KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - On July 26, 2018, Roy Anthony Williams,
of the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom, was sentenced by the Honorable Thomas A.
Varlan, Chief U.S. District Judge, to serve 120 months in federal prison for
traveling from the United Kingdom to Tennessee for the purpose of having sex
with a minor and attempting to persuade and entice the minor to have sex with
him. Following his release from prison,
Williams will be supervised by the U.S. Probation Office for 10 years and
required to register with the sex offender registry in any state in which he
resides, works, or attends school.
Williams will also be subject to deportation from the United States
following his release from prison.
In March 2018, Williams pleaded guilty to federal charges
stemming from his travel from the United Kingdom to Lenoir City, Tennessee, for
the purpose of having sex with a 13-year-old girl and then communicating with
the girl via text messages in order to arrange for the girl to meet him at a
local motel to have sex. The girl’s
mother discovered the text messages from Williams on her daughter’s phone and
reported the contact to the Lenoir City Police Department. A search of his cellular telephone and
computer resulted in the discovery of evidence confirming that Williams had
been grooming the girl online for several months, via various social media
platforms, to have sex with her.
“Sexual predators like Williams use the Internet and social
media to find children, particularly teenagers, to groom and entice for illicit
sexual activity. Parents should be
vigilant to protect their children from would-be child molesters who are prowling
the Internet for young victims,” said J. Douglas Overbey, U.S. Attorney for the
Eastern District of Tennessee. “Our
office will continue to work with investigative agencies to build cases and
prosecute the offenders of these heinous crimes,” added U.S. Attorney Overbey.
This investigation was conducted by the FBI and the Lenoir
City Police Department. Assistant U.S.
Attorney Matthew Morris represented the United States in court proceedings.
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