STATE
v. BOHANNON, 62
Wn. App. 462 (1991)
814
P.2d 694
THE
STATE OF WASHINGTON, Respondent,
v. GEORGE R. BOHANNON, Appellant.
No.
13408-0-II.
The
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division Two.
August
21, 1991.
[1]
Constitutional Law — Police Power —
Validity — Scope of
Regulation.
Under Const. art. 1, § 1, the Legislature
has
broad discretion to decide the scope of measures
necessary to
promote the health, peace, safety, and general
welfare of the
public.
[2]
Sexual Offenses — Sexual Exploitation of
Children — Public
Policy.
The prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse
of children
constitutes a governmental objective of surpassing
importance.
[3]
Criminal Law — Statutes — Vagueness
— Test.
A criminal
prohibition is sufficiently specific to satisfy
the due
process guaranty if (1) it provides fair notice
of what
conduct is proscribed and (2) it protects against
arbitrary
enforcement of the laws. It must be sufficiently
definite so
that persons of common intelligence need not guess
at its
meaning or differ as to its application, but it
need not
allow persons to predict with complete certainty
the exact
point at which their actions would be prohibited.
[4]
Statutes — Validity — Presumption
— In General.
A statute
is presumed to be constitutional unless its
unconstitutionality
appears beyond a reasonable doubt.
[5]
Statutes — Construction — Meaning
of Words — Statutory
Definition
— Effect.
Legislative definitions generally
control in construing the statutes in which they
appear.
[6]
Sexual Offenses — Sexual Exploitation of
Children —
"Sexually
Explicit Conduct" — Vagueness.
The phrase
"sexually explicit conduct," which is defined
in part in RCW 9.68A.011(3)(e)
as exhibitions for the purpose of the sexual
stimulation
of the viewer, is not unconstitutionally vague.
[7]
Statutes — Validity — Standing To
Challenge — Prejudice to
Another.
A party has no standing to challenge a statute
on the
basis that its operation has prejudiced another
person.
[8]
Searches and Seizures — Warrant —
Affidavit — Age of
Information
— In General.
Facts set forth in a search
warrant affidavit are not too stale or remote
to support the
issuance of a warrant if they support a logical
inference
that the items sought are still located at the
place to be
searched.
[9]
Criminal Law — Lesser Included Offense —
Instruction —
Necessity
— In General.
A criminal defendant is not entitled
to a lesser included offense instruction unless
each of the
elements of the lesser offense is a necessary
element of the
offense charged. A crime does not constitute a
lesser
included offense if it is possible to commit the
greater
offense without also committing the crime.
[10]
Sexual Offenses — Sexual Exploitation of
Children —
Included
Offenses — Sexually Explicit Depictions
of Minor.
Possession of depictions of a minor engaged in
sexually
explicit conduct as defined by former RCW 9.68A.070
is not a
lesser included offense of the crime of the sexual
exploitation
of a minor as defined by RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b).
[11]
Sexual Offenses — Sexual Exploitation of
Children —
Included
Offenses — Communication With Minor for
Immoral
Purposes.
Communication with a minor for immoral purposes
as defined
by RCW 9.68A.090
is not a lesser included offense of
the crime of the sexual exploitation of a minor
as defined by
RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b).
Nature
of Action:
The defendant was charged with the sexual
exploitation
of a minor for taking nude photographs of his
stepdaughter.
Superior
Court:
The Superior Court for Cowlitz County, No.
89-1-00126-5,
Milton R. Cox, J., on November 9, 1989, entered
a judgment
on a verdict of guilty.
Court
of Appeals:
Holding that the prohibition of taking
sexually explicit
photographs of a minor was within the State's
police power,
that the statutory prohibition was not
unconstitutionally
vague, that the defendant lacked
standing to challenge the statute as being overbroad,
that information
provided by the victim was not too stale to establish
probable cause
for the issuance of a search warrant, and that
the defendant
was not entitled to certain lesser included offense
instructions,
the court affirms
the judgment.
