Court Opinion

ID: 6112000
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-24 20:00:30.56354+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:21.655658
License: Public Domain

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                                                   [PUBLISH]
                            In the
         United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Eleventh Circuit

                   ____________________

                         No. 19-11669
                   ____________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
                                              Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
BRUCE MITCHELL NICHOLSON,

                                           Defendant-Appellant.

                   ____________________

          Appeal from the United States District Court
             for the Northern District of Alabama
          D.C. Docket No. 2:15-cr-00418-MHH-JHE-1
                   ____________________
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2                      Opinion of the Court                19-11669

Before JILL PRYOR, LUCK, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges.
BRASHER, Circuit Judge:
        Bruce Nicholson, an Alabama man convicted of federal child
sex crimes and sentenced to life in prison, challenges his conviction
on direct appeal. The main question in this criminal appeal is, as it
often is, whether a criminal should “go free because the constable
has blundered.” People v. Defore, 150 N.E. 585, 587 (N.Y. 1926).
Nicholson was convicted of heinous crimes—the long-term sexual
exploitation of two children that came to light only after one be-
came pregnant and he spirited both away across the country. But
the FBI dawdled during its investigation. The FBI let physical evi-
dence sit in a wrecker service’s office in Kentucky for months be-
fore securing a warrant to seize it. And it searched a laptop seized
in New York six months after its warrant’s deadline. Nonetheless,
the answer to the question on appeal is that the constable’s blun-
ders do not warrant reversing Nicholson’s conviction as a matter
of law. Accordingly, after careful consideration and with the bene-
fit of oral argument, we affirm.
                      I.     BACKGROUND

       Nicholson’s conviction arises out of his interactions with
two young girls: JF and KM. Nicholson had close personal relation-
ships with both children and subjected each to sexual abuse from
an early age. JF is Nicholson’s daughter by Rebecca Ford, his long-
term girlfriend, and KM is Ford’s daughter from a previous rela-
tionship. Although KM and Nicholson are not biologically related,
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19-11669              Opinion of the Court                      3

she viewed him as her father and would often refer to him as
“[d]ad” or “daddy.”
           A.    Nicholson sexually abuses KM and JF.

       JF and KM lived with Ford and Nicholson from JF’s birth in
1998 to 2008. During that ten-year period, Nicholson repeatedly
sexually abused both girls.
       Nicholson began abusing KM, the older of the two children,
when she was six or seven years old. He performed oral sex on KM,
had her perform oral sex on him, touched her genitals, and used
sex toys on her. Nicholson, who was employed as a truck driver,
would bring KM along on work trips and continue the abuse while
the two were traveling. Nicholson regularly viewed child pornog-
raphy in KM’s presence and showed her child pornography to ex-
plain what he wanted her to do with him.
       JF, the younger child, was about seven years old when Ni-
cholson first touched her genitals during a bath. After JF told a
school counselor and her mother about the abuse, Nicholson
threatened that he would stop loving her if she told anyone else.
Afterwards, Nicholson continued to have sexual contact with JF,
sometimes going to her bedroom and sometimes bringing her to
his. When JF was eight or nine years old, Nicholson conducted
what he called a “fashion show,” during which he used a green
camera to take sexually explicit pictures of JF and KM. He photo-
graphed the girls naked and wearing lingerie that he had purchased
for them. During the “fashion show,” Nicholson performed oral
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4                      Opinion of the Court                19-11669

sex on both girls. He would do so repeatedly during the ten-year
period that the three lived together. Just as he did with KM, Nichol-
son showed JF child pornography. He also asked KM to teach and
encourage JF so that she would perform the same sexual acts that
KM did. Nicholson specifically wanted KM to teach JF “[t]o not be
shy, to open up more, [and] to be more non-resistant.”
       In 2008, KM (then about twelve or thirteen years old) and JF
(about ten years old) were removed from Nicholson and Ford’s
custody and went to live with Janet and Mark Baker, relatives of
Ford’s. When Janet Baker arrived at Nicholson’s house to pick up
the girls’ belongings, she discovered light-up high heels “for
women who worked in nightclubs,” women’s lingerie, and “very
small dresses.” KM told Baker that all these items were hers.
        Despite moving in with the Bakers, JF and KM had regular
weekend overnight visits with Nicholson, and his abuse of the girls
continued. KM received a cellphone soon after the move that she
used to text with Nicholson. Nicholson used his access to KM to
solicit nude photos from her, requesting over text that she “send
him something pretty.” KM understood this request for what it was
and complied, taking a picture of her genitals using her phone and
sending it to Nicholson.
       Two-and-a-half years after the girls were removed from Ni-
cholson and Ford’s home, Nicholson regained custody of JF. Alt-
hough KM stayed with the Bakers, she continued her overnight vis-
its with Nicholson, where she would stay in his room. Throughout
this period, Nicholson continued to sexually abuse KM. He
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19-11669               Opinion of the Court                             5

