ReportWire

Tag: Child pornography

  • Police arrest Prince William Co. man, seize evidence in online child exploitation case – WTOP News

    Bryan Barahona-Peraza, 34, of Bristow, Virginia, has been charged with producing child pornography, according to Prince William County Police.

    A Bristow, Virginia, man has been charged with the production of child pornography after police said they found evidence that he was “soliciting underaged minors online for inappropriate acts.”

    Prince William County Police said detectives from the D.C./Northern Virginia Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force searched the home of Bryan Barahona-Peraza, 34, as part of an “ongoing child pornography investigation.”

    When police arrived at his home, Barahona-Peraza was arrested and evidence was seized by police.

    Barahona-Peraza was charged with the production of child pornography, use of a communication system to create child pornography and use of a communication system to solicit sexual acts.

    He is being held without bond. A court date in the case is pending.

    Anyone with information regarding Barahona-Peraza is asked to contact the Prince William County Police tip line at 703-792-7000 or submit a tip at pwcva.gov/policetip.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Valerie Bonk

    Source link

  • Fairfax man, 19, arrested on charges of possessing child sexual abuse materials – WTOP News

    A Northern Virginia student attending George Mason University has been barred from campus after being charged with 29 counts of possessing child sexual abuse materials.

    City of Fairfax, Virginia, police said 19-year-old Rahman Mawardy was arrested last week on 29 counts of possessing child sexual abuse materials.

    He’s also a student at George Mason University — and has now been barred from campus.

    Officers executed a search warrant Nov. 19 at a Fairfax home in the 10300 block of Beaumont Street, where they took Mawardy into custody.

    He was taken to the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center and is being held on a $5,000 bond, according to police.

    A university spokesperson told WTOP that Mawardy is currently registered as a student, but has been prohibited from entering campus “until further notice.” The school made the decision after officials learned of the charges.

    The university said it’s cooperating with authorities and reviewing the case to determine whether additional action is needed.

    Mawardy was awarded a $48,000 scholarship to attend George Mason in June 2024, according to the Academia School in Bangladesh. He was expected to graduate in 2028.

    Mawardy is scheduled to be arraigned in Fairfax County District Court Monday morning.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Will Vitka

    Source link

  • ‘Predator’ sentenced to 40 years for assault of child in Linda Vista home

    Superior Court sign. (File photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego)

    A man who snuck into a Linda Vista home and sexually assaulted a 5-year-old girl was sentenced Wednesday to 40 years and eight months in state prison.

    Alejandro Jose Confesor, 24, had pleaded guilty to charges of lewd acts on a child and possession of child pornography stemming from the April 18, 2024 assault, which took place inside a Wellington Street home.

    Deputy District Attorney Eric Bodnar called the defendant “a predator” and said, “This case truly is a parent’s worst nightmare.”

    Along with prison, Confesor will be required to register as a sex offender.

    According to testimony from a preliminary hearing held last year, he entered the home in the early morning hours and abused the child in her bedroom. He returned to the same home three days later around 3:30 a.m. and took items from the home’s garage.

    Prosecutors say Confesor has no relationship to the home’s residents.

    He was arrested the night of April 21 on Linda Vista Road, less than two miles from the home on Wellington.

    During Confesor’s sentencing hearing, the girl’s mother said her daughter has suffered from nightmares and cannot sleep alone anymore.

    For a time, she slept with shoes on to allow herself a better chance to kick intruders, her mother said.

    The family home has since been outfitted with new locks, alarms and cameras. The girl’s mother said she has gone as far as setting up cans and bottles near doorways to trip up a potential trespasser and alert her to the danger.


    Source link

  • Florida lawmaker moves to replace ‘child pornography’ mentions in state statute



    Rep. Jessica Baker wants to replace every mention of “child pornography” in statute with “child sexual abuse material.” Credit: Florida House of Representatives

    Because viewing images of children being sexually abused is illegal, Florida shouldn’t refer to the felony by the lawful term of “pornography,” a Florida Republican argues in a bill filled Wednesday.

    Instead, Rep. Jessica Baker wants to replace every mention of “child pornography” in statute with “child sexual abuse material,” because she believes it’s wrong to apply “pornography” to pictures and videos of raped or sexually battered children.

    “While adult pornography is legal, there is no legitimate category known as ‘child pornography,’” Baker, a Jacksonville Republican, said in a statement to the Phoenix. “The term itself is misleading, as it implies a lawful form of pornography when, in fact, any sexualized depiction or exploitation of minors is a crime. Such material is not pornography — it is Child Sexual Abuse Material.

    “We must call it what it truly is: the documentation of the sexual abuse of children,” she added.

    HB 245 is a 56-page measure that crosses out every reference to “child pornography” in Florida law and replaces it with “child sexual abuse material,” amending 19 state statutes.

    If passed, Baker’s bill would align Florida with Pennsylvania and Louisiana, which have already adopted similar language. Delaware and Texas will take up these measures during their 2026 legislative sessions, while Alaska’s measure failed in the Senate.

    These small changes to legal terminology come amid a broad, national push to ensure precise language is used when it comes to victims of sensitive, heinous crimes like child sexual abuse, human trafficking, and sexual exploitation. The Department of Justice in 2023 published a memo noting that although the term “child pornography” still appears in federal law, officials prefer to use “child sexual abuse material” because it’s a better reflection of the crime.

    The memo points out that in 2016 an international group working to combat child exploitation formally recognized “child sexual abuse material” as the preferred term.

    This isn’t Florida’ first foray into passing legislation dealing with child sexual abuse — albeit in generally more extreme terms. In 2023, the Florida Legislature became the first in decades to pass a law expanding the death penalty to child rapists. In 2024, it defined and created punishments for “grooming,” which involves enticing children into sex. During the 2025 session, it added human trafficking of a minor as another crime eligible for execution.

    The 2026 session begins Jan. 13.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


    The judge issued a stay of the lawsuit until after the Supreme Court decides whether a law prohibiting drug users having guns violates the Second Amendment.

