Defendant forced victims struggling with opioid addictions
to prostitute for his profit
Xaver M. Boston, 29, of Charlotte, North Carolina, was
convicted yesterday by a federal jury of six counts of sex trafficking and one
count of using an interstate facility to promote a prostitution enterprise. The
verdict was announced by Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore of the
Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, U.S. Attorney R. Andrew Murray of
the Western District of North Carolina, and Special Agent in Charge John Strong
of the FBI Charlotte, North Carolina, Field Division. U.S. District Judge
Robert J. Conrad, Jr. presided over the trial.
Evidence presented during the three day trial, including the
testimony of three of the four victims identified in the indictment by their
initials, revealed that Boston, who served in the U.S. Army as a reserve
military policeman, operated an extensive sex trafficking enterprise in the
Charlotte area between 2012 and September 2017, except for a brief period when
he was deployed overseas. Boston recruited the victims—young women and one
teenager who were all struggling with drug addictions—by promising to provide
them with a place to live and drugs to feed their addictions. He also falsely
promised them a house, car, and other material possessions. Boston then
advertised them on Backpage.com for prostitution and collected the proceeds for
his own profit.
After recruiting the victims, Boston controlled their supply
of highly addictive drugs such as heroin and hydrocodone pills. Without the
drugs, the victims would experience excruciating physical and mental pain and
withdrawal symptoms. In order to coerce the victims to prostitute, Boston
withheld their drugs until after they completed commercial sex acts, and he
withheld it as punishment if they failed to turn over all of the prostitution
proceeds or otherwise violated his rules.
Evidence presented at trial also showed that Boston used
violence to control and coerce the victims on occasion. For example, he choked
one victim on multiple occasions, and he punched and slapped others as well.
Boston also used a pistol to strike one victim in the face, breaking her
nose.
“The defendant in this case preyed upon young vulnerable
women, exploiting their drug addictions and forcing them to engage in
prostitution for his own profit,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Gore.
“The Civil Rights Division will continue its vigorous efforts to work with our
federal and state partners to hold human traffickers accountable and vindicate
the rights of victims.”
“Boston is a predator who ran a criminal enterprise that
violated the most basic standards of human decency,” said U.S. Attorney Murray.
“The defendant preyed on and abused vulnerable young women with the intention
of exploiting them for his financial gain, and used violence and drugs to exert
his control. My office will continue to prosecute sex traffickers and work with
our law enforcement partners to identify those who engage in this illegal,
dehumanizing business.”
“Xaver Boston promised his victims a better life, instead he
robbed them of their civil rights and freedom to make a profit, now he will pay
the price. The FBI devotes a significant amount of resources to help sex
trafficking victims recover from the trauma they suffer at the hands of
ruthless people like Boston,” said John Strong, Special Agent in Charge of the
FBI in North Carolina.
After deliberating for seven hours, the jury found the
defendant guilty of seven out of nine counts contained in the indictment.
Boston is currently in federal custody. Each sex trafficking charge carries a
minimum sentence of 15 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life,
mandatory restitution and a $250,000 fine. A sentencing date has not been set.
The case was investigated by the FBI Charlotte, North
Carolina, Field Division with assistance from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police
Department. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kimlani M.
Ford of the Western District of North Carolina and Trial Attorney Matthew T.
Grady of the Civil Rights Division’s Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
No comments:
Post a Comment