James
K. Morgan, for appellant.
C.C.
Bridgewater, Jr., Prosecuting Attorney,
and Douglas
S. Boole,
Deputy,
for respondent.
ALEXANDER J.
George R. Bohannon
appeals his conviction for sexual exploitation
of a minor. He claims that the statutes under
which he
was convicted are unconstitutionally vague and
overbroad. He also
contends that the trial court erred in (1) not
suppressing evidence
that was seized pursuant to a search warrant,
(2) not instructing
the jury on lesser included offenses and (3)
admitting and
withholding certain evidence. We affirm.
On June 5,
1988, Bohannon allegedly took sexually explicit
photographs
of his 16-year-old stepdaughter, T.M.B. He was
thereafter charged,
pursuant to RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b),
with sexual
exploitation of a minor.
In January
1987, T.M.B. moved in with her mother, Sheralee,
her stepfather,
George Bohannon, his son, Jeff, and her half-sister,
Lindsey. T.M.B.
testified that Bohannon had, on several
occasions, before
and after the move, made inappropriate sexual
advances toward
her, including requests that she pose for nude
photographs.
During the
1988 school year, T.M.B. and a high school girl
friend planned
to vacation in California. T.M.B. approached
Bohannon for money for the trip, offering to do
odd jobs
and chores around the house in return for the
money. She claimed
that Bohannon responded by telling her he would
only give her
the money if she agreed to pose for nude photographs.
She said
that she refused to do so.
According to
T.M.B., Bohannon again approached her on June
5, 1988,
and asked her to pose for the nude photographs.
She said that
she at first refused, but later agreed to do so
"[b]ecause there
was no other way [she] would be able to get the
money, and [she]
needed it to live if [she] was going to California."
She said
that Bohannon took 19 nude photographs of her,
instructed her
how to pose and paid her $100, telling her that
he was taking the
pictures to keep in his locker at work.
Initially,
T.M.B. did not tell anyone about the incident.
In late
September or early October of 1988, T.M.B. started
counseling sessions
with Roger Lucas, a pastor at her church.
During one of
these sessions, T.M.B. told Lucas and another
counselor that
Bohannon had taken photographs of her. Lucas
testified that
in March of 1989 he told T.M.B.'s mother,
Sheralee, about
the photographs. On the advice of a social
worker, Sheralee
told T.M.B. that she knew about the photographs.
The Longview
police were then informed.
Based on the
information provided by T.M.B. and her mother,
the Longview
police sought a warrant to search Bohannon's lockers
at his
workplace. A Cowlitz County District Court judge
authorized issuance
of the warrant and it was served on March 30,
1989. A search
of Bohannon's lockers produced several boxes of
magazines which
apparently contained nude photographs of women.
In another locker
they found 19 photographs of T.M.B. as well as
another photograph,
which depicted a friend of T.M.B.'s in a state
of partial
undress.
Bohannon sought
before trial to have the magazines suppressed
from evidence.
The trial court denied Bohannon's motion. The
State did not,
however, offer the magazines in evidence at trial.
The State's
motion to suppress the photograph of T.M.B.'s
friend was
granted by the trial court.
Bohannon testified
and denied that he had taken the photographs.
He claimed that T.M.B. brought the photographs
to his
workplace in early June of 1988 and offered to
sell them to him
for $100. Bohannon's son, Jeff, testified that
T.M.B. also tried
to sell the photographs to him. Bohannon claimed
that Jeff told
him about T.M.B.'s earlier attempt to sell the
photographs to
Jeff before T.M.B. brought the photographs to
him. Bohannon testified
that he agreed to buy the photographs from T.M.B.
only to
avoid the embarrassment of having her try to sell
them elsewhere.
He said that he purchased the photographs and
then tossed
them in the back of his locker, forgetting about
them.
