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627 F.3d 622
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Page I
627 F.3d 622
(Cite as: 627 F.3d 622)
C
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Donald J. McGUIRE, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 09-1597.
Argued Nov. 9, 2010.
Decided Dec. 2, 2010.
Background: Defendant was convicted, following
a jury trial, in the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Illinois, Rebecca R. Pall-
meyer, J., of traveling in interstate and foreign
commerce for the purpose of having sex with a
minor. Defendant was sentenced to 25 years in pris-
on. Defendant appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Posner, Circuit
Judge, held that:
(1) purpose of defendant's travel was to engage in
illegal sexual conduct,
(2) testimony of adult witnesses concerning their
child abuse by defendant was admissible.
Affirmed.
West Headnotes
[1] Commerce 83 €=82.10
83 Commerce
8311 Application to Particular Subjects and
Methods of Regulation
831I(J) Offenses and Prosecutions
83k82.5 Federal Offenses and Prosecu-
[ions
83k82.10 k. Offenses involving activ-
ity unlawful under state law. Most Cited Cases
Infants 211 €=13
211 Infants
21 I II Protection
211k13 k. Protection of health and morals.
Most Cited Cases
Purpose of defendant's travel in interstate or
foreign commerce to lead retreats in the company
of a boy he intended to molest was to engage in il-
legal sexual conduct, as required to convict defend-
ant of traveling for the purpose of having sex with a
minor; although defendant's trip to retreat had dual
purpose, defendant had broad latitude concerning
the number and location of the retreats held, and he
configured his travels to optimize his sexual activ-
ity. 18 U.S.C.A. § 2423(b).
[2] Criminal Law 110€=372(7)
110 Criminal Law
I I0XVII Evidence
I I0XVII(F) Other Offenses
110k372 Acts Part of Series Showing Sys-
tem or Habit
1101372(7) k. Incest, rape, and other
sex offenses. Most Cited Cases
Testimony of adult witnesses concerning their
childhood sexual assault by defendant was admiss-
ible, in defendant's prosecution for travel in inter-
state or foreign commerce for the purpose of having
sex with a minor, as evidence of defendant's modus
operandi and as evidence of defendant's previous
crimes of sexual assault and child molestation,
demonstrating a propensity to commit such crimes.
18 U.S.C.A. § 2423(b); Fed.Rules Evid.Rules
404(b), 413, 415, 28 U.S.C.A.
[3] Criminal Law 110 4C=338(7)
110 Criminal Law
I I0XVII Evidence
110XVII(D) Facts in Issue and Relevance
I 10k338 Relevancy in General
I 10k338(7) k. Evidence calculated to
create prejudice against or sympathy for accused.
Most Cited Cases
Probative value of testimony of adult witnesses
O 2011 Thomson Reuters. No Claim to Orig. US Gov. Works.
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627 F.3d 622
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concerning their childhood sexual assault by de-
fendant, including their testimony about the shame
and fear that dissuaded them from telling their par-
ents or others about what he had done to them until
they had grown up and escaped his control, was not
outweighed by danger of undue prejudice in de-
fendant's prosecution for travel in interstate or for-
eign commerce for the purpose of having sex with a
minor; evidence was material because defense was
that victim was a liar, evidence established defend-
ant's propensity for and modus operandi of molesta-
tion of young boys, and testimony about the same
and fear that witnesses had suffered was invited by
the brutal cross-examination of victim by defend-
ant's lawyer as to why victim had not come forward
sooner.
18
U.S.C.A. § 2423(b); Fed.Rules
Evid.Rule 403, 28 U.S.C.A.
•622 Julie B. Porter, Assistant U.S. Attorney
(argued), Office of the United States Attorney,
Chicago, IL, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Susan Kister, Attorney (argued), St. Louis, MO, for
Defendant-Appellant.