escalated that abuse to vaginal intercourse beginning when KM
was fourteen or fifteen years old.
        When she was about sixteen years old, KM became pregnant
by Nicholson. Nicholson continued having sex with KM after he
learned that she was pregnant and was excited at the prospect that
the child might be a girl. Nicholson also continued and escalated
his abuse of JF, performing oral sex on her and attempting for the
first time “to insert his fingers into [JF’s] genitalia.”
 B.     Nicholson takes the girls across state lines and is arrested.

        In June 2012, Nicholson left Alabama with JF and KM
“[b]ecause [KM] was pregnant and showing and [Nicholson] got
scared.” KM expected the move to be permanent, left her car in
Alabama, and left a note for the Bakers. KM brought the lingerie
that Nicholson had purchased for her. Initially, Nicholson took the
girls to Florida. When “word had gotten out that [JF and KM] were
missing,” Nicholson left Florida, traveled through the Carolinas,
and eventually arrived in New York. Along the way, Nicholson
continued to have sex with KM.
       In New York, Nicholson got a job driving eighteen-wheeler
trucks for a company he had previously worked for in Alabama. He
then left the vehicle that he had driven to that point, a Ford F-150,
in the company’s parking lot in New York, taking JF and KM with
him in one of the company’s eighteen-wheelers. While traveling in
the eighteen-wheeler, Nicholson had KM sleep with him in his
bunk and continued to perform oral sex on her.
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6                      Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

       When JF and KM disappeared, Baker contacted the local po-
lice department, which opened an investigation resulting in the is-
suance of a state arrest warrant charging Nicholson with interfer-
ence with child custody. The FBI also became involved in the in-
vestigation, obtaining a federal arrest warrant for unlawful flight to
avoid prosecution.
       About a month after the girls were taken, the FBI discovered
that Nicholson had been hired to drive an eighteen-wheeler and
developed a plan to arrest him on his route. At the FBI’s request,
state police stopped the eighteen-wheeler in Kentucky and arrested
Nicholson. FBI agents on the scene took custody of the girls. As
part of a “cover story,” neither JF nor KM mentioned their abuse
in their initial interview with law enforcement. During a follow-up
interview, however, KM told the FBI about the abuse “[b]ecause
[she] had two babies in [her] belly to worry about, not [Nichol-
son].”
       Although the FBI coordinated the nationwide search for Ni-
cholson and two FBI agents arrived at the scene shortly after his
arrest in Kentucky, the FBI did not search the eighteen-wheeler.
Instead, after Nicholson’s arrest, a Kentucky wrecker service towed
the eighteen-wheeler, searched it, and maintained its contents in
several boxes. The state police told the wrecker service “to hold
onto [the truck’s contents] and make sure nobody gets around
them, [and] that the FBI would be there within a reasonable
amount of time to receive them.” Despite attempts to recover his
belongings, Nicholson was unable to do so because the wrecker
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19-11669               Opinion of the Court                       7

service held the items on the expectation that the FBI would want
them.
       About six months after the arrest, the FBI obtained warrants
to search the F-150 that Nicholson had left in New York and the
contents of the eighteen-wheeler maintained by the wrecker ser-
vice in Kentucky. They found a laptop in New York. In Kentucky,
they found a green camera (which held pornographic images), sex
toys, and related paraphernalia.
        The FBI shipped the New York laptop to the FBI’s Birming-
ham office so that it could be searched. The New York warrant in-
cluded an attached addendum requiring all searches of electronic
material to be completed within sixty days, although it allowed the
government to request an extension “upon a showing of good
cause.” But the receiving FBI agent in Birmingham, unaware that
the New York warrant imposed any time limit, did not proceed ex-
peditiously. About four and a half months after receiving the com-
puter and about six months after obtaining a warrant, the FBI im-
aged the laptop’s hard drive and conducted a digital forensic analy-
sis that uncovered child pornography.
            C.    Nicholson is charged and convicted.

