Court Opinion

ID: 9365752
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-24 22:01:13.091911+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:47.489824
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit

No. 21–1973

                      UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                              Appellee,

                                 v.

                         JASON D. BOUDREAU,

                        Defendant, Appellant.

            APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

         [Hon. John J. McConnell, Jr., U.S. District Judge]

                               Before

                         Barron, Chief Judge,
                        Lynch, Circuit Judge,
                     and Kelley, District Judge.*

     Jeremy A. Pratt, with whom Jason D. Boudreau, pro se, was on
supplemental brief, for appellant.
     Lauren S. Zurier, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
Zachary A. Cunha, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
appellee.

                          January 24, 2023

*   Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.
           KELLEY, District Judge.      Jason D. Boudreau (“Boudreau”)

was indicted on 34 child pornography possession charges in the

District of Rhode Island.    Boudreau and the government reached a

plea agreement under which he pled guilty to Counts 19 and 34 of

the indictment, and the government dismissed the remaining 32

charges.   In entering this plea agreement, Boudreau agreed to

waive his rights to appeal his conviction and sentence.          Despite

executing this waiver, Boudreau now appeals various aspects of the

proceedings below, including the calculation of the Sentencing

Guidelines and the conditions of his life term of supervised

release.    Because   Boudreau's   waiver   of   appeal   is   valid    and

enforceable, we dismiss his appeal.

               I.     FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

           We begin with a review of Boudreau's criminal history.

In 2009, Boudreau pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of simple

assault of an 11-year-old girl in Rhode Island state court.

Although the charge was “simple assault,” the facts underlying

this conviction indicate that the crime was sexual in nature:

Boudreau placed the child on his lap, unbuckled her belt, kissed

her lips, and tried to place his tongue in her mouth.                  This

conviction was originally “filed,” with no punishment imposed, but

was converted to a term of probation in 2010 after Boudreau failed

to appear in court.

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             In 2012, Boudreau pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of

second-degree child molestation of a seven-year-old family member

in Rhode Island state court.             This offense involved kissing and

feeling the child's intimate parts over her underwear.                    The court

sentenced Boudreau to eight years, two to be served in prison and

six to be served on probation as a suspended sentence.

             In 2014, Boudreau pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of

possession of child pornography in Rhode Island state court.                    The

court sentenced him to a five-year suspended sentence with five

years of probation.

             We now turn to the facts of this case. In March 2015, a

person using an IP address associated with Boudreau's residence

uploaded     a    video    of   child   pornography      to   a    website   called

SendVid.com.         The    National    Center    for    Missing    and   Exploited

Children alerted Rhode Island authorities to the upload of this

video   in       April     2015.    Rhode       Island    authorities     received

information from Verizon connecting Boudreau's residential address

to the video in September 2015.                 In November 2015, authorities

executed a search warrant at Boudreau's residence and seized

electronic devices, including cell phones.                Boudreau acknowledged

ownership of these devices at the time of the search.

             Analysis of Boudreau's cell phone indicated that between

August and November 2015, the phone had accessed 617 images of

child pornography.           The phone's cache contained 677 images of

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child pornography.      The analysis indicated that on September 20,

2015 (the date which formed the basis for “Count 19,” one of the

two instant charges here), the phone had accessed 76 images of

child pornography.

            The District of Rhode Island issued an arrest warrant

for Boudreau in December 2015.            When Boudreau was arrested in

Connecticut, authorities seized an additional cell phone from his

person.    The SD card of this phone contained over 100 additional

images of child pornography as well as images of young girls in

Boudreau's family.

            A federal grand jury indicted Boudreau in February 2016

on 33 counts of access with intent to view child pornography, for

images found on his devices at his residence.            In June 2016, the

grand jury returned a superseding indictment adding one count of

possession of child pornography ("Count 34") to the original 33

counts, for the images found on his phone during his arrest.

            In May 2018, Boudreau entered into a plea agreement under

which he was to plead guilty to Counts 19 and 34 and the government

would dismiss the remaining 32 counts.          The parties agreed that

the government would recommend a sentence within the Guidelines

range     and   the   parties   further    agreed   to   four   sentencing

enhancements that would apply to the calculation of the offense

level.    The plea agreement expressly contemplated the possibility

that additional enhancements could apply, and the parties reserved

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their rights to argue at sentencing as to the proper calculation

of the guidelines.