•623 Before POSNER, TINDER, and HAMILTON,
Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
The defendant was convicted by a jury of trav-
eling in interstate and foreign commerce for the
purpose of having sex with a minor, and was sen-
tenced to 25 years in prison. His appeal argues that
while he indeed had sex with minors on trips that
crossed state and national boundaries, sex was not
the purpose of the travel. He further argues that the
judge should have excluded the testimony of other
minors, besides the one whom he was charged with
molesting, under Rule 403 of the Federal Rules of
Evidence, on the ground that the additional testi-
mony was unduly prejudicial. He does not chal-
lenge his sentence.
McGuire was a prominent Jesuit priest who in
1983 had begun serving as the spiritual director of
Mother Teresa's order of nuns-the Missionaries of
Charity-and as her confessor. A resident of Canisi-
us House, in Evanston, Illinois, a dwelling for Je-
suit priests, he led retreats all over the world
modeled on the spiritual exercises of Saint Ignatius
of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuit order. In 1997,
when his molestation of a boy named Dominick
began, he was elderly-67-and suffering from a long
list of diseases, including diabetes and asthma, and
disabilities resulting from frequent surgeries. He re-
cruited boys such as Dominick to accompany him
on his travels to the retreats, explaining that he
needed the boys to carry his bags, to provide him
with medications, physical therapy, and massages,
and to wash his feet.
He used the boys for sex as well. Dominick
was a fatherless child of 13 who became the de-
fendant's ward. From 1997 to 2001 the defendant
engaged in frequent sexual activity with Dominick,
often on trips to retreats; the details of the activity
need not detain us. He engaged in similar acts with
the four other boys who testified, and indeed with
many more. His sexual predation (which had begun
long before-perhaps decades before-his molestation
of Dominick began) involved the following modus
operandi: sleeping in the same bed with the boys;
receiving massages from them that began inno-
cently but evolved into sexual fondling of him that
he commanded them to perform; displaying porno-
graphic movies and magazines to "educate" the
boys about sex and the "beauty of the human
form'; eliciting confessions that they had masturb-
ated and threatening to expose as a masturbator any
boy who complained about molestation; and insist-
ing that complaint would be futile because no one
would believe that a priest of the defendant's prom-
inence was a pedophile.
The defendant's religious superiors began to be
suspicious of him as early as 1991, though he was
not defrocked until 2008. In 1991 they ordered him
not to travel with anyone under the age of 18. In
1995 the threshold was raised to 21 and in 2001 to
30. In 2000 they forbade his having his young as-
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sistants stay with him at Canisius House. He contin-
ued to travel with boys after being forbidden to do
so. His defense at trial was that Dominick had con-
cocted a false claim of sexual molestation in the
hope of obtaining money.
The defendant was charged with violating 18
U.S.C. § 2423(b), which is one of four closely re-
lated provisions of the federal criminal code. The
four are as follows:
18 U.S.C. § 2421: Whoever knowingly transports
any individual in interstate or foreign commerce,
or in any Territory or Possession of the United
States, with intent that such individual engage in
prostitution, or in any sexual activity for which
any person can be charged with a criminal of-
fense, or attempts to do so, *624 shall be fined
under this title or imprisoned not more than 10
years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 2423(a): Transportation with in-
tent to engage in criminal sexual activity.-A
person who knowingly transports an individual
who has not attained the age of 18 years in inter-
state or foreign commerce, or in any common-
wealth. territory or possession of the United
States, with intent that the individual engage in
prostitution, or in any sexual activity for which
any person can be charged with a criminal of-
fense, shall be fined under this title and im-
prisoned not less than 10 years or for life.
18 U.S.C. § 2423(b): Travel with intent to en-
gage in illicit sexual conduct.-A person who
travels in interstate commerce or travels into the
United States, or a United States citizen or an ali-
en admitted for permanent residence in the
United States who travels in foreign commerce,
for the purpose of engaging in any illicit sexual
conduct with another person shall be fined under
this title or imprisoned not more than 30 years, or
both.
18 U.S.C. § 2423(c): Engaging in illicit sexual
conduct in foreign places.-Any United States
citizen or alien admitted for permanent residence
who travels in foreign commerce, and engages in
any illicit sexual conduct with another person
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not
more than 30 years, or both.