       Nicholson was charged with child pornography and child
sex abuse offenses in a six-count indictment in the Northern Dis-
trict of Alabama. Counts One and Two charged him under 18
U.S.C. § 2423(a) with the knowing transportation of a minor in in-
terstate commerce with the intent that the minor “engage in sexual
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8                      Opinion of the Court               19-11669

activity for which a person can be charged with a criminal offense.”
Count One referenced KM and Count Two referenced JF. Count
Three charged traveling in interstate commerce “for the purpose
of engaging in illicit sexual conduct with [JF],” a violation of 18
U.S.C. § 2423(b). Count Four charged knowingly transporting by
means of interstate commerce child pornography found on the lap-
top and camera, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(1). Count Five
charged that Nicholson did “knowingly possess and access with in-
tent to view” a laptop hard drive containing an image of child por-
nography, “including an image that involved a prepubescent minor
and a minor who had not attained 12 years of age,” which was
transported in interstate commerce in violation of 18 U.S.C. §
2252A(a)(5)(B), (b)(2). And lastly, Count Six charged that Nicholson
attempted to and did use, persuade, induce, entice, and coerce a
minor, KM, to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose
of producing an image of that conduct in a manner affecting inter-
state commerce, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a), (e).
       Before trial, Nicholson moved to suppress evidence from
the Kentucky and New York searches, arguing that each violated
the Fourth Amendment. The district court held a hearing. The
FBI’s case agent testified that he did not know about the incrimi-
nating contents of the eighteen-wheeler until later interviews with
JF and KM and that he learned that the wrecker service had kept
the items only after an investigation. Both FBI agents at the scene
of the arrest testified that they never searched the truck, knew
nothing about a wrecker service, gave no instructions to the state
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19-11669                Opinion of the Court                         9

police as to any items in the truck, and had no knowledge of what
happened to the truck’s contents. The district court denied Nichol-
son’s motion as to the Kentucky search. Relevant to this appeal, the
district court found that “[t]he record demonstrates that none of
the three FBI agents who testified at the suppression hearing asked
Kelly’s Wrecker Service to hold the boxes of items taken from [Ni-
cholson’s eighteen-wheeler] until agents secured a federal search
warrant.”
        Nicholson renewed his suppression motions at trial. Based
on new testimony from employees of the wrecker service that the
court found signaled a “purpose . . . to assist law enforcement ef-
forts,” it determined that “a Fourth Amendment violation ha[d] oc-
curred” with respect to the Kentucky search. But the court declined
to suppress the evidence, stating that “[p]ursuant to Herring, be-
cause . . . the public interest is so high in a case of this nature in-
volving allegations of sexual abuse of children, the Court . . . over-
rules the defendant’s effort to suppress the evidence.” The court
took the same approach regarding the New York search, explaining
that “[b]ecause the costs in this case are significant . . . the Court
should not suppress the evidence” despite a determination that
“there was a Fourth Amendment violation with respect to the New
York search warrant.”
      During the trial, the government also sought to admit six old
images of KM and JF found in the unallocated space of the camera
to show Nicholson’s history and relationship with the girls. Unlike
the more recent images of child pornography on the camera, these
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10                      Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

images had been deleted and were held in the camera’s unallocated
space. The district court allowed the exhibits to be admitted into
evidence and briefly published to the jury. At trial, it became clear
that the government had searched the camera’s unallocated space
only after Nicholson’s own expert alerted the government to the
presence of additional pictures in that space. And it also became
clear that the government could have searched this space earlier,
but negligently failed to do so. Based on this revelation, Nicholson
argued that these images were protected by the work product priv-
ilege and that his defense was prejudiced by allowing the govern-
ment to introduce evidence that it could have discovered and dis-
closed long before. He moved for a mistrial or the exclusion of the
images in the alternative. The district court denied his motions.
But, later, the court excluded the exhibits as cumulative, and in-
structed the jury that “[t]here were a few exhibits . . . initially ad-
mitted into evidence but I have eliminated them from the record:
[t]hose are Government’s Exhibits 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8, so you will not
have those exhibits with you back in the jury room.”
       At the conclusion of a four-day trial, Nicholson was con-
victed on all counts and sentenced to concurrent terms of life in
prison for Counts One and Two, 360 months for Counts Three and
Six, and 120 months for Counts Four and Five. He timely appealed.
                        II.     DISCUSSION