    Nearly 3 million Floridians are at risk of going hungry if government shutdown stretches into November

    Nearly a dozen doctors called on lawmakers to reject any proposed legislation that would remove vaccine mandates from Florida schools





    Livia Caputo, Florida Phoenix
    Source link
  • Judge dismisses Indigenous Amazon tribe’s lawsuit against The New York Times and TMZ

    LOS ANGELES — A California judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by an Indigenous tribe in the Brazilian Amazon against The New York Times and TMZ that claimed the newspaper’s reporting on the tribe’s first exposure to the internet led to its members being widely portrayed as technology-addled and addicted to pornography.

    The suit was filed in May by the Marubo Tribe of the Javari Valley, a sovereign community of about 2,000 people in the Amazon rainforest.

    Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Tiana J. Murillo on Tuesday sided with the Times, whose lawyers argued in a hearing Monday that its coverage last year was fair and protected by free speech.

    TMZ argued that its coverage, which followed the Times’ initial reporting, addressed ongoing public controversies and matters of public interest.

    The suit claimed stories by TMZ and Yahoo amplified and sensationalized the Times’ reporting and smeared the tribe in the process. Yahoo was dismissed as a defendant earlier this month.

    Murillo wrote in her ruling that though some may “reasonably perceive” the Times’ and TMZ’s reporting as “insensitive, disparaging or reflecting a lack of respect, the Court need not, and does not, determine which of these characterizations is most apt.”

    The judge added that “regardless of tone, TMZ’s segment contributed to existing debate over the effects of internet connectivity on remote Indigenous communities.”

    “We are pleased by the comprehensive and careful analysis undertaken by the court in dismissing this frivolous lawsuit,” Danielle Rhoades Ha, a spokesperson for the Times, said in a statement Wednesday to The Associated Press. “Our reporter traveled to the Amazon and provided a nuanced account of tension that arose when modern technology came to an isolated community.”

    Attorneys for TMZ did not immediately respond to an email request for comment Wednesday.

    Plaintiffs in the lawsuit included the tribe, community leader Enoque Marubo and Brazilian journalist and sociologist Flora Dutra, who were both mentioned in the June 2024 story. Both were instrumental in bringing the tribe the internet connection, which they said has had many positive effects including facilitating emergency medicine and the education of children.

    N. Micheli Quadros, the attorney who represents the tribe, Marubo and Dutra, wrote to the AP Wednesday that the judge’s decision “highlights the imbalance of our legal system,” which “often shields powerful institutions while leaving vulnerable individuals, such as Indigenous communities without meaningful recourse.”

    Quadros said the plaintiffs will decide their next steps in the coming days, whether that is through courts in California or international human rights bodies.

    “This case is bigger than one courtroom or one ruling,” Quadros wrote. “It is about accountability, fairness, and the urgent need to protect communities that have historically been silenced or marginalized.”

    The lawsuit sought at least $180 million, including both general and punitive damages, from each of the defendants.

    The suit argued that the Times’ story by reporter Jack Nicas on how the group was handling the introduction of internet service via Starlink satellites operated by Elon Musk’s SpaceX “portrayed the Marubo people as a community unable to handle basic exposure to the internet, highlighting allegations that their youth had become consumed by pornography.”

    The court disagreed with the tribe’s claims that the Times article falsely implied its youth were “addicted to pornography,” noting that the coverage only mentioned unidentified young men had access to porn and did not state that the tribe as a whole was addicted to pornography.

    Nicas reported that in less than a year of Starlink access, the tribe was dealing with the same struggles the rest of the world has dealt with for years due to the pervasive effects of the internet. The challenges ranged from “teenagers glued to phones; group chats full of gossip; addictive social networks; online strangers; violent video games; scams; misinformation; and minors watching pornography,” Nicas wrote.

    He also wrote that a tribal leader said young men were sharing explicit videos in group chats. The piece doesn’t mention porn elsewhere, but other outlets amplified that aspect of the story. TMZ posted a story with the headline, “Elon Musk’s Starlink Hookup Leaves A Remote Tribe Addicted To Porn.”

    The Times published a follow-up story in response to misperceptions brought on by other outlets in which Nicas wrote: “The Marubo people are not addicted to pornography. There was no hint of this in the forest, and there was no suggestion of it in The New York Times’s article.”

    Nicas wrote that he spent a week with the Marubo tribe. The lawsuit claimed that while he was invited for a week, he spent less than 48 hours in the village, “barely enough time to observe, understand, or respectfully engage with the community.”

    Source link

  • Silver Spring man arrested for sending child pornography to undercover agent – WTOP News

    Silver Spring man arrested for sending child pornography to undercover agent – WTOP News

    The FBI-MPD Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force arrested a Silver Spring, Maryland, man in D.C. on Friday who’s accused of sharing child pornography on social media.

    The FBI-MPD Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force arrested a Silver Spring, Maryland, man in D.C. on Friday who’s accused of sharing child pornography on social media.

    In an indictment, unsealed Friday, Joseph Ruben Baer, 20, was charged with one count of distribution of child pornography.

    The task force says they were monitoring a social media app because they believed pedophiles were using it.

    According to the Department of Justice, an undercover agent monitoring the app began messaging with Baer on April 18. Baer “expressed an interest in the sexual exploitation of prepubescent boys” and later sent the agent two video files on the app that showed him “masturbating while watching child pornography on a laptop computer.”

    Days later, on April 25, a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Baer.

    The task force executed a search warrant on Friday at two residences connected to Baer in Silver Spring, but he was picked up in the District.

    Baer first appeared in court later that day. He is being held without bond.

    The case remains under investigation. It’s being pursued under Project Safe Childhood, launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Project Safe Childhood is a national strategy to combat child sexual exploitation.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Christopher Thomas

    Source link

  • Arlington Public Schools’ Extended Day employee accused of showing porn to children – WTOP News

    Arlington Public Schools’ Extended Day employee accused of showing porn to children – WTOP News

    An 18-year-old employee of Arlington County Public Schools’ Extended Day program has been arrested and charged with two counts of possession of child pornography, as well as assault and battery.