Section 2421 is the original Mann Act, as
amended in minor respects. Section 2423(a), inten-
ded to protect minors from sexual predation, mir-
rors the Mann Act but imposes more severe penal-
ties. Section 2423(b), the provision under which the
defendant was prosecuted, was added to expand the
protection of minors still further; it punishes travel
in interstate commerce even if no minor is transpor-
ted, if the purpose of the travel is sex with a minor.
(Prosecutors frequently use this section to prosecute
persons who cross state lines to rendezvous with
minors whom they meet in online chat rooms. See,
e.g., United States v. Burnt*, 432 F.3d 373 (1st
Cir.2005).) Section 2423(c) was added to punish
persons who travel in foreign commerce and have
sex with a minor in the course of the trip regardless
of what the defendant intended when he set out on
it.
It is apparent that if, as the jury found, the de-
fendant had molested Dominick on their travels, he
violated sections 2421, 2423(a), and 2423(c). E.g.,
United States v. Bonty, 383 F.3d 575, 578 (7th
Cir.2004); United States v. Snow, 507 F.2d 22, 23
(7th Cir. 1974); United States v. Hitt, 473 F.3d 146,
150 (5th Cir.2006). But inexplicably the govern-
ment charged the defendant only with violating sec-
tion 2423(b), which requires that the travel be for
the purpose of engaging in illegal sexual activity.
This charging decision (which the government's
lawyer was unable to explain to us at the oral argu-
ment) enabled the defendant to argue that the pur-
pose of his trips was merely to conduct retreats; sex
was not the purpose but a welcome byproduct (if
the government's evidence was believed) of the op-
portunities that the retreats created, as the boys
were more vulnerable when far from home and the
defendant's molestation of them was less likely to
be detected by his religious superiors, who as we
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know had suspected him for many years of being a
child molester yet had taken no effective steps to
protect young boys from him.
The courts have had trouble dealing with cases
in which the travel prosecuted under section
2423(b) may have had dual purposes, only one of
which was to have sex with minors. The statute
says "the" purpose must be sex rather than "a" pur-
pose, but in United States v. Vang, 128 F.3d 1065,
1068 (7th Cir. 1997), we approved*625 a jury in-
struction which said that sex didn't have to be "the
sole purpose" of the travel, though it did have to be
"a dominant purpose, as opposed to an incidental
one. A person may have more than one dominant
purpose for traveling across a state line." To speak
of multiple dominant purposes is not idiomatic, but
given the evidence in Vang the precise wording of
the instruction hardly mattered. Other cases, too,
fasten on "dominant," but then define it down to
mean "significant," "efficient and compelling,"
"predominat[ing]," "motivating," not "incidental,"
or not "an incident" to the defendant's purpose in
traveling. E.g., United States v. Julian, 427 F.3d
471, 485 (7th Cir.2005); United States R Hitt,
supra, 473 F.3d at 152; United States v. Hayward,
359 F.3d 631, 637-38 (3d Cir.2004); United States
v. Meacham, 115 F.3d 1488, 1495-96 (10th
Cir. 1997); United States v. Campbell, 49 F.3d
1079, 1083.84 (5th Cir.1995); United States v. El-
lis, 935 F.2d 385, 390 (1st Cir.1991); United States
v. Bennett, 364 F.2d 77, 79 (4th Cir.1966).
These verbal formulas are strained; the courts
turn handsprings trying to define "dominant" as if it
were a statutory term, see, e.g., United States v.
Miller, 148 F.3d 207, 212-13 (2d Cir. 1998), which
it is not. It would be better to ask whether, had a
sex motive not been present, the trip would not
have taken place or would have differed substan-
tially. See, e.g., United States v. Snow, supra, 507
F.2d at 24; United States v. Farley, 607 F.3d 1294,
1335 (11th Cir.2010); United States v. Meacham,
supra, 115 F.3d at 1495.96.