          The plea agreement also contained the following waiver

of appeal clause:

          Defendant hereby waives Defendant's right to
          appeal the convictions and sentences imposed
          by the Court, if the sentences imposed by the
          Court are within or below the sentencing
          guideline[s] range determined by the Court.
          This agreement does not affect the rights or
          obligations of the United States as set forth
          in 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b), and the government
          retains its right to appeal any of the Court's
          sentencing determinations.

          The district court conducted a change of plea hearing at

which Boudreau was questioned about his understanding of the plea

agreement and waiver of appeal.    Under oath, Boudreau testified

that he understood the terms of the agreement, including the waiver

of appeal, that he had discussed the agreement with his attorney,

and that he was fully satisfied with his attorney's performance.

The district court did not, however, state as a part of the

colloquy that Boudreau could not withdraw his plea of guilty if he

was dissatisfied with the sentence he received, as required by

Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure Rule 11(c)(3)(B).

          The   Probation   Department   prepared   a   Presentence

Investigation Report ("PSR") that contained a detailed statement

of facts supporting each application of a sentencing enhancement.

The PSR further recommended that the four sentencing enhancements

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that the parties had agreed to in the plea agreement should apply.

The   PSR   also   recommended   the     application      of     a    five-point

enhancement for a "pattern of activity involving the sexual abuse

or exploitation of a minor" should apply to Boudreau's offense

level, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2G2.2(b)(5).

            At   sentencing,   the     district   judge        calculated    the

Sentencing Guidelines as the PSR had recommended.                The district

judge determined that the base offense level was 18 and added each

of the four enhancements the parties had agreed upon in the plea

agreement: two-level increase for material depicting prepubescent

minors;     four-level   increase    for    depiction     of     sadistic     or

masochistic conduct; two-level increase for use of a computer; and

five-level increase for access to 600 or more images.                The district

court also applied the PSR's suggested five-level increase for a

"pattern of activity involving the sexual abuse or exploitation of

a minor" and a three-level decrease for Boudreau's acceptance of

responsibility.     This brought the offense level to 33.                Neither

party objected to the calculation of the offense level, including

the application of the enhancements.         The district court further

determined that the criminal history score was 9 and the criminal

history category was IV, resulting in a Sentencing Guidelines range

of 188 to 235 months.

            When imposing the sentence, the district court again

asked Boudreau if he had assented to the appeal waiver in his plea

                                    - 6 -
agreement, and Boudreau again indicated that he had.                    The district

court imposed a sentence at the top of the Guidelines range of 235

months.      Because this sentence fell within the Guidelines range,

the appeal waiver Boudreau agreed to in his plea agreement applied.

In explaining its sentence, the district court expressed concern

that Boudreau's risk of recidivism was nearly 100 percent and cited

his past instances of child abuse and child pornography possession

in reaching this conclusion.             The district court indicated that

it   would    have   imposed    a    harsher   sentence        if    the   Sentencing

Guidelines range had been higher and stated that it needed to keep

Boudreau "locked up as long as [it] can in order to protect the

public from [Boudreau] based on [his] history."

             The district court further imposed a sentence of a

lifetime      term   of   supervised      release       with        several    special

conditions including a "suspicionless search" provision that would

permit    the   Probation      Officer    to   search    Boudreau's           property,

including electronic devices, at any time, without a requirement

of reasonable suspicion of a violation.             Additionally, the court

imposed a special condition restricting Boudreau's abilities to

access devices capable of connecting to the internet and to

interact with persons under the age of 18.

                               II.     DISCUSSION

             Boudreau appeals his sentence on various procedural and

substantive grounds.        However, because Boudreau executed a waiver

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of appeal in his plea agreement, we first assess whether Boudreau's

waiver is valid and enforceable.        If an appeal is subject to a

waiver that is valid and enforceable, we will dismiss the appeal.

See United States v. Morales-Arroyo, 854 F.3d 118, 121–22 (1st

Cir. 2017).

