Late yesterday afternoon, a federal jury in U.S. District
Court in Oxford, Mississippi, found Raymorris Asencio, 31 of Hattiesburg,
Mississippi, guilty of human trafficking and transporting a minor across state
lines to engage in prostitution. The
announcement was made by U.S. Attorney William C. Lamar and Special Agent in
Charge, Christopher Freeze, Federal Bureau of Investigation. During the trial, the jury heard testimony
from the victim and local citizens who observed the minor and reported their
concerns to police. FBI agents and task
force officers from Oxford, Hattiesburg, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana were able
to rescue the minor from a hotel room in Baton Rouge in February 2017.
U.S. District Judge Glen H. Davidson presided over the trial
and will sentence Asencio at a later date.
Asencio faces possible penalties of not less than 10 years and up to
life imprisonment, fines of up to $250,000, and post-imprisonment terms of
supervision of not less than 5 years.
United States Attorney William C. Lamar said, “Combatting
human trafficking is a top priority for the Department of Justice and our
office. Through collaborative efforts
with our state and local law enforcement partners in Project Safe Neighborhoods
and Project Safe Childhood we will do just that. We must protect our children from predators
like Asencio. I want to thank the
private citizens in Oxford who noticed the minor and Asencio and notified the
Oxford Police Department of their concerns for the minor's safety. I also want to commend the quick action of
the Oxford Police Department, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other
police departments in Hattiesburg, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who all worked
together to locate and rescue the minor.”
“It is nearly unthinkable that trafficking a minor for
prostitution still happens in Mississippi, but the jury in this case agreed
that the charges against Asencio were warranted,” said Special Agent in Charge
Freeze. “Our Child Exploitation Task Force constantly focuses on those that
prey on children. I want to personally thank the special agents, task force
officers and partner law enforcement agencies that assisted with this case,
because without these partnerships, these types of verdicts would not be
possible.”
Assistant United States Attorneys Paul Roberts and Michael
Hallock prosecuted the case for the United States. The case was investigated by the FBI Jackson
Division’s Child Exploitation Task Force, which is made up of agents from the
FBI and the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office and officers from the
Prentiss County Sheriff’s Office and Southaven Police Department.
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