7th Circuit Partially Vacates Sex Trafficking Convictions
7th Circuit Partially Vacates Sex Trafficking Convictions
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has vacated part of a man’s convictions for his involvement in a juvenile sex trafficking scheme, finding the statute under which he was convicted is unconstitutionally vague.
The case of United States of America v. Douglas D. Jackson, 15-3693, began in May 2014 when Jackson, who was then 25 years old, met 15-year-old J.T. and told her he was 17. Jackson asked J.T. if she wanted to make some money, then began paying for to alter her appearance and placing ads on the website Backpage.com
The ad listed a phone number of a prepaid flip phone Jackson had purchased, and he and J.T. used the phone to text customers, who paid $150 for 30 minutes with J.T. or $200 for an hour. The pair travelled from South Bend to Atlanta, Louisville and Grand Rapids, Michigan to meet customers.
While in Grand Rapids, police officers were conducting a routine patrol in an area known for prostitution when they saw J.T. leave the car with her underwear exposed and Jackson reaching into the floorboard of the vehicle. One of the officers shined a light into Jackson’s car and discovered a firearm, which he had a permit for.
Jackson was then arrested and J.T. was taken into custody. After J.T. admitted that she was engaged in prostitution, Jackson was charged by complaint with two counts of sex trafficking a minor. He was later indicted on several other counts, including one count of possession of a firearm during a crime of violence, namely, sex trafficking under 18 U.S. Code section 924(c), among others.
A jury found Jackson guilty as charged, but he moved under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 for acquittal of the charge under section 924(c), arguing that statute was unconstitutionally vague. The statute defines a “crime of violence†as a felony that, among other standards, “involves a substantial risk that physical force … may be used in the course of committing the offense.†That language, Jackson said, was subject to the same deficiencies that led to the invalidation of the residual clause Armed Career Criminal Act in Johnson v. United States, — U.S. –, 135 S.Ct. 2551 (2015).
The U.S. District Court from the Northern District of Indiana disagreed and denied Jackson’s motion. The court then determined his offense level should be increased by two levels because he was a manager or supervisor in the offense and another two levels because he falsely claimed ignorance of the prostitution.
Jackson was, thus, sentenced to 295 months, but on appeal he once again argued his conviction under section 924(c) must be vacated due to unconstitutional vagueness. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, with Judge Ilana Rovner writing that Johnson has since been extended in United States v. Vivas-Ceja, 808 f.3d 719, to hold section 924(c)(3)(B) unconstitutionally vague. Based on the holding in Vivas-Ceja, that identical language of 18 U.S.C. section 16(b) was unconstitutionally vague, the court held in United States v. Cardena, 842 F.3d 959, 996 (7th Cir. 2016), that section 924(c) is also vague.
“We acknowledge that the case for distinguishing section 924(c)(3)(B) is not altogether unconvincing, but conclude that, unless we hear differently from the Supreme Court in (Sessions v. Dimaya, No. 15-1498), stare decisis and our recent precedents compel the conclusion that section 924(c)(3)(B) is unconstitutionally vague,†Rovner wrote.
Thus, the 7th Circuit vacated Jackson’s conviction under that statute, and also found the district court erred by enhancing his offense level as a manager or supervisor, because the victim of a crime cannot be a “participant.†Thus, the case was remanded for resentencing without the adjustment.
UE’s New Food Service Provider Chartwells Plans Job Fair
Chartwells, the new food service provider at the University of Evansville, has 20-30 open positions, including cooks, cashiers, food service workers, porters, supervisors, and baristas. A Chartwells Higher Education Job Fair is planned for Wednesday, August 9, 8:00 a.m.-noon, in Ridgway University Center on UE’s campus.
Previous experience in food service is preferred but not required. Great customer service skills are a must.
Chartwells Higher Education Dining Services partners with over 290 colleges and universities of all sizes across the United States. Chartwells embraces diversity and inclusion and is committed to recruiting and developing individuals interested in a career in the foodservice and hospitality industry.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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EVSC Names North Varsity Basketball Coach
The Evansville Vanderburgh Corporation announced the appointment of Jason Roach as the boy’s varsity basketball coach and physical education teacher at North High School. Roach replaces Andre Thomas who was recently named athletic director at Harrison High School.
Roach, who was previously a teacher and head coach at Pike Central High School, has a B.S. in health, physical education and life science from the University of Southern Indiana. Prior to his time at Pike Central, Roach taught at Washington Middle School and served as varsity assistant basketball coach at Bosse High School.
During his tenure at Pike Central, Roach accumulated a 47-29 record over three years and had three consecutive winning seasons. He led Pike Central to sectional championships in 2016 and 2017. In 2016, Roach was named Hoosier Basketball Coaches Association Coach of the Year in District Three and the Courier and Press All-Southwest Indiana Coach of the Year.
Indiana changes school child abuse reporting procedures
IL for www.theindianalawyer.ccom
Indiana school employees are now required to report suspected child abuse or neglect directly to the Department of Child Services or local law enforcement instead of first notifying a school administrator.
Republican State Sen. Mark Messmer of Jasper co-authored the legislation. He told the Tribune Star of Terre Haute that the change was made because of a history of issues being swept under the rug and not reported.
Prior to the law, school employees first had to report suspected abuse to the school’s principal or the principal’s designee.
The law said schools can’t create a policy that would restrict or delay an employee from reporting suspected abuse in any way.
The change emphasizes “all of us having firsthand responsibilities to protect kids,†said Teresa Meredith, president of the Indiana State Teachers Association.