     Nicholson makes three main arguments, with multiple sub-
arguments. First, he argues that the evidence was insufficient to
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19-11669                Opinion of the Court                        11

convict him of three counts: two counts for crimes against JF and
one for producing child pornography with KM. Second, he asks for
a new trial on the grounds that the district court should have sup-
pressed the evidence from the New York and Kentucky searches.
Third, he argues that the district court should have granted a mis-
trial when it admitted, but then excluded, six images of the girls
from the camera’s unallocated space. We address each issue in
turn.

 A. The Evidence Was Sufficient to Convict Nicholson on Counts
                    Two, Three, and Six.

      We begin with Nicholson’s challenges to his convictions un-
der Counts Two, Three, and Six of the indictment.
         Nicholson first argues that there was insufficient evidence to
convict him of the intent element of Counts Two and Three, which
charged sex crimes against JF under 18 U.S.C. § 2423. Count Two
charged that he transported JF in interstate commerce with the in-
tent that she engage in criminal sexual activity under Florida and
North Carolina law. See 18 U.S.C. § 2423(a). Both Florida law and
North Carolina law criminalize, among other things, oral sex and
sexual touching between adults and young children. See generally
FLA. STAT. § 800.04 (2012); N.C. GEN. STAT. § 14-27.7(a) (2012).
Count Three charged interstate travel with the intent to engage in
illicit sexual conduct with JF in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2423(b).
“[I]llicit sexual conduct” includes the production of child
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12                     Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

pornography and “a sexual act . . . with a person under 18 years of
age.” 18 U.S.C. § 2423(f).
       We will affirm a jury’s verdict “if a reasonable trier of fact
could conclude that the evidence establishes guilt beyond a reason-
able doubt.” United States v. Ortiz, 318 F.3d 1030, 1036 (11th Cir.
2003) (quoting United States v. Miles, 290 F.3d 1341, 1355 (11th Cir.
2002)). We have further explained that a verdict will stand “if there
is ‘any reasonable construction of the evidence [that] would have
allowed the jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.’” United States v. Hough, 803 F.3d 1181, 1187 (11th Cir.
2015) (quoting United States v. Friske, 640 F.3d 1288, 1291 (11th
Cir. 2011)).
        The crux of Nicholson’s argument is that, unlike KM, JF tes-
tified that Nicholson did not perform sex acts on her over the
course of the trip, including their stops in Florida and North Caro-
lina. The best evidence of what he intended, Nicholson argues, is
what actually happened—i.e., no sexual contact with JF. Accord-
ingly, Nicholson argues that no reasonable jury could conclude
that he transported JF across state lines with the intent that she en-
gage in criminal sexual activity (Count Two) or the intent to en-
gage in illicit sexual conduct with her (Count Three).
       We disagree that the evidence was insufficient to convict on
Counts Two and Three. It is true, of course, that some of “the most
probative evidence of intent will be objective evidence of what ac-
tually happened.” Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 253 (1976)
(Stevens, J., concurring). But we have held that the government
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19-11669               Opinion of the Court                        13

need not prove actual sexual activity to convict under Section 2423.
See United States v. Carter, 776 F.3d 1309, 1322 (11th Cir. 2015);
United States v. Hersh, 297 F.3d 1233, 1245–46 (11th Cir. 2002).
And evidence of actual sex acts is also not the only way to prove
the criminal intent to commit those acts. Here, Nicholson ignores
powerful evidence that he took JF across state lines for sex-related
purposes, even if he never followed through. There is ample evi-
dence that Nicholson sexually abused JF in Alabama, and JF testi-
fied that Nicholson’s abuse escalated in the time leading up to their
trip. Moreover, given that Nicholson took KM on the trip to have
sex with her, one could infer that he took JF for the same reason. A
reasonable jury could conclude that Nicholson took JF because he
intended to engage in sex acts with her.
       Next, Nicholson claims that there is insufficient evidence in
the record that the Northern District of Alabama is a proper venue
for Count Six, which charged the production of child pornography
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a), (e). Count Six is based on a text
message Nicholson sent to KM, then living with Janet Baker in
Trussville, Alabama, requesting that she “send him something
pretty.” KM testified that, based on her experience with Nicholson,
she understood the message to be requesting that she send a sex-
ually explicit image of herself. KM complied, sending Nicholson a
picture of her vagina.
       Nicholson argues that the government introduced insuffi-
cient evidence at trial to establish that the text message was sent or
received in the Northern District of Alabama. We disagree. “The
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14                     Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

