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Tuesday, March 06, 2007
James J. Kilpatrick :: Townhall.com Columnist
Case of the Dirty Pictures
by James J. Kilpatrick
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Without a murmur of comment or dissent, the Supreme Court last week effectively affirmed a sentence of life imprisonment imposed upon an Arizona man for possession of 20 dirty pictures. The court's indifference to the Constitution is arguably a more serious offense than the crime of Morton Berger.

This is not to defend Berger's conduct. His conduct was indefensible. Five years ago he was a 52-year-old husband, father of four, award-winning high school teacher. Outwardly he was a model citizen. Privately he was a connoisseur of pornography. His downloaded collection numbered in the thousands of images. Among these were some grossly obscene images of children. Justice W. Scott Bales laid out the facts in Arizona's Supreme Court.

"The trial evidence established that Berger possessed numerous videos and photo images of children, some younger than 10 years old, being subjected to sexual acts with adults and other children, including images of sexual intercourse and bestiality. ... He had created both computer and hard copy filing systems to maintain his collection."

Arizona's law on child pornography is unique. The mere possession of each image of child porn is a separate offense, punishable by a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison. Berger was indicted on 35 counts, but the state dropped 15 of them and a jury convicted on the remaining 20. His draconian sentence must be served without the possibility of probation, pardon or early release. He will die in his cell.

Some aspects of the case deserve special emphasis. Berger was a collector, not a creator. He had no criminal record of any kind. As a teacher he must have been tempted to lure some of his pupils into clandestine posing, but his trial produced no evidence of criminal subornation. His jollies were vicarious jollies. He will live out his life in prison for being, in private, merely a dirty old man. Is the punishment "cruel"?

Yes, the valid point is made that if it were not for such dirty old men, the serious evils of child porn could be abated. Point conceded. But criminal law historically has recognized that some evils are more evil than other evils and should be punished accordingly. In a federal court, at the time of his trial, Berger would have drawn a maximum sentence of five years. In Arizona, his sentence was death.

Justice Rebecca White Berch filed an eloquent dissent in the Berger case. She began by noting that Arizona's sentence for child porn "is by far the longest in the nation and is more severe than sentences imposed in Arizona for arguably more serious and violent crimes." Indeed, Arizona's minimum punishment for possession of one image "is greater than the maximum sentence for possession of child pornography in 36 states and equal to the maximum sentence in nine other states." Is the punishment "unusual"? Continued...

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About The Author

James J. Kilpatrick has been reporter, editor, columnist, commentator, and briefly an adjunct professor of journalism.

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When evidence should be required
All of us who are opposed to the sexual exploitation of children on any level and by any person, but who also allow ourselves to be guided by logic and know that this case is nothing more than another politically motivated course of action by the DA to increase funding to their office and the local police. It is a fact, that stricter punishments and enforcement of laws do NOT disuade an activity, but rather, increase creativity in methodology for getting away with an act.
Now enter the cyber-era, where 'virtuality,' eradicates facts. Set aside the FBI, DOJ, CERT, and over 400 million computers in the world containing antivirus/spam/spyware software, and look at the facts. Forget Arizona - in Oregon, the possession of 100 images = 1000 years in prison. For an addict, there are two choices: They can just up and kick their child porn habit, or, They can go on the Internet, and - in 50 minutes, for free - They can maintain their habit - and let YOU take the fall?
Decisions, decisions, decisions. Of course, most people give in and admit guilt - so they must be guilty, cause innocent people don't admit guilt. Well, I suppose - if you're given the chance to prove your innocence when the prosecution gets to have prima facie evidence that goes unchallenged and is based entirely on assumptions and you risk 1000 years in prison, or you admit guilt and risk 5 - 6 years, which would you choose? It's not rocket science - it's evidence of bullying and a violation of the foundations of justice by this country's government and members of the District Attorney and Federal offices.
Supreme Court: It is a far lesser crime to let a guilty man go free, than it is to sentence an innocent man to prison.

When actual pedophiles
and rapists get much less time for physical acts, yes, the penalty seems extreme.
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