She said it’s better to “err on the side of caution†and report rather than “find out later that something horrible happened.â€
The Vigo County School Corp. in Terre Haute is working on changing its policy to comply with the new state law. The proposed policy change had its first reading on July 17 and will have two more readings before being finalized.
The policy “needs to be clear that the person who observes or has reason to believe or has evidence that supports the child has been abused has to report to authorities first, then to the principal,†said school board member Jackie Lower.
The law also requires schools to start providing age-appropriate child abuse education to children in kindergarten through 12th grade.
Appellate court orders state to return $30,000 in seized currency
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
The state of Indiana must return $30,000 that was seized as part of a suspected drug trafficking scheme after the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday the state failed to prove the money could reasonably be considered the proceeds of drug trafficking.
While visually inspecting parcels at a local shipping company in November 2015, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Detective Brian Thorla was drawn to two parcels that were both shipped from Illinois to the same man, Jacob Murphy, in California. Thorla noticed the packages because they were being sent by priority overnight shipping, heavily taped and addressed to the same California recipient, which is known as a “source state for the importation/exportation of controlled substances.â€
Thorla conducted a K-9 dog sniff on the parcels, which alerted positively to the odor of controlled substances in each package. Thorla then obtained a search warrant authorizing law enforcement to search the packages “for controlled substances, records of drug trafficking, and proceeds of drug trafficking.â€
When law enforcement officials opened the parcels, they found $30,300, but no controlled substances or records of drug trafficking. The money was seized, but no criminal charges were brought against any of the defendants involved, including Murphy or Robert Bowman and Tommy Maurry, who were listed as the senders on the packages. There is also no indication that any of the men have been the subjects of a state or federal criminal investigation.
The state moved to transfer the money to the United States, but the men objected, arguing the seizure of the currency exceeded the scope of the search warrant. The Marion Superior Court ultimately granted the state’s motions, finding there was probable cause to “authorize the seizure of ‘proceeds of drug trafficking’ … .â€
The men appealed in Robert Bowman, Tommy Maurry, and Jacob Murphy, et al. v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1606-MI-1463, and the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed the grant of the state’s motion to transfer in a Wednesday opinion.
Judge John Baker, writing for the unanimous appellate panel, said the only way the seizure of the money could have fallen within the terms of the search warrant was if it could “reasonably be concluded to be ‘proceeds of drug trafficking.’†In this case, Baker said the fact that the parcels were heavily taped and were being shipped overnight to the same California recipient was not enough to prove the money could reasonably be considered the proceeds of drug trafficking.
“So, we are left with the fact that a K-9 unit gave positive alerts on both parcels at issue,†Baker continued. “The very most that this fact means is that at some point, someone handling the parcels transferred an odor of controlled substances to them. It may have been Bowman and Maurry, who sent the parcels, or it may have been any number of individuals involved with the handling of the parcels in transit.â€
Further, no drugs or drug paraphernalia were found in the parcels, and none of the men were charged with drug crimes, so the seizure of the currency exceeded the scope of the search warrant, Baker said. The appellate court remanded the case with instructions to return the money to the appellants.
IS IT TRUE AUGUST 7, 2017
IS IT TRUE earlier today that Marion Superior Court Judge Heather Welch awarded $128 million dollars in damages to the STATE OF INDIANA in a court order handed down by her today? … the state terminated IBM’s contract in 2009 claiming the company’s performance was poor?  …the State claimed that IBM breached a contract commitment to modernize  the delivery of welfare services for the Family and Social Services Administration?  …this decision will be appealed by IBM?
IS IT TRUE speaking of poverty please the additional IS IT TRUES in todays CCO?
IS IT TRUE that according to the publication Human Progress, 2016 was the first year in human history when 1% of the population owned more wealth than the remaining 99%?…in spite of that the number of people in the world who lived in absolute poverty is lower than it has ever been?
IS IT TRUE today 6 Billion of the 6.5 Billion people on earth do not live in poverty while the other 500 Million do?…that the ration of people not in poverty to those who are is at an all time high of 12?…just 40 years ago in 1977 was the first year that the critical ratio was one meaning an equal number of people were in and out of poverty?
IS IT TRUE historically the ration has been about 3 people in poverty for every one that is not?…this means that insofar as raising people out of poverty is concerned during the period of time since World War 2 the ratio of those out of poverty to those who are in poverty has improved by 3,500 percent?
IS IT TRUE this  progress is attributed in whole to the massive creation of wealth that widespread industrialization and the information age have made possible?…the very wealth that drives the resentment between the 1% and the 99% is what generated the resources to reduce poverty?
IS IT TRUE people at all economic levels need to start looking at how they live and cease obsessing over where they are in the fictitious ranking of wealth?…one small bite of an ever expanding pie is much better than having nearly all of a static pie?
IS IT TRUE from a lifestyle perspective, a low wage worker today lives better and more securely than a wealthy person 100 years ago?…with the invention of things like modern medicine, refrigeration, industrialized farming, electronics, transportation and housing, one of today’s less fortunate live a better life than the so called robber barons like Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Vanderbilt?
IS IT TRUE the time is now to wake up and smell the roses?…with only 500 million still living in poverty, down from 1.8 Billion in 1970 when poverty hit its peak, we can literally eliminate poverty in another 20 years?…that won’t keep the obsession with pecking order in check though because envy seems to be at the very root of human nature?
Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Would you like to know what it’s going to cost to repair the road mistake on the North Main street project?
Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS†and “LOCAL SPORTS†posted in our sections.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
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