Constitution, the Sixth Amendment, and Rule 18 of the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure guarantee defendants the right to be
tried in the district in which the crime was committed.” United
States v. Little, 864 F.3d 1283, 1287 (11th Cir. 2017) (quoting United
States v. Breitweiser, 357 F.3d 1249, 1253 (11th Cir. 2004)). “But
venue need only be proved by a preponderance of the evidence as
opposed to beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Rivamonte, 666 F.2d 515,
517 (11th Cir. 1982)). We have also explained that “there need not
be direct proof of venue where circumstantial evidence in the rec-
ord as a whole supports the inference that the crime was commit-
ted in the district where venue was laid.” United States v. Turner,
586 F.2d 395, 397 (5th Cir. 1978).
        Here, trial testimony linked Count Six to the Northern Dis-
trict of Alabama. KM testified that Nicholson communicated with
her by text message using a phone that she received only after she
was placed into the custody of the Bakers in Trussville, Alabama, a
city in the Northern District. KM also testified that Nicholson re-
quested that she take and send the explicit image forming the basis
of Count Six using this phone. The record gives us no reason to
think that KM, a minor child, would have texted Nicholson from
anywhere else than from the district in which she lived at the time.
In the light of the whole record, there was sufficient evidence of
venue in the Northern District of Alabama for Count Six.
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19-11669               Opinion of the Court                        15

  B. The FBI’s Negligence Does Not Justify Excluding the New
                 York or Kentucky Evidence.

       Now we turn to the district court’s decisions not to suppress
the evidence from the New York and Kentucky searches. We ad-
dress each search in turn.
                      1. The New York Search

      Nicholson argues that the district court should have granted
his motion to suppress images of child pornography found on his
laptop in New York. He argues that the government failed to fol-
low an addendum appended to the warrant that required that any
search of electronic media be completed within sixty days. The
government concedes that it searched the laptop outside the sixty-
day period but argues that suppression is not warranted because
Nicholson was not prejudiced, and the delay was not deliberate.
        Our “[r]eview of a district court’s denial of a motion to sup-
press is a mixed question of law and fact.” United States v. Delancy,
502 F.3d 1297, 1304 (11th Cir. 2007). As such, we accept the district
court’s factual findings as true unless clearly erroneous, and “re-
view the district court’s interpretation and application of the law
de novo.” Id.
       The district court found the following facts, which Nichol-
son does not challenge on appeal. On December 18, 2012, the FBI
obtained a search warrant from a magistrate judge in the Northern
District of New York authorizing a search of Nicholson’s New York
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16                     Opinion of the Court                19-11669

F-150 and “any computers, computer equipment, and/or any other
electronic media [present] at the time [of] the search.” The warrant
included an attached addendum that said in part that “[t]he com-
puter or electronic media search authorized by this warrant shall
be completed within sixty (60) days of the date of this warrant. This
period may be extended by the court upon a showing of good
cause.”
      The next day, law enforcement executed the warrant,
searched the F-150, and seized Nicholson’s laptop. The laptop was
then shipped to the FBI’s Birmingham office, which received it on
January 31, 2013. The relevant FBI agent in Birmingham was una-
ware that the New York warrant imposed a sixty-day limit. About
six months after it obtained the warrant, the FBI mirror imaged the
laptop’s hard drive and conducted a digital forensic analysis. It
found child pornography. The government concedes that it neither
complied with the addendum nor requested an extension from the
magistrate judge.
       Nicholson contends that the government’s failure to comply
with the terms of the addendum necessarily violated the Fourth
Amendment and justifies suppressing the evidence gathered from
the laptop. We disagree. Although the government did not comply
with the temporal limitation in the magistrate judge’s order, we
cannot say that this failure rises to a Fourth Amendment violation.
In contrast to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the Fourth
Amendment “does not specify that search warrants contain expira-
tion dates” and “contains no requirements about when the search
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19-11669                Opinion of the Court                        17

