Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Duggar sentencing set for today

Judge denies new trial, acquittal bids in child-porn case

- RON WOOD

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A federal judge denied Josh Duggar’s motion for acquittal or a new trial in his child pornograph­y case Tuesday, meaning Duggar’s sentencing will proceed this morning as scheduled.

U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks said the evidence presented against Duggar at trial was sufficient to support his conviction. Brooks twice denied motions to dismiss the case based on insufficie­nt evidence during trial.

Duggar, 34, of Springdale, was convicted Dec. 9 of possessing child pornograph­y. Brooks is set to sentence him at 9:30 a.m. today in Fayettevil­le.

Prosecutor­s accused Duggar in early 2021 of using the internet to download and view child pornograph­y, some of which depicts the sexual abuse of children younger than 12, according to court documents.

Prosecutor­s told jurors child pornograph­y was repeatedly downloaded on the computer at Duggar’s used car lot May 14, 15 and 16 of 2019.

Duggar’s attorneys contended he didn’t do it and suggested an unidentifi­ed, remote user may have downloaded the material.

Duggar’s motion for a new trial or acquittal argued there was insufficie­nt evidence for a jury to conclude that he actually viewed any child pornograph­y.

“Mr. Duggar’s argument lacks merit, as there is ample evidence he viewed the images of child pornograph­y that had been downloaded to his business computer,” Brooks wrote in his opinion Tuesday.

Brooks cited expert testimony from the trial that Duggar had set up a partition on the computer at his car dealership to defeat software that would tell his wife he was looking at pornograph­y. Experts also testified there was evidence Duggar downloaded child pornograph­y to that side of the computer and viewed it before deleting the files.

Brooks said the “coup de grace” is a timeline introduced by the government summarizin­g 50 or 60 exhibits of forensic evidence recovered from Duggar’s HP desktop, iPhone 11, iPhone 8 and MacBook.

The evidence places Duggar at the car lot May 13, 2019, during the installati­on of the Linux partition and operating system and during May 14-16, 2019, at the times child pornograph­y was downloaded to the HP desktop, according to Brooks.

Duggar’s lawyers argued a new trial was required because the government did not disclose evidence that prosecutor­s talked with a possible defense witness named Caleb Williams. Williams was one of several individual­s Duggar’s attorney identified by name during opening statement as having had the motive and opportunit­y to commit the crimes.

They also argued the government failed to investigat­e others who may have had means, motive and opportunit­y.

“In the end, however, the defense’s promise of an alternativ­e perpetrato­r came to nothing, as the evidence at trial showed that Mr. Duggar — and only Mr. Duggar — was physically present at the car lot when child pornograph­y was being downloaded,” Brooks wrote.

Brooks said unsolicite­d email from Williams, who did not testify at the trial, to prosecutor­s was turned over to the defense, but the email contained no evidence that Williams was physically present at the car lot when child pornograph­y was downloaded and the defense was unable to point the jury to any forensic evidence of remote access to the partition on the dealership computer.

Brooks said he issued an order before the trial allowing Duggar’s defense team to raise the possibilit­y of an alternativ­e perpetrato­r, but cautioned them he would not permit the defense to present speculativ­e testimony or make purely speculativ­e arguments to the jury.

Expert testimony at trial was that someone was physically present at the car lot May 13 and installed the partition on the operating system by inserting a thumb drive into the HP desktop computer, Brooks noted.

Brooks also rejected an argument that a government expert should not have been allowed to testify about geolocatio­n evidence related to pictures on Duggar’s cellphone. The evidence showed when and where certain pictures were taken, putting Duggar at the car lot when the child pornograph­y was downloaded.

Brooks said a defense expert had access to the same data prosecutor­s used, but never contradict­ed testimony about the various locations where the photograph­s were taken.

Duggar was charged in federal court with two counts involving receiving and possessing child pornograph­y. The jury found him guilty on both counts after more than six hours of deliberati­on over two days.

He’ll be sentenced only on the count of receiving child pornograph­y because possession of child pornograph­y is considered a lesser included offense under federal law.

Duggar faces up to 20 years in prison and fines up to $250,000. He’s been held at the Washington County jail since being convicted.

Federal prosecutor­s are recommendi­ng Duggar be sentenced to 20 years in prison on his child pornograph­y conviction, while Duggar’s lawyers say he should receive no more than five.

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