    An 18-year-old employee of Arlington County Public Schools’ Extended Day program has been arrested and charged with two counts of possession of child pornography, as well as assault and battery, according to the county police department’s special victims unit.

    A criminal investigation was initiated on April 19 for Matthew Pineda, of Fairfax County, Virginia, who was assigned to Abingdon Elementary School, after police received information he had shown pornography to three juveniles.

    Pineda is being held without bond in the Arlington County Detention Facility, and the police department’s SVU said it is seeking possible additional victims.

    Anyone with information related to this investigation or past inappropriate encounters with Pineda is asked to contact Detective R. Munizza at rmunizza@arlingtonva.us or 703-228-4171, or provide information anonymously through the Arlington County Crime Solvers hotline at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477).

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Dana Sukontarak

    Source link

  • Kansas moves to join Texas and other states in requiring porn sites to verify people’s ages

    Kansas moves to join Texas and other states in requiring porn sites to verify people’s ages

    TOPEKA, Kan. — Kansas is poised to require pornography websites to verify visitors are adults, a move that would follow Texas and a handful of other states despite concerns about privacy and how broadly the law could be applied.

    The Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature passed the proposal Tuesday, sending it to Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly. The House voted for it 92-31 and the Senate approved it unanimously last month. Kelly hasn’t announced her plans, but she typically signs bills with bipartisan backing, and supporters have enough votes to override a veto anyway.

    At least eight states have enacted age-verification laws since 2022 — Texas, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Utah and Virginia, and lawmakers have introduced proposals in more than 20 other states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures and an analysis from The Associated Press of data from the Plural bill-tracking service.

    Weeks ago, a federal appeals court upheld the Texas age-verification requirement as constitutional and a the Oklahoma House sent a similar measure to the state Senate.

    Supporters argue that they’re protecting children from widespread pornography online. Oklahoma Rep. Toni Hasenbeck, a sponsor of the legislation, said pornography is dramatically more available now than when “there might be a sixth-grade boy who would find a Playboy magazine in a ditch somewhere.”

    “What is commonplace in our society is for a child to be alone with their digital device in their bedroom,” said Hasenbeck, a Republican representing a rural southwest Oklahoma district.

    In Kansas, some critics questioned whether the measure would violate free speech and press rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment. Last year, that issue was raised in a federal lawsuit over the Texas law from the Free Speech Coalition, a trade association for the adult entertainment industry.

    A three-judge panel of the conservative, New Orleans-based Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that Texas’ age-verification requirement did not violate the First Amendment. The judges concluded that such a law can stand as long as a state has a rational basis for it and states have a legitimate interest in blocking minors’ access to pornography.

    The Kansas bill would make it a violation of state consumer protection laws for a website to fail to verify that a Kansas visitor is 18 if the website has material “harmful to minors.” The attorney general then could go to court seeking a fine of up to $10,000 for each violation. Parents also could sue for damages of at least $50,000.

    Under an existing Kansas criminal law, material is harmful to minors if it involves “nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement or sadomasochistic abuse.”

    But critics of the bill, mostly Democrats, argued that the law could be interpreted broadly enough that LGBTQ+ teenagers could not access information about sexual orientation or gender identity because the legal definition of sexual conduct includes acts of “homosexuality.” That means “being who we are” is defined as harmful to minors, said Rep. Brandon Woodard, who is gay and a Kansas City-area Democrat.

    Woodard also said opponents don’t understand “how technology works.” He said people could bypass an age-verification requirement by accessing pornography through the dark web or unregulated social media sites.

    Other lawmakers questioned whether the state could prevent websites based outside Kansas from retaining people’s personal information.

    “The information used to verify a person’s age could fall into the hands of entities who could use it for fraudulent purposes,” said southeastern Kansas Rep. Ken Collins, one of two Republicans to vote against the bill.

    Yet even critics acknowledged parents and other constituents have a strong interest in keeping minors from seeing pornography. Another southeastern Kansas Republican, Rep. Chuck Smith, chided the House because it didn’t approve the bill unanimously, as the Senate did.

    “Kids need to be protected,” he said. “Everybody in here knows what pornography is — everybody.”

    ___

    Murphy reported from Oklahoma City.

    Source link

  • Why did a serial child molester only get 35 years? His lawyer was a creep

    Why did a serial child molester only get 35 years? His lawyer was a creep

    Carl Nathaniel Fredricksen faced a possible prison sentence of 342 years for child molestation and photographing more than 14 children, including his two sons, engaging in sex acts with him and each other.

    Instead, Fredricksen, 37, a private tutor in the Valley, could see the light of day as a free man if he survives prison.

    As a result of a plea deal, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Joseph Kiefer on Jan. 26 dismissed all but five of the 41 counts stacked against Fredricksen for child molestation, sexual exploitation of a minor and furnishing obscene material to minors, among other charges.

    Waiving trial, Fredricksen pleaded guilty to five counts: two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, one count of attempted child molestation, one count of attempted sexual conduct with a minor under 15 and one count of attempted exploitation of a minor.

    Kiefer sentenced him to 35 years in prison.

    When Peoria police arrested Fredricksen in July 2020, they reportedly found thousands of hours of video recordings of child pornography, featuring Fredricksen and the minors, stored on his computer.

    The abuse spanned more than three years and involved boys and girls between the ages of 11 and 17, according to court records. Some of the minors were friends of Fredricksen’s sons or children placed in Fredricksen’s care by their parents.

    Court records also include a letter from Fredricksen to a female friend in which he admitted to being a “bisexual pedophile”  who was “attracted to pubescent children of either gender.” Fredricksen rationalized his crimes in the letter, denying he was a rapist and insisting that “nothing I’ve done has harmed anyone.”