or seizure is to occur or the duration [thereof].” United States v.
Gerber, 994 F.2d 1556, 1559 (11th Cir. 1993) (emphases omitted).
Accordingly, when the police complete a search after the deadline
in a warrant, the key constitutional question is whether the proba-
ble cause that justified the warrant went stale or dissipated because
of the delay. Id. at 1560. As relevant here, the circumstances provid-
ing the probable cause to search the electronically stored images
on a laptop in police custody did not dissipate or go stale over 100
days. See, e.g., United States v. Touset, 890 F.3d 1227, 1238 (11th
Cir. 2018) (rejecting staleness challenge to search of electronic child
pornography); United States v. Brewer, 588 F.3d 1165, 1173 (8th
Cir. 2009) (passage of several months does not dissipate probable
cause for searching “electronically-stored files in the custody of law
enforcement”). For this reason, the probable cause that justified the
initial seizure of the laptop continued to justify the belated search,
and the delay between the seizure of the laptop and the search of
the laptop was not constitutionally unreasonable.
        Instead of rising to the level of a Fourth Amendment viola-
tion, we believe the government’s belated search in this case is
comparable to a violation of Rule 41 of the Rules of Criminal Pro-
cedure, which contains a temporal limitation similar to the magis-
trate judge’s addendum. See FED. R. CRIM P. 41. We have held that
“noncompliance with Rule 41 requires suppression of evidence
only where (1) there was ‘prejudice’ in the sense that the search
might not have occurred or would not have been so abrasive if the
rule had been followed, or (2) there is evidence of intentional and
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18                     Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

deliberate disregard of a provision in the Rule.” Gerber, 994 F.2d at
1560 (emphases omitted) (quoting United States v. Loyd, 721 F.2d
331, 333 (11th Cir. 1983)).
       Applying the same test here, we conclude that suppression
is unwarranted. First, Nicholson does not contend that there was
prejudice under Gerber. The FBI seized the laptop the day after ob-
taining the warrant. Complying with the addendum would not
have stopped the FBI from conducting a digital forensic examina-
tion of the laptop nor would it have rendered that examination any
less abrasive. Second, there is no evidence of intentional or deliber-
ate disregard for the addendum’s temporal limitations. Nicholson
acknowledges that the FBI employee in Birmingham who con-
ducted the analysis was simply unaware of the existence or lapse of
the sixty-day limitation. In the absence of grounds for suppression
under our Rule 41 standard, we conclude that the district court did
not err in denying Nicholson’s suppression motion as to images
found on the laptop.
                      2. The Kentucky Search

       Nicholson next argues that evidence resulting from the Ken-
tucky search of the eighteen-wheeler’s contents should have been
suppressed and that the district court’s failure to do so was reversi-
ble error. We conclude otherwise.
       As an initial matter, the government concedes that the FBI's
delay in securing a warrant for the items taken from the Kentucky
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19-11669                  Opinion of the Court                             19

truck violated the Fourth Amendment.1 It is undisputed that the
wrecker service refused to release Nicholson’s property because it
was holding the property for the FBI. See United States v. Ford, 765
F.2d 1088, 1090 (11th Cir. 1985) (Fourth Amendment applies to pri-
vate parties acting as instrument of the government). The Ken-
tucky police, who arrested Nicholson and removed the girls from
his custody, told the wrecker service to keep the property because
“the FBI would be there within a [couple of days] to receive” it. Of
course, the Kentucky police overestimated the FBI. Instead, the FBI
did not think to search the items in the truck until much later and,
only then, secured a warrant.
       Because the government admits that this months-long, gov-
ernment-directed seizure of Nicholson’s property violated the
Fourth Amendment, the next question is whether the evidence
gathered from the eventual warrant-based search of that property
should have been suppressed. Suppression is not a “a necessary
consequence of a Fourth Amendment violation.” Herring v.
United States, 555 U.S. 135, 141 (2009). Instead, the rule is that a
court cannot admit “evidence resulting from a Fourth Amendment
violation, unless an exception applies.” United States v. Watkins,
10 F.4th 1179, 1180 (11th Cir. 2021) (en banc).

