SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Abdul Basier Hashimi, 26, of Elk Grove,
was sentenced today by Senior U.S. District Judge Garland E. Burrell Jr. to 12
years and seven months in prison for sex trafficking of a child, U.S. Attorney
McGregor W. Scott announced.
On August 31, 2018, Hashimi pleaded guilty to sex
trafficking of a child. According to statements made during the hearing,
Hashimi met the 13-year-old victim in August 2014 on social media and began
communicating with her. After she turned 14, Hashimi caused her to work as a
prostitute in Sacramento, Oakland, and elsewhere in Northern California.
Hashimi managed the victim’s activities by, among other things, creating an
internet advertisement, renting a motel room, and driving her to areas with
prostitution activity where he caused her to work as a prostitute. The victim
gave Hashimi the money she earned.
“Child sex traffickers often prey upon our community’s most
vulnerable minors — runaways, foster kids, children who face difficult circumstances
— promising the young victims that they will receive care and support. In
actuality, traffickers treat their victims as commodities to acquire and sell,
generating profit from exploiting them and leveraging their youth as a selling
point,” said Special Agent in Charge Sean Ragan of the FBI Sacramento Field
Office. “The FBI, the Sacramento Police Department, and our partners on the
Child Exploitation Task Force continue to work tirelessly to identify and
disrupt predators like Hashimi to protect the children in our communities. We
are also all committed to ensuring the children recovered from exploitation
receive the services to move forward with their lives.”
This case was the product of an investigation by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and the Sacramento Police Department. Assistant U.S.
Attorney Brian A. Fogerty prosecuted the case.
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