US v. Rusnak, No. 17-10137 (11-25-20)(R. Nelson w/Berzon & Lee). Note: This is an Az FPD appeal.
The 9th affirms convictions for child porn, denying
arguments involving misstatements in the warrant, unfair enforcement of a
discovery agreement, and prosecutorial misconduct, including “outside the scope
of direct” cross examination and “toeing the line” in closing arguments. The
9th did vacant several SR conditions and remanded for clearing up the record.
The defense was that defendant was not living at home,
and someone else (actually identified) had accessed, possessed, and distributed
the child porn. The 9th recognizes that the 4th Circuit has allowed the raising
of Franks challenge when an affiant
who secured a search warrant makes contradictory statements at trial. The 9th sidesteps the adoption here because
of waiver. The 9th further concludes there
was no plain error.
As for the discovery agreement (part of practice in
the Tucson division), the 9th finds no unequal application when it limited the
defense witness (who was not disclosed) but allowed the agent’s undisclosed
testimony. The 9th concludes that in weighing the testimony, the agent’s
testimony was foreshadowed by the summary provided. The limiting of the wife’s
testimony actually, to the 9th, benefitted the defendant.
Plain error occurred when the prosecutor expanded the
scope of the wife’s direct, asking about “other visitors” to the house. This
was beyond the agreement reached. However, the plain error was harmless given
the evidence. The prosecutor also came close to misconduct in closing but did
not step over in arguing inferences about who could access, and what was shown.
The court’s limiting instruction cleaned it up.
Last, the court had to make specific findings for some
of the SR conditions. Hence, a remand.
A spirited appeal by Molly Karlin, AFPD, Arizona
(Phoenix) in a tough case.
The decision is here:
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/11/25/17-10137.pdf
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