    Given the enormity of his crimes, why did the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office cut a deal with Fredricksen instead of trying him on all 41 counts and seeking the maximum punishment?

    The answer may lie in Fredricksen’s attorney.

    Fredricksen represented himself. The court assigned him an advisory counsel, but Fredricksen wrote his legal briefs and insisted on his right to personally cross-examine his adolescent victims.

    In June, Jamie Balson, an attorney for 10 of Fredricksen’s victims, moved for the court to prohibit Fredricksen from cross-examining the children.

    Balson cited an Arizona law, passed in 2021, which allowed a judge to bar direct questioning by a defendant representing themselves if the court found that the cross-examination “would prevent the minor victim from being able to reasonably communicate.”

    In his response to the motion, Fredricksen stood firm, referring to state and federal court precedents upholding a defendant’s right under the U.S. Constitution’s Sixth Amendment to represent themselves and confront their accusers.

    In another court filing, Fredricksen claimed that he did not want to “revictimize anyone by viewing the evidence with the fine-tooth comb necessary to properly defend myself.” But, he added, if the case was not resolved before trial, he would have no choice.

    In that same pleading, Fredricksen asked for a deal sentence of 20 years. But the county attorney’s office stuck to an offer of 35 years, which Fredricksen accepted.

    As a result, Kiefer never had to rule on the thorny issue of Fredricksen cross-examining his child victims.

    click to enlarge

    Chris Simcox also represented himself against child molestation allegations and sought to interrogate his child victims during his 2016 trial in Phoenix.

    Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office

    Chris Simcox wanted to question his child victims, too

    During a Feb. 7 press conference, County Attorney Rachel Mitchell briefly mentioned Fredricksen’s five guilty pleas and 35-year sentence. She didn’t mention the plea deal, nor was she asked about the 36 dismissed counts.

    A spokesperson for Mitchell’s office, Karla Navarette, later told Phoenix New Times that one factor in the county attorney’s decision to offer a plea deal was the prospect of Fredricksen cross-examining his victims.

    Interestingly, both Fredricksen’s and Balson’s court filings mentioned the 2016 Phoenix trial of ex-Minuteman leader Chris Simcox for child molestation. Like Fredricksen, Simcox represented himself and sought to personally interrogate his child victims, including one of his daughters.

    Prosecutors objected. Ultimately, Simcox dropped his bid to question his minor victims, allowing his court-appointed advisory counsel to question them on his behalf.

    Simcox was, however, able to interrogate a minor daughter whom he did not molest and a grown daughter whom he allegedly molested in her youth. The jury convicted Simcox on two counts of child molestation and one count of furnishing porn to a minor. He was sentenced to 19.5 years in prison.

    click to enlarge Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell

    A factor in Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell agreeing to a plea deal with Carl Nathaniel Fredricksen in January was to keep him from cross-examining his victims, a spokesperson said.

    Katya Schwenk

    Inside the mind of a predator

    Katherine Manning, a former senior attorney advisor with the U.S. Department of Justice, studied the issue of child predators who represent themselves and attempt to question their victims in court. She wrote about the phenomenon in 2022 for the Brooklyn Law Review, “Protecting the Constitution while Protecting Victims: Challenges to Pro Se Cross Examination.”

    “It’s really hard to get a sense of how common it is,” Manning told New Times. “But I spoke to a couple of the larger prosecutors’ offices in the country, and everyone had examples of it.”

    Manning, who is based in Washington, D.C., said she wrote the paper because she found that many prosecutors believed that the Sixth Amendment’s confrontation clause was absolute. She wanted to demonstrate that the right of defendants representing themselves to interrogate their victims could be challenged.

    She said the right of defendants to confront their accusers can be restricted if the court makes a “particularized finding” that cross-examination by the defendant will cause further trauma to the victim.

    Doesn’t this offer a playbook of sorts for the pedophile who gets caught? Represent yourself, demand to cross-examine the victims and you might score a better plea deal?

    Manning said it was “one of those strange areas where it is neither in the victim’s interest nor the defendant’s” for the defendant to represent themself. The defendant would be better off having a lawyer represent them, and the victim is subject to being re-victimized.

    She added that defendants want to “keep the victims from testifying at all” or “they want one more chance to harass and control.”

    And it’s not just child molesters. “It’s domestic violence abusers, it’s stalkers, it’s rapists,” she added.

    Manning said these predators often operate under the delusion that if they can question their victims directly, it would help their victims “understand that this really was about love or whatever.”

    In one pleading, Fredricksen wrote that he intended to present at an evidentiary hearing “picture and video evidence of interactions” between himself and his victims at an evidentiary hearing. He was confident that the court would agree that the photos and video “will demonstrate a complete lack of fear or discomfort” on the part of the victims.

    And in a letter to a friend, Fredricksen revealed more about his twisted thinking. “Not only do I have a porn collection that’s holy-fucking-illegal (sic), I’ve done things with kids before that NEVER hurt a soul but are far from socially acceptable,” he wrote.

    Balson declined to comment on the case.

    A presentence report by Maricopa County Adult Probation Department noted the comments of some parents of the victims.

    One father said he would leave sentencing to the court’s discretion.

    The mother of another minor victim told the department that the plea agreement appeared lenient.

    “But if it prevents the trauma of a trial, then she can accept it,” the report said.

    Stephen Lemons

    Source link

  • Mansfield man used Snapchat to send graphic messages to 14-year-old, gets 17 years in prison

    Mansfield man used Snapchat to send graphic messages to 14-year-old, gets 17 years in prison


    Juan Aguilera Duran, of Mansfield, Texas, was sentenced to 17 years in prison Friday, three months after pleading to a child pornography charge, the U.S. Attorney's Office Northern District of Texas announced Tuesday.

    Juan Aguilera Duran, of Mansfield, Texas, was sentenced to 17 years in prison Friday, three months after pleading to a child pornography charge, the U.S. Attorney’s Office Northern District of Texas announced Tuesday.

