Benjamin Carpenter founded Ahlud-Tawhid Publications ("ATP"), an organization that translated and published ISIS propaganda in a variety of languages. Federal agents arrested him after he provided such services to an undercover FBI agent posing as a member of ISIS. A federal grand jury subsequently indicted him with one count of attempting to provide material support or resources to a terrorist organization in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2339B. A jury convicted him after a five-day jury trial, and the District Court sentenced him to 240 months imprisonment - a sentence within the range recommended by the United States Sentencing Guidelines.
Carpenter challenged both his conviction, certain evidentiary rulings made by the District Court, and his sentence on appeal. The Sixth Circuit rejected each argument he raised and affirmed his conviction in a published opinion.
The Court first rejected Carpenter's argument that providing translating services did not constitute providing a "service" to a terrorist organization in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2339B. It first found that providing translating services to ISIS furthered its "propaganda mission." Next, it held that the statute's list of "service" examples was not a "phrase of limitation," excluding translation services, but instead indicated that the services Carpenter provided fell within the statute's proscriptions. It additionally concluded that this reading did not make the statute unconstitutionally vague.
The Court next turned to Carpenter's challenge to various evidentiary decisions made by the District Court. It rejected his argument that the District Court erred in admitting evidence of Carpenter's role in ATP, ATP's work product, and Carpenter's interaction with ISIS's work product as improper FRE 404(b) evidence. It held that the District Court properly concluded it was admissible "intrinsic acts" evidence demonstrating Carpenter's role within ATP. It also found that the District Court properly admitted the evidence under FRE 403.
Carpenter also challenged the District Court's decision to admit screenshots of his WhatsApp messages with an ISIS-supporting romantic interest, arguing the government did not provide notice of this plan pursuant to FRE 404(b). Not so, the Court held, noting the District Court properly admitted the evidence under FRE 405 because Carpenter made his reputation an issue by raising an entrapment defense. Since the evidence was admissible under FRE 405, the rules did not require prior notice.
Carpenter also challenged the District Court's decision to allow lay testimony from an FBI agent that the abbreviation "JJ" in Carpenter's WhatsApp messages meant "Jihadi John," a known ISIS member. The Court held the District Court did not err, however, because Carpenter did not show that the identification was faulty, and, even if it was, any error was harmless.
The Court also rejected Carpenter's claim the District Court erred by refusing to let him stipulate that he knew ISIS was a terrorist organization. Since his requested stipulation did not relate to prior convictions, the Court held that the Government was not obligated to agree to the stipulation, and the Court was not required to grant it.
Carpenter also claimed the District Court erred in entering a protective order permitting an undercover FBI agent to use a pseudonym at trial. However, the Court found the order neither abused the District Court's discretion nor violated the Confrontation Clause of the United States Constitution because the District Court reasonably weighed Carpenter's right to confrontation with the danger posed to the agent by disclosing his or her identity.
The Court also rejected Carpenter's challenges to the jury instructions the District Court used during his trial. First, it held the District Court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to give an instruction regarding bad-acts evidence under FRE 404(b) because it did not admit such evidence. It also held the District Court did not abuse its discretion in using the Sixth Circuit's pattern Allen charge. Noting the District Court administered the charge several days into the jury's deliberation and promptly after it reported it was deadlocked, the Court held the District Court did not coerce the jury to reach a decision.
The Court next affirmed the District Court's sentence. In doing so, it rejected Carpenter's argument that the District Court misapplied U.S.S.G. § 3A1.4, which enhances a proposed sentence based on “federal crime[s] of terrorism," finding the District Court had sufficient evidence Carpenter specifically intended "to influence or affect the conduct of the Egyptian government by intimidation or coercion and to retaliate against [the] Egyptian government['s] conduct against ISIS."
The Court likewise found that Carpenter's sentence was substantively reasonable. It found that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in imposing his within-Guidelines sentence, citing the seriousness of his offense, his "lack of repentance," and his "high risk of recidivism."