Case Law Database

Trafficking in persons

United States v. Glenn Marcus

Fact Summary

The defendant met the victim, Jodi, on an internet chat room. He convinced her to move to Maryland to be with him. There, they initially engaged in a consensual relationship. However, soon afterward Jodi expressed her desire to terminate the relationship, but through threats of force and reputational damage, Marcus began abusing Jodi. He engaged in a bondage, dominance/discipline, submission/sadism, and masochism (“BDSM”) relationship with Jodi.  Marcus videotaped and otherwise documented the BDSM he engaged in with Jodi, forced her to maintain an online website, and kept all the profits from the website. At trial, the jury convicted Marcus on sex trafficking, forced labor, and dissemination of obscene material through an interactive computer service.

Commentary and Significant Features

In the original decision Marcus was convicted on all three charges and sentenced to 108 months imprisonment. However, this decision was vacated and remanded since the Second Circuit believed he was charged retroactively, and thus the trial was tainted by “plain error”. The case was later brought to the Supreme Court through a Writ of Certiorari; the Supreme Court overturned the Second Circuit’s ruling.

Sentence Date:
2007-09-18
Author:
Human Trafficking Database of the University of Michigan Law School

Keywords

Acts:
Recruitment
Harbouring
Means:
Threat or use of force or other forms of coercion
Purpose of Exploitation:
Forced labour or services
Slavery or practices similar to slavery
Other
Form of Trafficking:
Internal
Sector in which exploitation takes place:
Commercial sexual exploitation
Domestic servitude

Procedural Information

Legal System:
Common Law
Latest Court Ruling:
Supreme Court
Type of Proceeding:
Criminal
 

Victims / Plaintiffs in the first instance

Victim:
Ms J.
Gender:
Female
Nationality:
American

Defendants / Respondents in the first instance

Defendant:
Glenn Marcus, aka “S&M Svengali”
Gender:
Male
Nationality:
American
Legal Reasoning:

The jury found Marcus guilty under the TVPA and considered actions from 1999-2001, with no instruction that it cannot convict based solely on pre-2000, pre-enactment acts.

Charges / Claims / Decisions

Defendant:
Glenn Marcus, aka “S&M Svengali”
Legislation / Statute / Code:
18 USC 1591(a)(1)
Charge details:
Sex Trafficking
Verdict:
Guilty
Charge details:
Forced Labor
Verdict:
Guilty
Charge details:
Dissemination of obscene materials through an interactive computer service
Verdict:
Guilty
Term of Imprisonment:
9 years
Appellate Decision:
Reversed

2nd instance:

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the conviction violated the Constitution because Marcus was convicted of breaking a law, the 2000 Trafficking Victims Protection Act, that wasn't in place when some offenses happened.

The judgment of the district court was vacated, and the case was remanded for proceedings consistent with the opinion.

The ruling denied government’s use of the 2000 law to prosecute Marcus for incidents spanning from 1999 to 2001. Marcus' attorneys argued, and the court agreed, that the law was applied retroactively in violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause of the Constitution, constituting a “plain error” and warranting a reversal of his conviction.

Reversed & Remanded

3rd instance:

The Supreme Court granted the Writ of Certiorari to the government. The Supreme Court has agreed to consider reinstating the sex trafficking and forced labor conviction of Glenn Marcus, and is currently in pending status.

At trial, the jury considered evidence of Marcus’ behavior that occurred both before and after the TVPA. The indictment referenced the acts he allegedly committed between “January 1999 and October 2001.” Because Marcus was indicted for conduct that occurred both before and after indictment, the court did not find a constitutional violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause. Specifically, the court stated that the “Constitution did not prohibit conviction for a ‘continuing offense’ so long as the conviction rested, at least in part, upon post-enactment conduct.” 560 U.S.(2010).

Marcus also contended that not bringing up the Ex Post Facto argument at trial constituted “plain error”, as defined in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed, and articulated the test for plain error review as well as stressed that it requires the error to be prejudicial. In this case, the court did not believe that had the trial court considered the Ex Post Facto argument, the jury’s decision would be different.

Court

United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York