We can place the blame for judicial preoccupa-
tion with the word "dominant" on the Supreme
Court, which in Mortensen v. United States, 322
U.S. 369, 374, 64 S.Ct. 1037, 88 L.Ed. 1331 (1944)
, a Mann Act case, said that engaging in forbidden
sexual activity "must be the dominant purpose of
such interstate movement." That was dictum, be-
cause the sole purpose of the movement in question
was to give several prostitutes an innocent vaca-
tion-that is, one in which they would not be plying
their trade. There were not multiple purposes, of
which one was sexual, so there was no occasion to
identify a dominant purpose. But later cases, ignor-
ing Justice Holmes's admonition to think things not
words, have tended to treat "dominant purpose" as
if it were the language of the Mann Act itself, and,
later still, as if it were the language of the statutes,
including 18 U.S.C. § 2423(b), that restate and ex-
tend the Act; and from the cases the term entered
jury instructions. (The evolution of "dominant pur-
pose" is considered at length in our opinion in
United States v. Vang, supra, 128 F.3d at 1070.72.)
The Fourth Circuit stated sensibly in United States
v. Bennett, supra, 364 F.2d at 77, 78 n. 4, that "the
`dominant motive' test seems completely inappro-
priate in any case involving multiple purposes,
some of which were legitimate but one of which is
proscribed by [section] 2421," and equally by sec-
tion 2423(b). But the defendant does not challenge
the jury instructions, so the only question is wheth-
er the jury was unreasonable in convicting him.
[ I] To answer the question we need to be clear
about the meaning of the statutory term "travels";
that will get us further than worrying the word
"dominant." To say that a sexual predator "travels"
in interstate or foreign commerce to a retreat is not
a full description of the travel in this case. He
travels in interstate or foreign commerce to a retreat
in the company of a boy he intends to molest-that is
the full description. The purpose of the travel so un-
derstood is to engage in illegal sexual conduct. See
United States v. Meacham, supra, 115 F.3d at
1495-96; United States v. Ellis, supra, 935 F.2d at
390.91.
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*626 At the oral argument we put the following
hypothetical case to the defendant's lawyer. A man
who travels frequently abroad on business has two
assistants. One is an older woman. The other is
young and beautiful. He needs only one of the as-
sistants to accompany him; they are equally com-
petent; but he chooses to take the young woman be-
cause he hopes to have sex with her. The purpose of
his travel is business; but the purpose of his travel
with this assistant rather than the other one is sex-
legal sex, in the example, but that's not the point;
the point is that the purpose of his choosing this
particular way to travel is sex rather than business.
Cf. United States v. Snow, supra, 507 F.2d at 24;
United States v. Meacham, supra, 115 F.3d at
1495.96. The defendant's lawyer was unable to dis-
tinguish the present case from our hypothetical
case.
It would be different if in that case the travel-
ing businessman had only one assistant, the beauti-
ful young woman. He hopes that he might have sex
with her on the trip, yet he would have made the
same trip, taking her with him, even if he had had
no such designs. In that event sex would not have
been the purpose of the trip with her, but a possible
bonus that could however have played no part in his
decision to take the trip-he was ordered to take it
and needed, for purely business reasons, to take the
assistant with him. Compare Hansen R Haff, 291
U.S. 559, 563, 54 S.Ct. 494, 78 L.Ed. 968 (1934)
("if the purpose of the journey was not sexual inter-
course, though that be contemplated, the statute is
not violated"), with Ghadiali v. United States, 17
F.2d 236, 237 (9th Cir.1927) (the defendant "had a
right to cause [his secretary] to be transported in in-
terstate commerce in the discharge of her secretari-
al duties without transgressing the provisions of the
law; but if, in addition to the secretarial duties, it
was also his purpose to have sexual intercourse
with her, and, entertaining such purpose, transpor-
ted her in interstate commerce, he would be
guilty").
