CAMDEN, N.J. – A Camden County, New Jersey, man today
admitted sending obscene material to minors over the internet, U.S. Attorney
Craig Carpenito announced.
Zackary McFerren, 28, of Winslow Township, New Jersey,
pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Noel L. Hillman in Camden federal
court to an information charging him with two counts of transferring obscene
matter to minors, as well to violating the terms of his supervised release by
contacting those minors.
According to documents filed in this case and statements
made in court:
McFerren admitted that he previously pleaded guilty to
possessing child pornography and transferring obscene material to a minor and
was sentenced Oct. 17, 2016, to 33 months in prison, to be followed by five
years of supervised release, which started May 3, 2019.
McFerren acknowledged that the terms of his supervised
release included not committing another federal crime; required him to submit
to computer monitoring by the U.S. Probation Office and restricted his contact
with minors.
McFerren admitted that starting on July 15, 2019, he used a
mobile phone to communicate with an individual he believed to be a 13-year old
girl living in New York. Unbeknownst to McFerren, he was actually communicating
with an undercover FBI employee.
McFerren admitted that he had expressed an interest in having sex with
the 13-year old girl and sent her obscene images of himself. McFerren
acknowledged that his communicating with the person he believed to be a minor
and sending the obscene photos was a violation of the terms of his supervised
release.
McFerren also admitted to conduct from August 2015. McFerren
admitted to using the “Kik” messaging application to communicate with other Kik
users over the Internet. While using the Kik application, McFerren used the
screen name “Emily” and begin communicating with an underage girl in the Eaton
Rapids, Michigan, area. He exchanged obscene images with the girl.
The charges to which McFerren pleaded guilty each carry a
maximum potential penalty of 10 years in prison per count and a fine of
$250,000. McFerren faces up to an additional four years for violating the term
of supervised release from his previous conviction. Sentencing is scheduled for
April 22, 2020.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents and task
force officers of the FBI, Newark Division’s Atlantic City Resident Agency,
Child Exploitation Task Force, which is made up of FBI special agents and
detectives from the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office, Atlantic County
Sheriff’s Office, the New Jersey State Police, and the N.J. Department of Human
Services Police, under the direction of FBI Special Agent in Charge Gregory W.
Ehrie, with the investigation leading to today’s guilty plea. He also thanked
FBI special agents and task force officers in the FBI Buffalo Division and
officers and detective with the Eaton Rapids, Michigan, Police Department for
their work on this investigation.
The government is represented by Senior Trial Counsel Jason
M. Richardson of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Criminal Division in Camden.
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