Eggplant Emoji đ Means What You Think It MeansâState v. Farley
Farley: â10:30 good boy 11 bad boyâ
Victim: âMe bad boyâ
Farley: â11 tomorrow night budâ
Victim: âNoâ plus âthree emojis, which the victim testified were âa pointer at â like closing their finger meaning small [I assume đ€] and an eggplant emoji [đ]'â
[The court then includes more of the conversation in a footnote, but treats this part as irrelevant:]
Farley: âPlease bud, u know whyâ
Victim: âN9â [meant to be ânoâ]
Victim: âPlz 11â [the opinion says this message came from the victim, but I wonder if it actually came from Farley?]
The victim testified that the eggplant emoji referred to a penis and that he was making a joke that Farley had a small penis. A detective testified âthat because of his training and experience he knew that the eggplant emoji meant a penisâ (I wonder what training covered this topic?), that the parties were talking about future sexual contact, and the victim was saying that he didnât want the sexual contact. In closing arguments, the prosecutor said:
A fair reading of those texts, especially in the context of the relationship described by [the victim] and described by the defendant on the recording with [the detective][,] is that the defendant was implying that he wanted [the victim] to be a bad boy starting at around 11 oâclock at night when [the victim] went to bed in Corey Farleyâs bed. Thatâs where [the victim] slept . . . . The implication is that he was going to do naughty things in bed with [the victim]. Thatâs what those emojis were about.
[The victim] was seemingly willing to be a bad boy, but couldnât help commenting how small the defendantâs penis was using those emojis. Again, [the victim] couldnât have known anything about this 29-year old manâs penis unless [the victim] had seen it. It is also too suspicious to ignore that reference to a penis being immediately connected to the talk about being a bad boy in the text, right.
On appeal, Farley protested that the prosecutor made a conclusion that wasnât supported by the evidence (I assume this refers to how the prosecutorâs interpretation differed from the detectiveâs testimonyâŠ?). The court disagrees:
Although Farley is correct that the victim testified that the messages reflected a joke, exhibits containing the messages and emojis were admitted in evidence, the victim and detective both testified that the eggplant emoji meant a penis, and the detective also testified that he initially thought the messages indicated that Farley and the victim âwere talking about a sexual exchange.â The prosecutor did not err in inferring from this testimony and from the exhibits that the messages had a sexual connotation, despite the testimony to the contrary that the messages did not mean this
The court upheld Farleyâs conviction and sentence.
The opinion is confusing because the conversation, without additional context, could support multiple interpretations. It seems pretty obvious that the parties were discussing sexual contact, with or without the detectiveâs testimony or the prosecutorâs characterizations. Itâs less obvious that the conversation indicates that the victim had actually seen Farleyâs penis. Genitalia size jokes are a trope, even among younger children. Itâs also unclear to me if the conversation indicates what the victim wanted to happen (especially the âplz 11â message), but consent is irrelevant when dealing with minors.
FWIW, I found 7 other references to the eggplant emoji in my caselaw dataset.
Case Citation: State v. Farley, 2024 ME 52 (Me. Sup. Ct. July 18, 2024)