1Although the government asserts that Nicholson lacks standing to challenge
the search of one item found in the eighteen-wheeler, a camera, we assume
without deciding that Nicholson has standing to contest the search. See United
States v. Ross, 963 F.3d 1056, 1063 (11th Cir. 2020) (recognizing Fourth
Amendment standing as non-jurisdictional).
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20                      Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

       Citing Herring, the government argues that the “good faith
exception” to the exclusionary rule applies. The exclusionary rule’s
“sole purpose . . . is to deter future Fourth Amendment violations.”
Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229, 236–37 (2011). And the deter-
rent value of exclusion corresponds to “the culpability of the law
enforcement conduct” in committing the violation. Herring, 555
U.S. at 143. “When the police exhibit deliberate, reckless, or grossly
negligent disregard for Fourth Amendment rights, the deterrent
value of exclusion is strong” enough to warrant exclusion. Davis,
564 U.S. at 238 (quotations omitted). But “[w]here the official ac-
tion was pursued in complete good faith, . . . the deterrence ra-
tionale loses much of its force.” United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897,
919 (1984) (quoting United States v. Peltier, 422 U.S. 531, 539
(1975)). Accordingly, “[t]o trigger the exclusionary rule, police con-
duct must be sufficiently deliberate that exclusion can meaning-
fully deter it, and sufficiently culpable that such deterrence is worth
the price paid by the justice system.” Herring, 555 U.S. at 144. Bal-
ancing the benefits of deterrence and the systemic cost of excluding
otherwise credible evidence, the Supreme Court has held that
merely negligent law enforcement conduct does not justify exclu-
sion. Id.
       Nicholson argues that the FBI’s conduct here was “the exact
type of deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent” action that the ex-
clusionary rule would deter. We disagree. The government did not
deliberately violate Nicholson’s rights. The Kentucky police rea-
sonably believed that, having arrested Nicholson on a warrant at
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19-11669                Opinion of the Court                        21

the request of the FBI, the FBI would quickly follow-up with a war-
rant to search the contents of his vehicle. Indeed, any reasonable
person would share that belief. The FBI almost certainly had prob-
able cause to search the truck when Nicholson was arrested and
obviously had probable cause after the children told them about his
sex crimes. But the FBI’s investigation was negligent. The FBI did
not think to search the truck at the time of the arrest. Later, the FBI
did not know that the wrecker service was holding the truck’s con-
tents and, when they discovered that it was, did not know the
wrecker service was acting on the advice of the Kentucky police.
Absent a “systemic error or reckless disregard of constitutional re-
quirements,” id. at 147, this kind of negligent mistake does not war-
rant suppression.
        For its part, the district court declined to exclude this evi-
dence because it thought the cost of suppression was too high “in
a case of this nature involving allegations of sexual abuse of chil-
dren” and expressly limited its reasoning to “this particular case and
this type of crime.” Doc. 166 at p. 134. This reasoning, which we
are obliged to correct, misunderstands the Supreme Court’s case
law. The Supreme Court in Herring explained that the exclusion-
ary rule and its exceptions weigh the benefits of deterring uncon-
stitutional police conduct and the costs of “letting guilty and possi-
bly dangerous defendants go free.” Herring, 555 U.S. at 141. But
the Court was concerned with general deterrence and system-wide
costs, not whether a particular police officer would benefit from
specific deterrence or whether a particular defendant would be
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22                      Opinion of the Court                  19-11669

costly to release. Id. at 142–43 (explaining that the good faith ex-
ception as a rule “reflect[s]” and is “justified by” weighing costs and
deterrence benefits). Under Herring, therefore, when a court con-
cludes that a constitutional violation was caused by a police of-
ficer’s good faith mistake, “rather than systemic error or reckless
disregard of constitutional requirements,” id. at 147, the costs of
suppressing the evidence necessarily outweigh the benefits. The in-
verse is also true. And it is true whether the charged crime is mur-
der or jaywalking or something in between.
       Finally, even if this evidence should have been suppressed,
we believe any error would have been harmless beyond a reasona-
ble doubt under Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18 (1967). Consti-
tutional errors in a criminal trial “do not require reversal if they are
harmless.” United States v. Pon, 963 F.3d 1207, 1227 (11th Cir.
2020) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v.
Roy, 855 F.3d 1133, 1167 (11th Cir. 2017) (en banc)). A constitu-
tional error is harmless when the government proves “beyond a
reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute
to the verdict obtained.” Id. (quoting Chapman, 386 U.S. at 22).
“To say that an error did not contribute to the verdict is . . . to find
that error unimportant in relation to everything else the jury con-
sidered on the issue in question, as revealed in the record.” Yates v.
Evatt, 500 U.S. 391, 403 (1991).
       Two pieces of evidence were found in the truck: (1) a cam-
era with child pornography and (2) sex toys and similar parapher-
nalia. Nicholson argues that the images found on the camera were
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19-11669                Opinion of the Court                        23

