Jacksonville, Florida – United States District Judge Marcia
Morales Howard has sentenced Mark Wesley Schmit (50, Jacksonville) to 20 years
in federal prison for distributing child pornography. Schmit was also ordered
to serve a 10-year term of supervised release and to register as a sex
offender.
Schmit had pleaded guilty on August 2, 2019.
According to court documents, during the course of the
investigation of an unrelated child exploitation case, the FBI learned that a
particular individual had exchanged a series of text messages with Schmit. At
one point during that conversation, that individual sent several explicit
videos to Schmit, claiming that they depicted his 13-year-old sister. In
response, Schmit requested that the individual send him additional graphic
sexual videos of that purported child. Schmit then sent an image to that
individual, which depicted an adult male sexually assaulting a young girl.
On April 16, 2019, FBI agents arrested Schmit pursuant to a
federal arrest warrant. During an interview, Schmit admitted to sending and
receiving child pornography, and that he had a sexual interest in looking at
images of underage girls. Schmit also
admitted that he had used a fictitious internet persona to portray himself as a
teenage boy, for the purpose of meeting underage girls through social media. In
some cases, Schmit had cultivated long-term online relationships with his
victims so that he could solicit them to send him sexual images of themselves.
A subsequent investigation revealed that Schmit had solicited and received
sexual images from at least three underage girls. A forensic analysis of
Schmit’s cellphone revealed that it contained at least five images depicting
the sexual abuse of young children.
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation in Jacksonville. It was prosecuted by Assistant United States
Attorney David B. Mesrobian.
This is another case was brought as part of Project Safe
Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of
Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse.
Led by the United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child
Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal,
state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who
sexually exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims. For more
information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit
www.justice.gov/psc.
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