After 1991 the defendant was forbidden to
travel with minors to his retreats-and all the trips
with Dominick took place after that. If a trip has
dual purposes, one licit but intended to bolster an
illicit sexual purpose, the sexual purpose is "the"
purpose, in a reasonable sense of the word. Suppose
a salesman employed by Sears Roebuck is directed
by Sears to travel to Singapore to sell clothes dryers
there. Instead he travels to Bangkok because he
wants to patronize child prostitutes. He sells some
clothes dryers in Bangkok in the intervals between
his visits to the child prostitutes and alters the in-
voices to make it seem that the sales occurred in
Singapore. The purpose of his travel would be sex
rather than business, though business would be
transacted during the trip. See United States v.
Snow, supra, 507 F.2d at 24; United States v.
Meacham, supra, 115 F.3d at 1495-96; United
States v. Farley, supra, 607 F.3d at 1335; United
States v. Breditnus, 234 F.Supp.2d 639, 646
2002), affirmed, 352 F.3d 200 (5th
Cir.2003). The defendant in our case had, so far as
appears, broad latitude concerning the number and
location of the retreats he led, and he configured his
travels to optimize his sexual activity.
We turn to the defendant's objection to the
testimony by the four other boys (like Dominick,
adults when they testified) whom he molested. The
district judge was concerned about the possibility
of undue prejudice and helpfully placed on the re-
cord her pretrial discussion of the issue with coun-
sel, facilitating appellate review.
[2][3] The testimony was admissible as evid-
ence of the defendant's modus operandi (and thus
not excludable under Rule 404(b) of the Federal
Rules of Evidence, *627 see United States v. Za-
hursky, 580 F.3d 515, 524.25 (7th Cir.2009)) and it
was also admissible under Rules 413 and 414 as
evidence of the defendant's previous crimes of
sexual assault and child molestation, demonstrating
a propensity to commit such crimes. E.g., United
States v. Rogers, 587 F.3d 816, 821 (7th Cir.2009).
But like other evidence, such testimony is subject
to the limitations that Rule 403 places on evidence
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that is unduly prejudicial, confusing, or repetitious.
Id. at 822.23. The judge was concerned lest the jury
be overwhelmed by profoundly disturbing and
highly emotional testimony of numerous witnesses,
which would deflect the jurors from careful consid-
eration of the only actual issue they had to decide,
which was whether the defendant had traveled with
Dominick for the purpose of sexually abusing him.
On the basis of the striking similarities among the
experiences of each of the victims, the judge tentat-
ively ruled that she would allow the government to
call one witness whom the defendant had abused
besides Dominick, while reserving decision on four
others until after the defendant's cross-examination
of Dominick. In the end she allowed testimony by
three others.
The evidence was material because the defense
was that Dominick was a liar. Although the defend-
ant himself did not testify, the defense presented
more witnesses than the government-witnesses who
testified to the defendant's sterling character. The
evidence of the other boys established the defend-
ant's propensity for, and modus operandi of, mo-
lestation of young boys and by doing so bolstered
Dominick's testimony.
The defendant particularly objects to the boys'
testimony about the shame and fear that dissuaded
them from telling their parents or others about what
he had done to them until they had grown up and
escaped his control. But this testimony was invited
by the brutal cross-examination of Dominick by the
defendant's lawyer and by the argument that
Dominick's failure to tell anyone about what the de-
fendant was doing to him until 2005, long after the
sexual molestation had ceased (the defendant mo-
lested boys, and eventually boys become men), in-
dicated fabrication. This argument entitled the gov-
ernment to elicit in redirect examination the reasons
Dominick and the other boys had not revealed the
defendant's acts soon after they occurred. See
United States v. Hensley, 574 F.3d 384, 389.90 (7th
Cir.2009); United States v. Pi:unman, 409 F.3d 919,
928-29 (8th Cir.2005); United States v. Powers, 59
F.3d 1460, 1464, 1467 (4th Cir.1995).
AFFIRMED.
C.A.7 (111.),2010.
U.S. v. McGuire
627 F.3d 622
END OF DOCUMENT
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