A Weed, California man pleaded guilty today to conspiracy to
produce child pornography for his participation in a website that was operated
for the purpose of coercing and enticing minors as young as eight years old to
engage in sexually explicit conduct on web camera.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Dana J. Boente of the
Eastern District of Virginia; and Section Chief John J. Brosnan of the FBI’s Violent
Crimes Against Children Section (VCACS) made the announcement.
Jeffery Van Dyke, 46, was charged on April 4, 2016, and
pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III of the Eastern
District of Virginia. Sentencing is set
for June 9.
According to admissions made in connection with the plea
agreement, members of the conspiracy created false profiles on social
networking sites popular with children posing as young teenagers to lure
children to two websites they controlled.
Once on the conspirators’ websites, Van Dyke admitted that members of
the conspiracy showed the children pre-recorded videos of prior minor victims,
often engaging in sexually explicit conduct, to make the new victims think that
they were chatting with another minor.
Van Dyke further admitted that conspirators used these videos to coerce
and entice children to engage in sexually explicit activity on their own web
cameras, which could be viewed live by other members without the victim’s
knowledge and which the website automatically recorded and made available for
download later. Van Dyke admitted that
he linked minors to one of the websites and chatted with them there in
furtherance of the conspiracy. The
defendant also admitted that one of the websites ranked the efforts of the
members to successfully coerce and entice children to engage in sexually
explicit conduct on live web camera. Law
enforcement agencies have disabled both websites.
VCACS special agents led the investigation with the
assistance of the FBI’s Operation Rescue Me and the FBI’s Digital Analysis and
Research Center and the Office of Victim Assistance. The South Africa Police Service, Family
Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offenses, Gauteng; Royal Canadian Mounted
Police, National Child Exploitation Coordination Centre; the Dutch Police
Service Agency, KLPD; and the Australian Federal Police, Child Protection
Operations, Sydney were active partners in Operation Subterfuge, a
multinational investigation coordinated by members of the FBI’s Violent Crimes
Against Children International Task Force.
Trial Attorney Lauren Britsch of the Criminal Division’s Child
Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS) and Assistant U.S. Attorney Whitney
Russell of the Eastern District of Virginia prosecuted the case.
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