    File photo

    A 33-year-old Mansfield man accused of using Snapchat to send sexually graphic messages and videos to a 14-year-old boy has been sentenced to more than 17 years in prison federal prosecutors said.

    Juan Aguilera Duran was charged via criminal complaint in May 2023 and was indicted in August 2023. He pleaded guilty to receipt of child pornography in October 2023, according to a news release from Leigha Simonton, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas.

    He was sentenced on Jan. 26 by U.S. District Judge Reed C. O’ Connor, who also ordered Duran to a lifetime of supervised release.

    “The Secret Service is committed to using our forensic and investigative capabilities to help catch criminals who prey on the most vulnerable among us,” said Christina Foley, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Secret Service’s Dallas Field Office, in the release.

    According to court documents, Mansfield police were dispatched on Aug. 13, 2022 to a residence in Mansfield to meet with the 14-year-old who had received sexually explicit messages, images, and videos via Snapchat from Duran.

    Search and arrest warrants resulted in Duran pleading guilty to receiving child pornography. He later pleaded guilty to receiving images of child pornography on his computer, according to the release.

    “This case is a testament to the great work that occurs when agencies collaborate and work together for the common good to fight evil in our community. This particular unit is established to protect our most valuable and vulnerable, our kids,” Mansfield police Chief Tracy Aaron said in the release.

    The Mansfield Police Department, Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office Digital Forensics and Technical Services, and the Secret Service conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Brandie Wade prosecuted the case.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nicole Lopez is a breaking news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso, where she studied multimedia journalism. She also does freelance writing.



    Nicole Lopez

    Source link

  • Mass. marijuana shops pay towns hefty fees. Why that might change. – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Mass. marijuana shops pay towns hefty fees. Why that might change. – Medical Marijuana Program Connection


    … Monday. 
    Under current state law, marijuana establishments must pay a community … the costs imposed by the marijuana establishment.  
    “Reasonably related” means there … offset the operation of a marijuana establishment. Those costs could include …

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..



    MMP News Author

    Source link

  • Three of the biggest porn sites must verify ages to protect kids under Europe's new digital law

    Three of the biggest porn sites must verify ages to protect kids under Europe's new digital law

    LONDON — Three of the world’s biggest porn websites face new requirements in the European Union that include verifying the ages of users, the 27-nation bloc said Wednesday, expanding the reach of its digital law designed to keep people safe on the internet.

    Pornhub, XVideos and Stripchat have now been classed as “very large online platforms” subject to more stringent controls under the Digital Services Act because they each have 45 million average monthly users, according to the European Commission, the EU’s executive branch.

    They are the first porn sites to be targeted by the sweeping Digital Services Act, which imposes tough obligations to keep users safe from illegal content and dodgy products.

    Violations are punishable by fines of up to 6% of global revenue or even a ban on operating in the EU. Some 19 online platforms and search engines have already been identified for stricter scrutiny under the DSA, including TikTok, Amazon, Facebook, Instagram, Google and more.

    Pornhub disputed its status as a very large online platform under the DSA, referring to a statement on its website saying it has 33 million average monthly users.

    XVideos and Stripchat did not respond to requests for comment.

    The law includes provisions to protect children by preventing them “from accessing pornographic content online, including with age verification tools,” the commission said in a press release.

    France, Germany and Britain and U.S. states including Utah and Texas have drafted laws requiring porn sites to verify a user is 18 or older. Methods could include checking credit cards or government-issued ID or scanning faces to estimate ages, but all those systems have raised concerns about privacy and discrimination.

    Europe’s digital law also calls for measures to curb the risk of spreading illegal content online, such as child sexual abuse material, or content that breaches “fundamental rights” like privacy, such as “non-consensual” images or deepfake porn.

    “These measures can include adapting their terms and conditions, interfaces, moderation processes or algorithms, among others,” the commission said.

    The DSA kicked in for the biggest online platforms in August. The requirements also include carrying out risk assessments, giving researchers access to publicly available data and filing regular transparency reports.

    The EU has used the law to crack down on Elon Musk’s social media platform X, previously known as Twitter, by opening an investigation on Monday into whether it failed to do enough to stop the spread of illegal content such as hate speech or incitement of terrorism.

    Source link

  • Facebook parent sued by New Mexico alleging it has failed to shield children from predators

    Facebook parent sued by New Mexico alleging it has failed to shield children from predators

    SANTA FE, N.M. — Facebook and Instagram fail to protect underage users from exposure to child sexual abuse material and let adults solicit pornographic imagery from them, New Mexico’s attorney general alleges in a lawsuit that follows an undercover online investigation.

    “Our investigation into Meta’s social media platforms demonstrates that they are not safe spaces for children but rather prime locations for predators to trade child pornography and solicit minors for sex,” Attorney General Raul Torrez said in a statement Wednesday.

    The civil lawsuit filed late Tuesday against Meta Platforms Inc. in state court also names its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, as a defendant.

    In addition, the suit claims Meta “harms children and teenagers through the addictive design of its platform, degrading users’ mental health, their sense of self-worth, and their physical safety,” Torrez’s office said in a statement.

    Those claims echo a lawsuit filed in late October by the attorneys general of 33 states, including California and New York, against Meta that alleges Instagram and Facebook include features deliberately designed to hook children, contributing to the youth mental health crisis and leading to depression, anxiety and eating disorders. New Mexico was not a party to that lawsuit.

    Investigators in New Mexico created decoy accounts of children 14 years and younger that Torrez’s office said were served sexually explicit images even when the child expressed no interest in them. State prosecutors claim that Meta let dozens of adults find, contact and encourage children to provide sexually explicit and pornographic images.

    The accounts also received recommendations to join unmoderated Facebook groups devoted to facilitating commercial sex, investigators said, adding that Meta also let its users find, share, and sell “an enormous volume of child pornography.”