Evidence was
presented at trial that T.M.B. had posed, in the
past, for nude
photographs taken by a boyfriend. Evidence,
offered by Bohannon,
that T.M.B. had stated on different occasions
that she had aspirations of becoming a Playboy
bunny was
ruled inadmissible by the trial court.
Bohannon was convicted of the
charge by a jury and he appeals.
I
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF STATUTES
Bohannon argues
that RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b)
and 9.68A.011(3)(e)
are unconstitutionally
vague or overbroad. More specifically, he
contends that
the term "sexually explicit conduct", defined
in RCW
9.68A.011(3)(e),
is so vague and overbroad as to allow the
authorities
to arbitrarily decide what conduct is or is not
prohibited.
[1]
Pursuant to article 1, section 1 of the Washington
Constitution,
the State Legislature is empowered to enact
laws to promote
the health, peace, safety, and general welfare
of the
people of the state. State
v. Brayman,
110 Wn.2d 183,
192-93, 751
P.2d 294 (1988).
Broad discretion is vested in the Legislature
to determine what the public interest demands
and what
measures are necessary to protect the same. State
v. Brayman,
110 Wn.2d at 193; Reesman
v. State,
74 Wn.2d 646,
650, 445
P.2d 1004 (1968).
[2]
It is well established that the "prevention of
sexual exploitation
and abuse of children constitutes a government
objective of
surpassing importance." State
v. Farmer,
116 Wn.2d 414,
422, 805
P.2d 200 (1991)
(quoting State
v. Davis,
53 Wn. App. 502,
504, 768
P.2d 499, review
denied,
112 Wn.2d 1014 (1989));
RCW 9.68A.001.
In our judgment, the State's interest in
protecting its
children from sexual exploitation is sufficiently
compelling to
prohibit the taking of sexually explicit
photographs
of a minor.
Nevertheless,
even where an enactment is a valid exercise of
the Legislature's
police power, specificity in the penal statutes
and ordinances
is also required to comply with the requirements
of due process
under the Fourteenth Amendment. Seattle
v. Eze, 111 Wn.2d 22,
26, 759 P.2d 366,
78 A.L.R.4th 1115 (1988); Seattle
v. Rice,
93 Wn.2d 728,
731, 612 P.2d 792
(1980).
A
Vagueness
[3,
4] To
meet constitutional muster a statute must provide
fair notice
to citizens as to what conduct is proscribed and
it must
also protect against arbitrary enforcement of
the laws. Under
the Fourteenth Amendment, a "statute is `void
for vagueness if
it is framed in terms so vague that persons of
common intelligence
must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ
as to
its application." Eze,
111 Wn.2d at 26 (quoting O'Day
v. King
Cy.,
109 Wn.2d 796,
810, 749 P.2d 142
(1988)).
The required
degree of specificity is, however, limited in
two significant
ways: (1) a statute is presumed to be constitutional
"unless its
unconstitutionality appears beyond a reasonable
doubt." Eze,
111 Wn.2d at 26; and (2) impossible standards
of specificity
are not required. "Consequently, a statute is
not unconstitutionally
vague merely because a person cannot predict
with complete
certainty the exact point at which his actions
would be classified
as prohibited conduct." Eze,
111 Wn.2d at 27.
Here, Bohannon
was charged with aiding or causing a minor to
engage in "sexually
explicit conduct", knowing that the conduct
would be photographed.
RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b).
"Sexually explicit conduct"
is defined, in part, as "[e]xhibition of the genitals
or unclothed
pubic or rectal areas of any minor, . . . for
the purpose
of sexual stimulation of the viewer;" RCW
9.68A.011(3)(e).
Bohannon contends that the language "for the
purposes of
sexual stimulation of the viewer" allows for
arbitrary determinations
as to which nude exhibitions are sexually
stimulating. He suggests, for example, under that
definition,
the taking of a photograph of a naked baby in
a bathtub
could fall within the reach of the statute.
