SACRAMENTO, Calif. — After a six-day trial, Jaquorey Rashawn
Carter, 24, of Sacramento, was found guilty today of sex trafficking of a
child, and sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion, U.S. Attorney McGregor
W. Scott announced.
“The defendant targeted vulnerable young women and underage
girls to work as prostitutes for him on the streets of California cities and
inside seedy motels,” U.S. Attorney Scott stated. “Thanks to the thorough work
of the investigating agencies, the defendant’s years-long pimping operation has
come to an end. For the next several years, he will be in a place where he
cannot harm young females.”
“Traffickers see their victims as mere commodities to be
controlled and sold. This case illustrates the cycle of violence and
exploitation victims often face and traffickers’ brazen disregard for the law,”
said FBI Sacramento Field Office Special Agent in Charge Sean Ragan. “The FBI
works with its local and state partners to ensure criminals face justice for
their actions and victims of trafficking are connected with the support they
need to move forward with their lives.”
“Sex trafficking is a monstrous crime. It has no place in
our society, let alone near our children,” said California Attorney General
Xavier Becerra. “Those who profit from the detestable exploitation of human
beings must pay a high price. We owe many thanks to the multi-jurisdictional
law enforcement team that successfully investigated and prosecuted this case.”
According to evidence presented at trial, between 2013 and
October 2018, Carter targeted vulnerable young women and underage girls to work
as prostitutes for him. Carter used a consistent pattern of behavior in
recruiting and keeping close association to the women and girls who worked for
his financial benefit. As part of Carter’s pimping operation, he put girls and
women in motel rooms and had them engage in prostitution in Sacramento,
Stockton, Oakland, Sunnyvale, and Santa Ana, in order to make money from their
prostitution activity.
Starting in 2013, Carter recruited two 14-year-olds to work
as prostitutes for him in Oakland. Ultimately, the girls were returned home to
Sacramento, but Carter continued to transport, harbor and maintain one of the
underage girls in connection with prostitution activity through 2018.
Evidence presented at trial also showed that Carter has been
arrested or contacted by law enforcement on multiple occasions on the streets
or in high-crime areas while he was transporting his victims to or from his
illegal business opportunities. In September 2018, a federal judge authorized
the wiretap of Carter’s cellphone. Sacramento-based task force agents then
intercepted calls demonstrating that Carter was actively recruiting, harboring,
transporting, and managing several women engaged in prostitution throughout
California. During the calls, Carter discussed his pimping operation and his
involvement in violence, and he threaten to physically beat one of his victims.
Task force agents identified at least five different women
that Carter was either recruiting or actively managing in ongoing prostitution.
On Sept. 19, 2018, law enforcement intervened during an intercepted call when
Carter described his plan to hurt a woman. At the time of the call, Carter was
driving to Oakland with four women in his car. A California Highway Patrol
officer conducted a traffic stop and arrested Carter for falsely impersonating
someone. A short time later, while out on bail, Carter assisted a fellow pimp
who savagely beat a woman inside a car. The victim tried to exit the car, but
Carter stood outside the car and attempted to prevent her from escaping.
This case is the product of an investigation by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the California Department of Justice’s Special
Operations Unit, and the Sacramento Police Department. The California Highway
Patrol, Sacramento Sheriff’s Department, and the Sacramento District Attorney’s
Office assisted in the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brian A. Fogerty
and Jason Hitt are prosecuting the case.
Carter is scheduled to be sentenced on May 4, 2020, by U.S.
District Judge William B. Shubb. Carter faces a mandatory minimum sentence of
10 years in prison and a maximum statutory penalty of life in prison for sex
trafficking of a child. Carter also faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 15
years in prison and a maximum statutory penalty of life in prison for sex
trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion. Both counts of conviction carry a
maximum fine of $250,000. The actual sentence, however, will be determined at
the discretion of the court after consideration of any applicable statutory
factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into account a number
of variables.
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