    “Mr. Zuckerberg and other Meta executives are aware of the serious harm their products can pose to young users, and yet they have failed to make sufficient changes to their platforms that would prevent the sexual exploitation of children,” Torrez said, accusing Meta’s executives of prioritizing “engagement and ad revenue over the safety of the most vulnerable members of our society.”

    Meta, which is based in Menlo Park, California, did not directly respond to the New Mexico lawsuit’s allegations, but said that it works hard to protect young users with a serious commitment of resources.

    “We use sophisticated technology, hire child safety experts, report content to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and share information and tools with other companies and law enforcement, including state attorneys general, to help root out predators,” the company said. “In one month alone, we disabled more than half a million accounts for violating our child safety policies.”

    Company spokesman Andy Stone pointed to a company report detailing the millions of tips Facebook and Instagram sent to the National Center in the third quarter of 2023 — including 48,000 involving inappropriate interactions that could include an adult soliciting child sexual abuse material directly from a minor or attempting to meet with one in person.

    Critics including former employees have long complained that Meta’s largely automated content moderation systems are ill-equipped to identify and adequately eliminate abusive behavior on its platforms.

    Source link

  • Video chat service Omegle shuts down following years of user abuse claims

    Video chat service Omegle shuts down following years of user abuse claims

    Omegle, a video chat service that connects users with strangers at random, is shutting down after 14 years following ample misuse of the platform — particularly the sexual abuse of minors

    ByThe Associated Press

    November 9, 2023, 10:54 AM

    This photo, in New York, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023, shows the Omegle logo, and their website posting on a mobile phone. Omegle, a video chat service that connects users with strangers at random, is shutting down after 14 years following ample misuse of the platform — particularly the sexual abuse of minors. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

    The Associated Press

    NEW YORK — Omegle, a video chat service that connects users with strangers at random, is shutting down after 14 years following ample misuse of the platform — particularly the sexual abuse of minors.

    In a lengthy statement announcing the site’s closure, founder Leif K-Brooks reflected on how Omegle was meant to connect people worldwide and “build on the things I loved about the Internet.” But, he added that a dark side of the platform emerged.

    “Virtually every tool can be used for good or for evil,” Brooks wrote. “There can be no honest accounting of Omegle without acknowledging that some people misused it, including to commit unspeakably heinous crimes.”

    Over the years, Omegle has faced significant scrutiny for becoming what some say is a breeding ground for child pornography and other abuse. The site’s closure arrives about a week after Omegle settled a lawsuit that accused the platform of pairing a then 11-year-old user with a sexual predator, according to court records.

    The suit, which was filed in an Oregon court in 2021, is a piece of a long chain of similar litigation that Omegle has faced. According to the BBC, the platform has been mentioned in more than 50 cases against pedophiles in the last two years.

    “Operating Omegle is no longer sustainable, financially nor psychologically,” Brooks wrote. “From the bottom of my heart, thank you to everyone who used Omegle for positive purposes, and to everyone who contributed to the site’s success in any way. I’m so sorry I couldn’t keep fighting for you.”

    Brooks founded Omegle in 2009 at the age of 18. In addition to claiming millions of daily users over the years, recordings of Omegle videos are shared widely on YouTube and social media platforms like TikTok.

    As of Thursday morning, the Omegle website remained live with Brooks’ statement, but its online video chat function was no longer visible.

    Source link

  • LAUSD teacher arrested on suspicion of sharing child pornography

    LAUSD teacher arrested on suspicion of sharing child pornography

    A Los Angeles Unified School teacher was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of sharing child pornography with a county government worker, authorities said.

    Detectives with the San Bernardino Police Department arrested Rene Gregorio Estrella on the 210 Freeway around 6:30 a.m. on suspicion of distributing and receiving child pornography. Estrella, 60, is a teacher at the School of Business and Tourism at the Miguel Contreras Learning Complex, according to the school’s website.

    Investigators said Estrella exchanged multiple images of child pornography with 62-year-old Steven Frasher, who worked as a public information officer with the Los Angeles County Public Works Department.

    Investigators with the San Bernardino Police Department’s Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and Specialized Crimes Unit served search and arrest warrants on Estrella at a residence in Claremont and a second location in the city of Los Angeles. Police found several electronic devices that were taken as part of their investigation, according a news release from the police department.

    In a statement, the Los Angeles Unified School District said it was notified about an employee’s arrest by San Bernardino police, but it did not name Estrella. Officials said the employee will be blocked from entering any LAUSD sites.

    “All District protocols are being followed, and we remain in cooperation with local authorities,” the statement said. “Due to the ongoing investigation by law enforcement, we are unable to disclose additional details about this matter. Please be assured that the safety of our students continues to be our utmost priority. Students and the greater school community are always encouraged to share any and all concerns with their school or with local authorities.”

    Jail records show that Estrella was booked into custody on Wednesday but released later that day.

    Frasher, a resident of Redlands, was arrested Oct. 3 after investigators received a tip indicating that he was downloading illicit child porn on the internet and saving it in an internet storage account, police said.

    Frasher, a candidate for the Redlands City Council in 2020, worked for the Riverside Police Department as a public information officer and also served as a public information officer for the Glendale Unified School District.

    The San Bernardino Police Department posted a video on its Instagram account of Frasher’s arrest, showing officers entering and searching his home. The video also shows Frasher being led away in handcuffs.

    Times staff writer Summer Lin contributed to this story.

    Nathan Solis

    Source link

  • Male nanny convicted in California of sexually assaulting 16 young boys in his care

    Male nanny convicted in California of sexually assaulting 16 young boys in his care

    A male nanny who worked for families across Southern California was convicted of sexually assaulting 16 young boys in his care and showing another boy child pornography

    ByThe Associated Press

    October 3, 2023, 10:47 PM

    SANTA ANA, Calif. — A male nanny who worked for families across Southern California was convicted Tuesday of sexually assaulting 16 young boys in his care and showing another boy child pornography, prosecutors said.