[5]
Legislative definitions generally control in construing
the statutes
in which they appear. Seattle
v. Shepherd, 93 Wn.2d 861,
866, 613 P.2d 1158
(1980). Accordingly the constitutional
sufficiency of the language turns on the adequacy
of the definition
contained in the statute.
[6]
The language "for the purposes of sexual stimulation
of the
viewer", rather than making the statute vague,
serves to clarify
and narrow the reach of the statute. It is this
language that
would permit a trier of fact to distinguish between
pictures of
the sort taken here and those taken for "legitimate
scientific,
medical, or educational activities." The latter
pictures, the
Legislature specifically did not intend to
prohibit. RCW
9.68A.001.
In State
v. Schimmelpfennig,
92 Wn.2d 95,
103, 594 P.2d 442 (1979),
a case in which the term "for purposes of
sexual misconduct"
was challenged as unconstitutionally vague,
our Supreme
Court said:
any person
of common understanding, contemplating
asking a small
child to climb into a van and engage
in sexual activities need not guess as to the
proscription
and penalties of the statute.
Schimmelpfennig,
92 Wn.2d at 103. We believe, similarly, that
any person of
common understanding would know that causing
photographs
to be taken of a nude 16-year-old girl would fall
within the proscription
of RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b)
and 011(3)(e).
B
Overbreadth
We have found
it difficult to determine precisely what
Bohannon's argument
is on overbreadth. It appears, however, that
he is claiming
that the statute is overbroad because it
interferes with
the victim's
First Amendment rights of free expression.
[7]
Bohannon does not have standing to make such a
challenge here.
In order to challenge the constitutionality of
a statute, the
person challenging it must show that the complained
of statute
has operated to his own prejudice. Farmer,
116 Wn.2d at 421.
Bohannon would only have standing to make the
challenge if the
statute affected his right to nude expression.
He clearly does
not have standing to claim that T.M.B.'s nudity
is his protected
expression.
II
SEARCH WARRANT
Bohannon challenges
the validity of the search of his lockers.
He contends
that the search warrant should not have been issued
because the
information provided to the police was too stale
or remote
to establish probable cause that the items sought
would be in
his locker.
[8]
"An affidavit in support of a search warrant must
set forth
sufficient facts and circumstances to establish
a reasonable
probability that criminal activity is occurring
or about to
occur." State
v. Petty,
48 Wn. App. 615,
621, 740 P.2d 879,
review
denied,
109 Wn.2d 1012
(1987). The test for staleness
of information contained in a search warrant affidavit
is a commonsense
test of determining if the facts are sufficient
to justify a
conclusion by a neutral magistrate that the property
sought is still
on the person or premises to be searched. State
v.
Petty, supra; State v. Anderson,
41 Wn. App. 85,
95, 702 P.2d 481
(1985), rev'd,
107 Wn.2d 745,
733 P.2d 517
(1987); State
v.
Riley,
34 Wn. App. 529,
534, 663 P.2d 145
(1983). If the facts
and circumstances recited in the affidavit support
the conclusion
that there is continuing and contemporaneous
possession of
the property sought to be seized, then the
information
is not stale for purposes of probable cause. State
v.
Johnson,
17 Wn. App. 153,
156, 561 P.2d 701,
review
denied, 89 Wn.2d 1001
(1977).
The affidavit
presented to the Cowlitz County District Court
judge in support
of the warrant contained a police detective's
recounting of
statements made to him by T.M.B. and her mother.
According to
the detective, T.M.B. stated that at the time
the photographs
were taken, Bohannon told her that he would be
keeping them
in a private place at his workplace. The affidavit
goes on to reveal
that T.M.B. told the officer that over 6 months
later she demanded
that Bohannon return the photographs and he
responded that
"they were still in his locker at his place of
employment.
. . ."
These facts
are sufficient to support a conclusion that the
photographs
would still be in one of Bohannon's lockers at
his workplace.
