his home computer when the child pornography was
accessed. We are not persuaded. Viewing the evidence as in a Venn
diagram, the fact defendant provided the commonality among all four of
these computers reasonably demonstrated that it was defendant who
searched the Internet for and accessed the child pornography Web sites
and images. Any inadequacy in the investigation of other possibilities
went only to the weight of such evidence.
Viewing the totality of the evidence in the
light most favorable to the judgment, substantial circumstantial
evidence supported the jury’s conclusion that defendant was the person
who had possessed or controlled the child pornography on the home
computer (and the work computers).
II.
There Is Substantial Evidence Defendant Knowingly Possessed Or
Controlled The Child Pornography In The TIF (Cache)
The second question the Supreme Court has
directed us to consider is: “(2) May [defendant] be convicted of
possessing child pornography stored in a computer’s cache files absent
some evidence that he was aware those files existed? (See United
States v. Kuchinski (9th Cir. 2006) 469 F.3d 853; Barton v. State
(June 21, 2007, A07A0486) [648] S.E.2d [660], 2007 WL 1775565.)”
The Supreme Court’s question focuses our attention on a developing area
of the law regarding whether a defendant knowingly possesses child
pornography on a computer when the computer automatically downloads
those images into computer cache. There is currently no case that has
considered the issue under the California statute, section 311.11,
subdivision (a). (Cf. People v. Luera (2001) 86 Cal.App.4th 513,
523 [substantial evidence supported defendant’s conviction under section
311.11 as defendant admitted possessing and downloading images of child
pornography and showed one of the images on his computer to officers
when they asked].)
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals most
recently considered the issue under the federal child pornography
statute in United States v. Kuchinski, supra, 469 F.3d 853 (Kuchinski).
Kuchinski pled guilty to possession of child pornography in violation of
18 U.S.C. section 2252A(a)(5)(B),
and forfeiture of his computer equipment under 18 U.S.C. section 2253.
(Kuchinski, supra, at p. 856.) He was found guilty after a court
trial of receipt of child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. section
2252A(a)(2). Kuchinski admitted his responsibility for the 110 images
of child pornography located in his computer’s downloaded files and the
deleted files in his recycle bin (Kuchinski, supra, at p. 856),
but contested whether his sentence for receipt and possession of those
files could be increased based on thousands of other images located in
his computer’s active or deleted TIF. (Id. at pp. 861-862.) The
Ninth Circuit held it could not. (Id. at pp. 862-863.)
Distinguishing one of its prior cases (United States v. Romm (9th
Cir. 2006) 455 F.3d 990) as a case where “the defendant knew about the
cache files and had actually taken steps to access and delete them[,]” (Kuchinski,
supra, at p. 862), and a Tenth Circuit case (United States v.
Tucker (10th Cir. 2002) 305 F.3d 1193) as a case where the defendant
knew his computer’s Web browser was automatically saving the images he
viewed in its cache (Kuchinski, supra, at pp. 862-863), the Ninth
Circuit held that “[w]here a defendant lacks knowledge about the cache
files, and concomitantly lacks access to and control over those files,
it is not proper to charge him with possession and control of the child
pornography images located in those files, without some other indication
of dominion and control over the images. To do so turns abysmal
ignorance into knowledge and a less than valetudinarian grasp into
dominion and control.” (Id. at p. 863; see also United States
v. Stulock (8th Cir. 2002) 308 F.3d 922, 925, noting without
disagreement that the district court acquitted defendant of knowing
possession of child pornography because “one cannot be guilty of
possession for simply having viewed an image on a web site, thereby
causing the image to be automatically stored in the browser’s cache,
without having purposely saved or downloaded the image.”)
The Ninth Circuit’s position has been followed
in Georgia. In Barton v. State, supra, 648 S.E.2d 660 (Barton),
the Court of Appeals of Georgia concluded that the mere accessing and
viewing of pornographic materials over the Internet did not constitute
the knowing possession of those materials under the relevant Georgia
statute
absent some evidence the defendant was aware of the storage of them in
the computer’s TIF or cache. (Id. at pp. 662-663.)
In Commonwealth v. Gardner (2007) 72
Va.Cir. 497, the Virginia circuit court expressly agreed with
Kuchinski, supra, 469 F.3d 853, but denied a motion to
dismiss filed by the defendant because the defendant could be found to
have known of the images stored in his TIF or cache based on his
statement to law enforcement investigators that “I don’t have too
much.” (Commonwealth v. Gardner, supra, at pp. 497-498.)
The Ninth Circuit view in Kuchinski, supra,
469 F.3d 853, is not, however, universally accepted. (State
v. Jensen (Ariz. 2008) 217 Ariz. 345, 349-350 [notes the division of
authority on whether a defendant knowingly possesses child pornography
on a computer when the computer automatically downloads those images
without the defendant’s knowledge, but does not need to decide issue
since it finds defendant “received” the images under its statute];
Howard, supra, 19 Berkeley Tech. L.J. at pp. 1253-1264
[discussing two conceptual approaches to the issue].)
In Ward v. State (April 27, 2007,
CR-05-1277) ___ So.2d ___, (2007 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 71), the Alabama
court adopted a constructive possession approach when evidence showed
the defendant “reached out” for and viewed 288 images of child
pornography and that he had the ability to copy, print, e-mail or send
the images to another computer. (Id. slip opn. at pp. 15-24.)