    Matthew Antonio Zakrzewski was arrested in May 2019 after a couple told Laguna Beach police he touched their son inappropriately. More alleged victims were identified, and Zakrzewski was ultimately charged with 34 felonies, including lewd and lascivious acts with a minor.

    Zakrzewski’s victims ranged from 2 to 12 years old, investigators said. A jury convicted the 34-year-old on all counts, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

    “These young boys were forced to endure unimaginable terror as a result of the ultimate betrayal by a babysitter,” said District Attorney Todd Spitzer said in a statement.

    Zakrzewski, of Costa Mesa, had billed himself on his website as a “manny,” who not only watched over children but provided a fun “buddy” experience.

    Sentencing was scheduled for Nov. 17.

    Source link

  • Police probe report of dad being told 11-year-old girl could face charges in images sent to man

    Police probe report of dad being told 11-year-old girl could face charges in images sent to man

    Columbus police say they are investigating a report that a father was told by officers that his 11-year-old daughter could face charges after he called to report that she had been the victim of an “online predator.”

    ByThe Associated Press

    September 18, 2023, 7:00 PM

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Columbus police say they are investigating a report that a father was told by officers that his 11-year-old daughter could face charges after he called to report that she had been the victim of an “online predator.”

    A video posted on social media shows the unidentified man talking to officers who came to his door in answer to his complaint of a man having manipulated his daughter into sending images. The man says he wanted someone to talk to her to get her “to realize what this was” and then suggests “reality is” there isn’t much he can do.

    One officer is heard in the video saying his daughter “could probably get charged with child porn” if she produced the images. Told the girl is only 11, the officer replies “Doesn’t matter. She’s still making porn.” After the man says she is being manipulated by an adult on the internet, the same officer asks whether the girl is taking pictures, and the man then breaks off the conversation and the officers depart, according to the video.

    It’s unclear when the interaction took place, but the social media poster said the police response occurred six hours after the man’s call to police.

    Columbus police said Monday that the city’s Department of the Inspector General, “which investigates complaints of misconduct and/or excessive use of force by sworn personnel, has opened an inquiry into this incident.” The department said it is investigating the video posted on social media “involving two officers responding to a call for service.”

    Police said they regard all sexual misconduct allegations” with the utmost seriousness” and “incidents involving minors are handled with the highest degree of concern.” Detectives with the sexual assault unit were immediately notified and have since initiated an investigation.

    Source link

  • Utah Republicans defend book removal law while protesting district that banned Bible

    Utah Republicans defend book removal law while protesting district that banned Bible

    SALT LAKE CITY — Republican lawmakers rallied with more than one hundred Bible-toting parents and children at Utah’s Capitol on Wednesday to protest a suburban school district’s decision to remove the Bible from middle and elementary school libraries in the wake of a GOP-backed “sensitive materials” law passed two years ago.

    Concerned parents and children holding signs that read “The Bible is the original textbook” and “Remove porn, not the Bible,” said they were outraged after northern Utah’s Davis School District announced that a review committee concluded the Bible was too “violent or vulgar” for young children. The committee ruled that it did not qualify as obscene or pornographic under the sensitive materials law, but used its own discretion to remove it from libraries below the high school level.

    Karlee Vincent, a Davis County mother of three kids carrying children’s Bibles to the demonstration, said districts could weigh banning certain titles with controversial material, but not religious texts like the Bible.

    “We love the Bible. We love God. And we need God in our nation,” she said.

    The anonymously made challenge to the Bible appears to have been submitted as a statement to undermine the two-year-old law, noting the sacred text contains instances of incest, prostitution and rape. It derided the review procedures as a “bad faith process” and attacked groups that have pushed to remove certain titles from schools, including Parents United and its Utah-based affiliate.

    The Bible removal is the highest-profile effort to remove a book from a school in Utah since the Legislature passed a law requiring school districts to create new pathways for residents to challenge “sensitive materials” and used a statute-based definition on pornography to define them. It has presented challenges for proponents of scrutinizing materials available in school. The pushback has emboldened book-banning critics, who argue anger at banning the Bible illustrates arbitrary and political double standards and the issues inherent to removing books that have certain content.

    “If folks are outraged about the Bible being banned, they should be outraged about all the books that are being censored in our public schools,” Kasey Meehan, who directs the Freedom to Read program at the writers’ organization PEN America, said last week.

    Utah Parents United President Nichole Mason said she worried the spotlight the Bible ban turned on Utah distracted from conversations about obscene materials that remain in school libraries. Defending Utah’s sensitive materials law, Mason noted that the committee determined the Bible didn’t qualify as pornographic under state statute. She doubled down on her stance that Utah should give parents more say in what’s in their kids’ schools.

    “God Bless America that we can challenge any book out there!” Mason said.

    State Rep. Ken Ivory, the sensitive materials law’s Republican sponsor, rebuffed the idea that his law paved the way for the Bible to be banned. Though he defended the review process after the sacred text’s removal, he said on Wednesday that the Davis School District had overstepped its role by removing the Bible from middle and elementary schools because of criteria not in state law.

    He said criticism of the review process that led to the banning of the Bible didn’t relinquish the need for oversight from parents and administrators about materials in schools.

    “Should we have age appropriate limits for children in school? Almost universally anyone of good faith says ‘Yes.’ The question is then: What should those limits be?” he said.

    Ivory urged the Legislature to change the law so book removal decisions have to be overseen by elected officials at open public meetings, not the kind of committee that decided to remove the Bible from middle and elementary schools in the Davis School District.

    Utah is among a longer list of Republican-led states that have in recent years expanded residents’ ability to challenge books and curriculum in schools and libraries. Lobbied by an ascendant parents’ rights movement, lawmakers from Florida to Wyoming have increasingly scrutinized what books are available, touching off outrage about content related to race, sex and gender in particular. New state laws have given parents additional power to challenge books and opened librarians up to potential criminal charges if they provide minors content deemed “harmful.”

    Neither Ivory nor parents took issue with efforts to remove other books, including the race- and LGBTQ-related titles that account for the majority of book challenges.