          We thus begin with Boudreau's challenge to the validity

of his waiver of appeal.     We identified a three-factor standard

for validity in United States v. Teeter, 257 F.3d 14, 24–25 (1st

Cir. 2001).    First, the waiver must "comprise 'a clear statement'

describing the waiver and specifying its scope."       United States

v. Morillo, 910 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 2018) (quoting Teeter, 257

F.3d at 24).     Second, the "record must show that the judge’s

interrogation 'suffice[d] to ensure that the defendant freely and

intelligently agreed to waive [his or] her right to appeal [his

or] her forthcoming sentence.'"     Id. (alterations in original)

(quoting Teeter, 257 F.3d at 24).       And third, denying a right to

appeal must not "work a miscarriage of justice."        Id. (quoting

Teeter, 257 F.3d at 25).

          Here, there is no argument on the first Teeter factor,

as Boudreau does not dispute that the plea agreement plainly states

the terms and scope of the waiver.       On the second factor -- the

sufficiency of the district court's plea colloquy -- Boudreau

contends that the court should not give effect to the appeal waiver

based on this factor in part because the district court failed to

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inform him that he did not have a right to withdraw his plea, in

violation of Rule 11(c)(3)(B), and failed to inform him about the

nature of each charge to which he was pleading, in violation of

Rule 11(b)(1)(G).           Regarding the district court's failure to

inform Boudreau about his right to withdraw his plea, we do not

see how this error, even if true, has any bearing on whether

Boudreau was adequately informed about his right to appeal his

conviction and sentence, and we therefore do not see how this error

is relevant to the second Teeter factor.

            As to Boudreau's claim that the district court failed to

inform him about the nature of each charge to which he was

pleading,    a    court's    failure    in     this   regard   could    affect   a

defendant's ability to "intelligently" waive his right to appeal

his conviction and sentence on those charges and is thus relevant

to the Teeter analysis.          See Morillo, 910 F.3d at 2.             However,

Boudreau does not sufficiently develop his argument regarding this

error; although he argues that the prosecutor "provided the court

with an incorrect explanation" regarding the charges against him,

Boudreau    does    not   provide     any    argument   for    how   exactly   the

prosecutor       erred    and   how    that     error    affected      Boudreau's

intelligent waiver of his right to appeal.                 We therefore treat

this argument as insufficiently developed and, thus, waived.                   See

United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990).                   Thus,

                                       - 9 -
the two errors Boudreau asserts, which he casts as Rule 11 errors,1

provide no support for the argument that the district court's

interrogation was insufficient to show that Boudreau waived his

right to appeal "freely and intelligently."     See Morillo, 910 F.3d

at 2.

          Having   dispensed    with     Boudreau's   Rule   11-based

challenges to the validity of his appeal waiver, we turn to the

other arguments he makes regarding the second Teeter factor.      We

do not find them persuasive.     Boudreau's principal argument is

that the plea agreement's language is complex, and his answers at

the plea colloquy were brief and thus insufficient to establish

full understanding of the plea.        These concerns, which we have

never identified as factors that can support relief on this claim,

are minimal, given that Boudreau was represented by counsel --

whose duties included explaining any complexities in the plea

agreement to Boudreau -- throughout plea negotiations and at his

change of plea hearing.    Further, Boudreau stated at his plea

hearing that he was fully satisfied with the performance of his

     1 Insofar as Boudreau argues that Rule 11 errors not only
affected his ability to intelligently waive his right to appeal
but invalidated the plea agreement itself, with the effect of
freeing him not only from the appeal waiver but from all other
aspects of the agreement reached as part of his plea, this
challenge fails under plain error review, as Boudreau has not shown
"a reasonable probability that, but for the error, he would not
have entered the plea." United States v. Dominguez-Benitez, 542
U.S. 74, 83 (2004); see United States v. Rivera-Clemente, 813 F.3d
43, 47 (1st Cir. 2016) (same).

                               - 10 -
counsel,     and     he   has   not    contested       the     quality   of      his

representation.       See United States v. Rivera-Clemente, 813 F.3d

43, 48–49 (1st Cir. 2016);        United States v. Hernandez-Maldonado,

793 F.3d 223, 226 (1st Cir. 2015).                   Additionally, during the

colloquy, Boudreau was again afforded the opportunity to consult

with counsel and to ask the court to further explain anything that

he did not understand. Consequently, Boudreau has failed to carry

his burden to establish that his appeal waiver was not entered

"freely and intelligently." Morillo, 910 F.3d at 2.2

            Our final task is to determine whether, per the third

Teeter     factor,    denying   Boudreau       his    appeal    would    "work     a