In Commonwealth v. Diodoro (2007) 932
A.2d 172 (Diodoro),
the Pennsylvania statute, similar to section 311.11 here in California,
made it a criminal offense for any person to “knowingly possess[] or
control[] any book, magazine, pamphlet, slide, photograph, film,
videotape, computer depiction or other material depicting a child under
the age of 18 years engaging in a prohibited sexual act or in the
simulation of such act . . . .” (18 Pa. Consol. Stat. Ann. § 6312(d)
(2008), quoted in Diodoro, at p. 173.) The court found the
defendant had intentionally sought out and viewed child pornography and
thereby controlled the pornography. (Diodoro, supra, at
pp. 174-175.) “His actions of operating the computer mouse, locating
the Web sites, opening the sites, displaying the images on his computer
screen, and then closing the sites were affirmative steps and
corroborated his interest and intent to exercise influence over, and,
thereby, control over the child pornography.” (Id. at p. 174.)
The court noted that “determining whether an individual sought and
controlled pornographic images of children recognizes and promotes the
purposes behind such statutes; namely, the destruction of the market for
the exploitative use of children, Osborn v. Ohio, 495 U.S. 103,
109, 110 S.Ct. 1691, 109 L.Ed.2d 98 (1990), and, in turn, the protection
of the physical and psychological well-being of children. New York
v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 756, 102 S.Ct. 3348, 73 L.Ed.2d 1113
(1982).” (Id. at p. 174, fn. 4.)
With these cases in mind, we turn to the
interpretation of our California statute. “‘As in any case involving
statutory interpretation, our fundamental task is to determine the
Legislature’s intent so as to effectuate the law’s purpose.’
[Citation.] The rules for performing this task are well established.
We begin by examining the statutory language, giving it a plain and
commonsense meaning. [Citation.] We do not, however, consider the
statutory language in isolation; rather, we look to the entire substance
of the statutes in order to determine their scope and purposes.
[Citation.] That is, we construe the words in question in context,
keeping in mind the statutes’ nature and obvious purposes.
[Citation.]” (People v. Cole (2006) 38 Cal.4th 964, 974-975.)
“If the statutory language is unambiguous, then its plain meaning
controls. If, however, the language supports more than one reasonable
construction, then we may look to extrinsic aids, including the
ostensible objects to be achieved and the legislative history.
[Citation.]” (Ibid.)
The operative language of section 311.11,
subdivision (a), provides it is a criminal offense for any person to “knowingly
possess[] or control[] any matter, representation of
information, data, or image, including, but not limited to,
any film, filmstrip, photograph, negative, slide, photocopy,
videotape, video laser disc, computer hardware, computer software,
computer floppy disc, data storage media, CD-ROM, or computer-generated
equipment or any other computer-generated image that contains
or incorporates in any manner, any film or filmstrip, the production
of which involves the use of a person under the age of 18 years, knowing
that the matter depicts a person under the age of 18 years personally
engaging in or simulating sexual conduct[.]” (Italics added.)
By its plain language section 311.11,
subdivision (a), prohibits either possession or control of
any child pornography “matter, representation of information, data,
or image.” (§ 311.11, subd. (a), italics added.) The
nonexclusive language then broadly describes numerous forms and methods
by which such child pornography may be distributed, including not just
physical storage devices, but any “computer-generated
image[.]” (Ibid.,
italics added.) The statutory language reflects a far-reaching
intent by the Legislature to cover both traditional means of displaying
child pornography and the new era of Internet use in an effort to reduce
the exploitation of children. By its plain terms, section 311.11
includes an image of child pornography as it is displayed on a computer
screen as an object that may be knowingly possessed or controlled.
Section 311.11, subdivision (a), is not limited to the knowing
possession or control of the computer’s underlying data or files.
We view, therefore, the language of section
311.11, subdivision (a), as having material differences to the federal
child pornography statute at issue in Kuchinski, supra, 469 F.3d
853. The federal statute prohibits the knowing possession of “any book,
magazine, periodical, film, videotape, computer disk, or any other
material that contains an image of child pornography[.]” (18
U.S.C.S. § 2252A(a)(5)(B), italics added.)
That is, the federal statute does not make it illegal to knowingly
possess or control an image of child pornography; only to knowingly
possess the material containing the image. In the context of computer
child pornography, it is understandable that the federal courts have
focused, therefore, on the data stored in the computer’s files as that
which is illegal under the federal statute to possess. Without
knowledge of such files, there can be no “knowing” possession under the
federal statute.
Similarly, the Georgia statute, as considered
in Barton, supra, 648 S.E.2d 660, prohibited possession of “‘any
material which depicts a minor or a portion of a minor’s body engaged in
any sexually explicit conduct.’” (Id. at p. 661.)
However, the language of section 311.11,
subdivision (a), is not so limited. Section 311.11, subdivision (a),
makes it directly illegal to knowingly “possess[] or control” any
“image” of child pornography.
The evidence here amply supports the jury’s
conclusion that defendant did knowingly possess or control images of
child pornography. The evidence established defendant actively searched
for child pornography Web sites, opened such Web sites, went past the
home pages, clicked through images on at least one site tour, displayed
multiple images of child pornography from the Web sites on his computer
screen, in some cases multiple times, and enlarged some of the images
from thumbnail views. In our view, the TIF or cache evidenced
defendant’s knowing possession or control of the images. There was no
need for additional evidence that defendant was aware of the TIF or
cache in order for the defendant to have violated section 311.11,
subdivision (a).
We wish to be clear. Although a few states
have prohibited the viewing of child pornography,
we do not interpret section 311.11, subdivision (a), as doing so. We
conclude defendant here knowingly possessed or controlled images of
child pornography in violation of section 311.11, subdivision (a),
because the evidence, viewed in the light favorable to the judgment,
demonstrates defendant intentionally used his home and work computers to
find, access, and peruse through quantities of child pornography,
manipulating the display of such images on his computer screen.
DISPOSITION
Having reviewed the record and finding
substantial evidence supports defendant’s convictions, we affirm the
judgment.
CANTIL-SAKAUYE , J.
We concur:
SCOTLAND , P. J.
DAVIS , J.

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