    Many parents and people of faith at Utah’s Capitol on Wednesday said they had heard little of book banning efforts until news about the Bible’s removal broke last week. They defended the Bible’s role as a foundational text, saying it shouldn’t be compared to other books that parents have challenged. They said the committee’s decision affirmed long-simmering distrust against public schools and those who make decisions governing them.

    “I hope it will be part of our schools, not only to give information to our minds but character to our hearts — and the greatest character of all is Jesus Christ,” Tad Callister, the former Sunday School General President for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said of the Bible and Book of Mormon as an audience applauded.

    Source link

  • ‘Romeo & Juliet’ stars’ lawsuit over 1968 film’s teen nude scene tossed

    ‘Romeo & Juliet’ stars’ lawsuit over 1968 film’s teen nude scene tossed

    A Los Angeles County judge on Thursday said she will dismiss a lawsuit that the stars of 1968’s “Romeo and Juliet” filed over the film’s nude scene, finding that their depiction could not be considered child pornography and they filed their claim too late.

    Superior Court Judge Alison Mackenzie ruled in favor of a motion from defendant Paramount Pictures to dismiss the lawsuit brought by Olivia Hussey, who played Juliet at age 15 and is now 72, and Leonard Whiting, who played Romeo at 16 and is also 72.

    Mackenzie determined that the scene was protected by the First Amendment, finding that the actors “have not put forth any authority showing the film here can be deemed to be sufficiently sexually suggestive as a matter of law to be held to be conclusively illegal.”

    In her written decision, she also found that the suit didn’t fall within the bounds of a California law that temporarily suspended the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse, and that a February re-release of the film did not change that.

    The actors’ attorney denounced the decision and said they plan to file another version of the suit in federal court.

    “We firmly believe that the exploitation and sexualization of minors in the film industry must be confronted and legally addressed to protect vulnerable individuals from harm and ensure the enforcement of existing laws,” lawyer Solomon Gresen said in a statement.

    The film and its theme song were major hits at the time, and — despite the nude scene that briefly shows Whiting’s bare buttocks and Hussey’s bare breasts — it was played for generations of high school students studying Shakespeare’s tragedy.

    Director Franco Zeffirelli, who died in 2019 at age 96, initially told the two that they would wear flesh-colored undergarments in the bedroom scene that comes late in the movie and was shot on the final days of filming, the suit alleged.

    But on the morning of the shoot, Zeffirelli told Whiting and Hussey that they would wear only body makeup, while still assuring them the camera would be positioned in a way that would not show nudity, according to the suit.

    Despite those assurances, they were filmed in the nude without their knowledge, in violation of California and federal laws against indecency and the exploitation of children, the suit alleged.

    Zeffirelli told them they must act in the nude “or the Picture would fail” and their careers would be hurt, the suit said. The actors said that the opposite occurred, that neither had the career the film’s success suggested, and that the fraud, sexual abuse and sexual harassment they underwent caused them emotional damage and mental anguish for decades. They had sought more than $500 million in damages.

    The judge, though, found that the plaintiffs “cherry-picked” from the law and failed to provide legal authority for why it should apply to “purported works of artistic merit, such as the award-winning film at issue here.”

    She quoted from an appeals court precedent that said child pornography is “particularly repulsive,” but “not all images of nude children are pornographic.”

    The ruling relied on California law that is meant to protect the free speech of defendants from being squelched by lawsuits, and is often the first line of defense when lawsuits are filed.

    An attorney for Paramount declined to comment about the ruling.

    The Associated Press typically does not name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they come forward publicly, which Hussey and Whiting did.

    ___

    Follow AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton on Twitter: https://twitter.com/andyjamesdalton

    Source link

  • Porn industry group sues over Utah age verification law

    Porn industry group sues over Utah age verification law

    An adult entertainment industry group has filed a lawsuit challenging a new Utah law that requires porn websites to implement age verification mechanisms to block minors from accessing sexually explicit materials

    BySAM METZ Associated Press

    SALT LAKE CITY — An adult entertainment industry group filed a lawsuit on Wednesday challenging a new Utah law that requires porn websites to implement age verification mechanisms to block minors from accessing sexually explicit materials.

    The law, which took effect Wednesday, made Utah the second state to require adult websites to verify the age of those who want to view their pages — either through an independent contractor or digital ID. Lawmakers likened the requirement to those for alcohol or online gambling and argued that stronger protections were needed to shield kids from pornography, which is ubiquitous online.

    The Free Speech Coalition — along with an erotica author and companies that manage adult websites and are party to the suit — argues that Utah’s new law unfairly discriminates against certain kinds of speech, violates the First Amendment rights of porn providers and intrudes on the privacy of individuals who want to view sexually explicit materials. The plaintiffs have asked a federal judge to bar enforcement of the law until their legal challenge is resolved.

    They contend that the age verification law “imposes a content-based restriction on protected speech that requires narrow tailoring to serve a compelling state interest.”

    It is currently illegal to show children pornography under federal law, however that law is rarely enforced.

    Utah’s new law is the conservative state’s latest effort to crack down on access to pornography and dovetails with lawmakers’ other efforts to restrict how children use the internet, including social media sites. It comes less than a year after Louisiana enacted a similar law and as additional states consider such policies as filters or age verification for adult websites.

    The Utah law builds off years of anti-porn efforts by the Republican-controlled Legislature, where a majority of lawmakers are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It comes seven years after Utah became the first state to declare pornography a public health crisis and two years after lawmakers passed a measure paving the way to require internet-capable devices be equipped with porn filters for children. Provisions of the law delay it from taking effect unless at least five other states pass similar measures.

    The age verification law is facing strong pushback, including from one of the biggest porn sites, Pornhub, which disabled access to its site in Utah earlier this week.

    The Free Speech Coalition has filed similar challenges before. In 2002, its case against a federal child pornography statute made landed before the U.S. Supreme Court, which struck down provisions for overly interfering with free speech.

    Source link