Six men from around the country were sentenced today and
yesterday for participating in an international child pornography production
ring, announced Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, United States Attorney Matthew Schneider of the
Eastern District of Michigan, and Special Agent in Charge Timothy R. Slater of
the FBI, Detroit Division.
Terry Kovac, 49, a
dispatcher of a package delivery company of Las Vegas, Nevada, was sentenced to
37 years in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release.
Felipe
Dominguez-Meija, 31, a painter of Springdale, Arkansas, was sentenced to 41
years in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release.
Noel Eisley, 38, a
research scientist of Wappinger Falls, New York, was sentenced to 35 years in
prison, followed by 10 years of supervised release.
Eric Robinson, 42,
a restaurant manager of Duluth, Minnesota, was sentenced to 34 years in prison,
followed by 10 years of supervised release.
Bret Massey, 47, a
sales coordinator and design specialist of Portland, Maine, was sentenced to 32
years in prison, followed by 10 years of supervised release.
William Phillips, 39, a cook of Highland Park, New York,
pleaded guilty to the charge of child exploitation enterprise in two cases for
his participation in the above-described group as well as another, similar
group with the same objective. Phillips
entered guilty pleas on Dec. 21, 2017 and May 11, 2018. On the first case, Phillips was sentenced to
33 years in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. On the second case, Phillips was sentenced to
33 years in prison, to run concurrently, followed by 5 years of supervised
release.
In addition to their prison sentences and terms of
supervised release, all of the defendants were ordered to pay 5,000 dollars in
restitution to each of the identified victims, reaching a total of over 1.4
million dollars. U.S. District Judge
Stephen J. Murphy III for the Eastern District of Michigan imposed the
sentences.
According to court records, these six men worked together
from 2013 to April of 2017, with other men both inside and outside of the
United States, to lure juvenile girls to two different unmonitored video chat
websites and sexually exploit them. The
men recruited the victims from common social media platforms by pretending to
be teenage boys interested in chatting with the girls in real time. Once the victims arrived in the chatrooms,
the group—all pretending to be teenagers—worked together to build trust and
convince the child to engage in sexually explicit conduct on web camera. The group members then recorded that activity
and shared it with each other. The girls
were unaware that the men were making recordings, or what they dubbed
“captures,” of the sexual activity.
Through their scheme, the group successfully recorded tens
of thousands of sexually explicit videos of minors, some as young as 11 years
old. The defendants preyed on more than
100 victims, some of whom were present for the sentencing hearing and made
statements to the Court. Still other
victims have not been identified. The
FBI has so-far identified 48 victims in the United States.
“The six men sentenced today are an example of a disturbing
and reprehensible new trend: the ‘crowdsourcing’ of child exploitation,” said
Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski.
“These highly organized and coldly calculating defendants worked
together over the course of several years, pretending to be teenage boys in
order to entice more than 100 minor girls—some as young as 11 years old—into
producing child pornography which the defendants then shared with each other.
Thanks to the outstanding efforts of the agents and prosecutors who worked on
this case, these men will spend years behind bars, and their victims—some of
whom were present at the sentencing and addressed the Court—have received some
measure of justice for the terrible harm done to them.”
“These predators committed truly horrific crimes against
innocent girls, and they deserve decades in prison. Shockingly, some of these defendants have
young children themselves,” said United States Attorney Schneider. “Parents, please speak with your children
about the dangers of chatting online so we can keep all of our children safe.”
“These appalling crimes victimize and exploit innocent
children”, said FBI Special Agent in Charge Slater. “The arrest and prosecution of perpetrators
who commit these heinous acts of violence will continue to be a high priority
of the FBI’s SEMTEC task force.”
Assistant United States Attorneys April N. Russo and Kevin
M. Mulcahy of the Eastern District of Michigan, along with Trial Attorney
Leslie Fisher of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS) of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, prosecuted the case. The FBI’s Detroit Field Office and Southeast
Michigan Trafficking and Exploitation Crimes task force investigated the case.
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