miscarriage of justice."         257 F.3d at 25.             Whether a district

court's error constitutes a miscarriage of justice is "more a

concept than a constant," and the factors that we may weigh include

"the clarity of the error, its gravity, its character (e.g.,

whether it concerns a fact issue, a sentencing guideline, or a

statutory maximum), the impact of the error on the defendant, the

impact of correcting the error on the government, and the extent

     2 Boudreau separately contends in his counseled brief to us
that he did not "freely and intelligently" waive his right to
appeal the suspicionless search condition imposed on him as part
of his supervised release because he could not have reasonably
foreseen that it would be imposed and that it was, in any event,
outside the scope of his appeal waiver. But, given the terms of
his plea agreement and colloquy, these contentions are meritless
under our precedent. See United States v. Santiago, 769 F.3d 1, 7-
8 (1st Cir. 2014).

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to which the defendant acquiesced in the result."                       Id. at 26.   We

will reverse on this factor "only in 'egregious cases,'" not in

"garden-variety" sentencing disputes.              Morillo, 910 F.3d at 4

(quoting Teeter, 257 F.3d at 25–26).             As we have explained, for

the imposition of a condition of supervised release to result in

a "miscarriage of justice," the condition must be "so lacking in

rationality    or    so   wholly    unrelated    to    legitimate          sentencing

purposes as to necessitate invalidating [the] waiver of appeal."

United States v. Rivera-López, 736 F.3d 633, 636 (1st Cir. 2015).

           Here,      Boudreau     has   alleged      no        error    sufficiently

egregious for us to consider piercing his waiver of appeal.                          We

will   comment      briefly   on   Boudreau's      assertions           that   certain

conditions    of    supervised     release    amount       to    a   miscarriage     of

justice.     Specifically, Boudreau challenges Special Condition 6,

which permits the Probation Officer to search his residence and

property without reasonable suspicion of a violation; Special

Condition 7, which restricts him from accessing devices that are

capable of connecting to the internet; and Special Condition 8,

which restricts his ability to contact children, either male or

female, under the age of 18.

           Each of these challenges fails on plain error review, as

Boudreau does not identify precedent that would provide a basis

for concluding that it would be clear or obvious error to impose

any of these conditions.            See Rivera-López, 736 F.3d at 63.

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Indeed, we have permitted the imposition of a suspicionless search

condition in another context as reasonably related to the goals of

supervised release, see United States v. Windle, 35 F.4th 62, 67-

68 (1st Cir. 2022), and three of our sister circuits have upheld

the   imposition   of   similar    conditions    on   child   pornography

offenders, see United States v. Sulik, 807 F. App'x. 489, 492–93

(6th Cir. 2020); United States v. Rosenthal, 295 F. App'x 985, 986

(11th Cir. 2008); United States v. White, 244 F.3d 1199, 1208 (10th

Cir. 2001).   In addition, we have upheld on plain error review

both a supervised release condition barring a child sex offender's

ability to have contact with minors, see United States v. Pabon,

819 F.3d 26, 29, 34–35 (1st Cir. 2016), and a restriction on a

child pornography offender's ability to access the internet, see

United States v. Velez-Luciano, 814 F.3d 553, 560 (1st Cir. 2016).

Thus, Boudreau has not met his burden to show that the imposition

of the conditions that he challenges resulted in a miscarriage of

justice in his case.

          We need not go further.3         The district court's sentence

was supported by meticulous factfinding and a clear consideration

      3Boudreau contests the validity of the plea agreement on a
number of additional grounds in his pro se supplemental brief. To
the extent these arguments were not waived, they are meritless.
The record does not suggest that the plea agreement was
procedurally invalid or lacked consideration, that any of the
prosecutor’s actions were taken in bad faith or in breach of the
agreement, or that any of the supervised release conditions imposed
on Boudreau were outside the scope of the appeal waiver. Because

                                  - 13 -
of the statutorily required factors, and falls squarely within the

scope   of   what   courts   within   and   outside    this   circuit   have

permitted.    There has been no miscarriage of justice.            We find

that Boudreau's waiver of appeal is valid, enforceable, and bars

our further consideration of his arguments.           We thus dismiss and,

as to the arguments addressed in Footnote 1, affirm as there was

no plain error.

counsel declined to make these arguments, we need not address their
deficiencies in any further detail.

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