prejudicial because they formed the basis of Count Four. He argues
that he was prejudiced by the admission of the sex toys and related
paraphernalia because these items supported the government’s po-
sition that he took JF and KM across state lines for sex-related pur-
poses.
       Even so, we think the admission of this evidence was harm-
less. Count Four charged the transportation of child pornography
via the camera and the laptop. As discussed above, the district court
did not err in refusing to suppress images of child pornography
found on the laptop. So, even if the images found on the camera
had been suppressed, the jury would still have been presented with
overwhelming evidence of Nicholson’s guilt as to Count Four
based on images on the laptop’s hard drive. Likewise, there was
overwhelming evidence that Nicholson had sexual relations with
KM and JF before the trip, and KM testified extensively about their
relations during the trip. Having reviewed the entirety of the rec-
ord, we are firmly convinced that the jury would have returned the
same verdict even if this evidence had been excluded.
 C. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Denying a
                            Mistrial.

       Lastly, Nicholson argues that the district court abused its dis-
cretion by denying his request for a mistrial based on the admission
and publication of the government’s exhibits three through eight,
which contained six images of KM and JF. We disagree.
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24                     Opinion of the Court                 19-11669

       A defendant is entitled to a mistrial only upon a showing of
substantial prejudice, and we review a district court’s denial of a
mistrial for abuse of discretion. United States v. Chastain, 198 F.3d
1338, 1351–52 (11th Cir. 1999). Substantial prejudice “occurs when
there is a reasonable probability that, but for the alleged error, the
outcome of the trial would have been different.” United States v.
Capers, 708 F.3d 1286, 1298 (11th Cir. 2013) (cleaned up) (quoting
United States v. Newsome, 475 F.3d 1221, 1227 (11th Cir. 2007)).
When a defendant’s motion arises out of the admission and later
exclusion of evidence, “[a]n instruction to disregard evidence with-
drawn from the jury is sufficient grounds for an appellate court to
uphold a trial court’s denial of a motion for mistrial unless the evi-
dence is so highly prejudicial as to be incurable by the trial court’s
admonition.” United States v. Slocum, 708 F.2d 587, 598 (11th Cir.
1983). Factors relevant to our consideration of whether evidence
creates incurable prejudice include the way the court gives a cura-
tive instruction and the existence of other evidence in support of a
conviction. Id.
       As evidence of the nature and history of Nicholson’s rela-
tionship with the victims, the prosecution sought to admit six im-
ages discovered in the unallocated space of the camera recovered
from Nicholson’s eighteen-wheeler and maintained by the Ken-
tucky wrecker service. These images were discovered by Nichol-
son’s computer expert (perhaps unsurprisingly given its other blun-
ders, the FBI had failed to search the camera’s unallocated space),
and Nicholson argued that they were barred from being admitted
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19-11669               Opinion of the Court                        25

by the work product doctrine and that they prejudiced his ability
to prepare a defense because the government could have, but did
not, discover and disclose them much earlier in the litigation.
        Assuming for the sake of argument that exhibits three
through eight were inadmissible, the district court did not abuse its
discretion by denying Nicholson’s motion for a mistrial. Although
the court declined to declare a mistrial, it excluded the exhibits and
instructed the jury that those images would be unavailable during
deliberations. Nothing in the record suggests that the admission
and brief publication of the images created incurable prejudice. In
fact, the court’s curative instruction reflected Nicholson’s own un-
derstanding of “the best way to ameliorate the impact” of the im-
ages: “simply . . . say[ing that] those exhibits are no longer in evi-
dence and not to be considered and leav[ing] it at that.” Nor has
Nicholson disputed the existence of substantial uncontested evi-
dence bearing on the charged offenses, most notably JF and KM’s
extensive trial testimony. We cannot say that the district court
abused its discretion by declining to declare a mistrial based on the
temporary admission and brief publication of largely cumulative
evidence, especially when it gave the specific curative instruction
requested by the defense.
                       III.    CONCLUSION

     For the foregoing reasons, Nicholson’s conviction is
AFFIRMED.