KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A former Ohio university professor was
sentenced in federal court today for traveling to Kansas City, Missouri, to
engage in sexual activity with a person whom he believed to be a 14-year-old
runaway.
Kevin Connor Armitage, 54, was sentenced by U.S. District
Judge Brian C. Wimes to two years and nine months in federal prison without
parole.
On May 1, 2019, Armitage pleaded guilty to traveling across
state lines to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor. Armitage was a
professor of American studies at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
Armitage maintained a profile on a website that allows
registered members to exchange information regarding commercial sex activity.
The website’s public posts contain detailed accounts of sexual encounters
between members and commercial sex workers, including prices and specific
locations for sexual encounters. Links to well-known sex trafficking websites
were posted with reviews of sexual encounters. Members of the website are able
to contact the posters by private message to obtain contact information for the
commercial sex workers described in the posts.
Armitage was a senior member of the website, with 576
postings that detail his prior experiences with prostitutes in Ohio, Arizona,
Kansas, Colorado, and Tijuana.
On May 22, 2018, an undercover federal agent responded to a
discussion thread posted by another user. Armitage contacted the undercover
agent through a private message and indicated that he would be visiting the
Kansas City area and was interested in recommendations. Armitage was provided a
phone number for a female FBI agent, who was posing as a 14-year-old female
runaway.
After several conversations, Armitage agreed to meet the
14-year-old’s cousin at a restaurant on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City
on May 30, 2018, in order to discuss payment. Once he arrived at the
restaurant, Armitage was told, he would be given the address where he could
meet the 14-year-old. An FBI undercover employee, posing as the cousin, met
Armitage at the restaurant and he was arrested.
This case was prosecuted by First Assistant U.S. Attorney
Teresa A. Moore. It was investigated by the Department of Health and Human
Services, Office of Inspector General and the FBI.
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