Seventh Defendant to Plead Guilty in Sex Trafficking Case
The Justice Department announced today that Granville
Robinson, 27, of Memphis, Tennessee, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring
to commit sex trafficking and one count of sex trafficking for his role in
scheme operated out of the Riviera Motel in New Orleans. Six defendants have previously pleaded guilty
in connection with the scheme, which used force and threats to compel multiple
women to engage in prostitution for the defendants’ profit in New Orleans and
elsewhere.
“Human traffickers facilitate a form of modern-day slavery
that threatens the dignity of vulnerable individuals and violates the most
basic standards of human decency,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
General Vanita Gupta, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “We will continue to vigorously pursue
justice by prosecuting traffickers and protecting victims from this heinous
crime that has no place in our society.”
“This defendant recruited vulnerable victims from the New
Orleans community and brought other victims to New Orleans to engage in
commercial sex trafficking,” said U.S. Attorney Kenneth A. Polite of the
Eastern District of Louisiana. “These
crimes often pass without detection because victims live in fear from physical
abuse, threats and other forms of coercion.
My office is committed to prosecuting individuals who manipulate victims
into committing commercial sex acts and profit from this illegal conduct.”
“Granville Robinson is not only the ringleader of this gang,
but also the most violent of the group,” said Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey
S. Sallet of the FBI’s New Orleans Division.
“In December 2015, the FBI New Orleans Division established the ‘Violent
Crime Against Children and Human Trafficking Task Force,’ a stand-alone squad
formed to specifically address the Human Trafficking threat in Louisiana. We will continue to aggressively work with
our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners to investigate these
matters and bring people to justice.”
“Sex traffickers have complete disregard for humanity. They
treat people as commodities solely for financial gain,” said Special Agent in
Charge Raymond R. Parmer Jr. of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) New
Orleans. “With this guilty plea, we have
made our nation safer, ensuring this trafficker can't harm future victims.”
On Oct. 3 2014, Robinson and co-defendants Duane Phillips,
Christopher Williams, Anthony Ellis and Laquentin Brown were charged in a
second superseding indictment with sex trafficking conspiracy and varying
counts of sex trafficking and transportation for prostitution. An additional defendant, Kanubhai Patel, who
owned the Riviera Motel where the sex trafficking scheme was based, was charged
in the same indictment with benefitting financially from sex trafficking. A seventh defendant, Zacchaeus Taylor, was
charged separately on March 28, 2014.
According to Robinson’s admissions during his plea hearing
and other court documents, he enforced strict rules on the women he trafficked
as part of his conspiracy. These rules
included requiring the women to earn a minimum amount each day, to provide him
with all of their earnings and to seek his permission to stop prostituting for
the night. Robinson confiscated some
women’s identification to make it harder for them to leave, and forced some to
get tattoos signifying that they belonged to him. When the women broke the rules or did not
earn enough money, Robinson physically assaulted them.
Robinson acknowledged compelling and coercing more than 10
different women to engage in prostitution for his profit from 2012 through
January 2014 in connection with the charged conspiracy. Robinson admitted to using force to punish
and control the women, including one instance of punching and kicking a woman
in the abdomen, knowing she was pregnant, to punish her for texting without his
permission, and another instance of shoving a woman into a toilet tank hard
enough to break it, then striking her repeatedly with a wooden board, to punish
her for reportedly planning to escape.
Robinson and his co-defendants aided each other by posting
bond for each other following arrests, monitoring the women and reporting to
each other any violations of the rules the defendants imposed on the women and
transporting women together from New Orleans to Texas, Tennessee, Maryland and
Washington, D.C., for prostitution. When
two women tried to escape on one such trip, Robinson and a co-defendant found
them, forced them into a car, and brought them back to New Orleans to continue
prostituting.
Robinson and his co-defendants operated out of certain
motels, including the Riviera, which generally did not report their activities
to the police. The defendants rented
multiple rooms at the Riviera where women would meet prostitution clients, and
paid the Riviera above-market rates to reflect the high traffic through the
rooms.
Robinson is the seventh defendant to plead guilty in
connection with this case. On July 1,
2015, Patel pleaded guilty to benefitting financially from human
trafficking. In March and April 2015,
Phillips, Williams, Ellis and Brown pleaded guilty to conspiracy to engage in
sex trafficking by force, fraud and coercion.
Ellis and Brown also pleaded guilty to interstate transportation for
prostitution. On June 25, 2014, Taylor
pleaded guilty to sex trafficking conspiracy and interstate transportation for
prostitution.
At sentencing, currently scheduled for May 4, 2016, Robinson
faces a minimum sentence of 15 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life
in prison. The plea agreement provides
for a recommended sentence of 24 and a half years in prison.
This case was investigated jointly by the FBI’s New Orleans
Division and HIS’s New Orleans Field Office, with assistance from the FBI’s
Memphis Division. This case is being
prosecuted by Trial Attorney Christine M. Siscaretti and Special Litigation
Counsel John Cotton Richmond of the Civil Right Division’s Human Trafficking
Prosecution Unit, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia K. Evans of the Eastern
District of Louisiana.
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