Bohannon's statements to T.M.B. reveal that he
had kept
the photographs in his locker for 6 months. That
fact alone supports
a logical inference that he would have possession
of the photographs
on the day of the search, only 2 months after
he last told
T.M.B. that he was keeping them at work.
III
JURY INSTRUCTIONS
[9]
Bohannon contends that the trial court erred in
refusing to
give his proposed jury instructions on two lesser
included offenses.
In Washington, a defendant is entitled to an
instruction
on a lesser included offense, when requested,
if each of
the elements of the lesser offense is a necessary
element of the
offense charged. State
v. Pelkey,
109 Wn.2d 484,
488, 745 P.2d 854
(1987); State
v. Workman,
90 Wn.2d 443,
445, 584 P.2d 382
(1978). "Put another way, if it is possible to
commit the greater
offense without having committed the lesser offense,
the latter
is not an included crime." Pelkey,
109 Wn.2d at 488; State
v. Falco,
59 Wn. App. 354,
356, 796 P.2d 796
(1990).
[10]
Bohannon contends that the trial court should
have instructed
the jury that "possession of depictions of a minor"
was a lesser
included offense of the crime charged. At the
time Bohannon
committed the crime with which he was charged,
RCW 9.68A.070
provided in part as follows:
(1) A person
who knowingly possesses visual or
printed matter depicting a minor engaged in sexually
explicit conduct
is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
(2) As used
in this section, "minor"
means a person
under
sixteen years of age.[]
(Italics ours.)
According to
the record, T.M.B. was 16 years old at the time
of the
crime. Consequently, Bohannon could not have been
convicted of
the crime of possession of depictions of a minor,
the victim not
being a minor according to RCW 9.68A.070.
It was, therefore, not
error for the trial court to refuse to give the
requested instruction.
[11]
Similarly, it was not error for the court to refuse
to instruct
the jury that "[c]ommunication with a minor for
immoral purposes",
RCW 9.68A.090,
was a lesser included offense of sexual
exploitation
of a minor. RCW 9.68A.090 provided
in pertinent part as follows: "A person who communicates
with a minor
for immoral purposes is guilty of a gross
misdemeanor.
. . ." "Communication" for purposes of this statute
has been judicially
interpreted to mean "any spoken word or
course of conduct
with a minor for purposes of sexual misconduct..
. ." Schimmelpfennig,
92 Wn.2d at 103-04; Falco,
59 Wn. App.
at 358.
In our judgment,
it is possible for a person to commit the
offense of sexual
exploitation of a minor without committing the
crime of communication
with a minor for immoral purposes. For
example, an
individual could take sexually explicit photographs
of a child at
a time when the child was unaware that the pictures
were being taken.
Under those circumstances, the photographer
could still
be found guilty of sexual exploitation of a minor,
notwithstanding
the fact that he had not communicated with the
child by conduct
or word, if he were to use or sell the
photographs
"for the purpose of sexual stimulation of the
viewer". Without
"communication", being invariably part of both
offenses, RCW
9.68A.090
is not a lesser included offense of the
greater crime.
See
Falco,
59 Wn. App. at 359. The trial court did
not err in refusing the instruction.
A majority
of the panel having determined that only the
foregoing portion
of this opinion will be printed in the
Washington Appellate
Reports and that the remainder shall be
filed for public
record pursuant to RCW 2.06.040,
it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
PETRICH, A.C.J., and MORGAN,
J., concur.
[fn1] RCW 9.68A.040(1)(b)
in effect at the time the crime was committed
provided as follows:
"(1) A person
is guilty of sexual exploitation of a minor if
the person:
"(b) Aids, or
causes a minor to engage in sexually explicit
conduct, knowing
that such conduct will be photographed or part
of a live performance;
. . .". Amended by Laws of 1989, ch. 32, §
2, effective
June 23, 1989.
[fn2] Chapter
9.68A.011(4)
now provides that a minor is any person
under eighteen years of age. Amended by Laws of
1989, ch. 32,
§ 1, effective July 23, 1989.
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