The Ninth Circuit has determined that a Nevada conviction for possession of visual presentation depicting sexual conduct of a person under 16 years of age is not a sexual abuse of a minor aggravated felony. The court noted that “the Nevada statute does not require proof that the offender participated in sexual conduct with a minor, as required under the first two elements of the federal generic definition. That requirement is grounded in the ordinary meaning of ‘sexual abuse.’” “The Nevada statute punishes possession of a visual depiction of a minor engaged in sexual conduct, but knowing and willful possession of the image alone renders an offender guilty. The offender himself need not have participated in any form of sexual conduct with the minor who is depicted in the image.” “With a possession-only offense such as N.R.S. § 200.730, the minor depicted in the image is not the direct object of the offender’s conduct, which is a necessary predicate for the offense to qualify as ‘sexual abuse of a minor.’”

The court remanded for the agency to address in the first instance if the conviction qualified as an aggravated felony related to child pornography, but the government admitted that statute is likely overbroad compared to the generic definition of that aggravated felony.

The full text of Mero v. Barr can be found here:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/05/01/17-70929.pdf

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