Today, the Justice Department announced that Andre James Hertzog, 29,
was sentenced to serve 10 years in prison and eight years of supervised
release for participating in a sex trafficking conspiracy. Hertzog’s
co-defendant, Nicole Bramer, 29, was sentenced to serve 21 months in
prison, to be followed by five years of supervised release. In
addition, the defendants were each ordered to pay $6100 in restitution
to the victims of the offense. Hertzog and Bramer are both from St.
Paul, Minn.
“The defendants preyed upon vulnerable young women by a variety of
deplorable means,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Jocelyn
Samuels for the Civil Rights Division. “The Department of Justice is
committed to prosecuting those who sexually exploit vulnerable women for
financial benefit.”
“Working with victims of sex trafficking to attain a measure of justice
is a serious responsibility,” said Special Agent in Charge Christopher
Warrener for the FBI’s Minneapolis Field Office. “These sentences are
the culmination of investigators and prosecutors effectively
communicating with victims.”
Bramer pleaded guilty to participating in the sex trafficking conspiracy
on May 29, 2013, and Hertzog pleaded guilty on July 2, 2013. During
his plea hearing, Hertzog admitted that, from April 2011 to August 2012,
he and Bramer engaged in a scheme to target and recruit young,
vulnerable women, one of whom was a minor, and to compel them into
performing commercial sex acts for their own financial gain. Hertzog
and Bramer used coercive tactics, including physical violence and
psychological coercion, to isolate the young women, control them and
cause them to perform acts of prostitution. As part of the trafficking
scheme, the defendants transported the victims across state lines for
the purpose of having them engage in prostitution, and the defendants
routinely advertised the sexual services of the young women on the
internet website Backpage.com.
The case was investigated by the FBI and prosecuted jointly by Special
Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Kappelhoff for the District of Minnesota,
Trial Attorney Christine M. Siscaretti, and former Trial Attorney Amanda
Gregory for the Civil Rights Division’s Human Trafficking Prosecution
Unit.
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