Christopher Martinelli Was Under Supervision for a Previous
Federal Felony Conviction for Failing to Register as a Sex Offender
SYRACUSE, NEW YORK – Christopher Martinelli, 40, of
Syracuse, was sentenced to serve a total of twenty‑five years in
prison, to be followed by a lifetime of supervised release, for distributing,
receiving, and transporting child pornography and violating supervised release.
The announcement was made by United
States Attorney Grant C. Jaquith; James N. Hendricks, Special Agent in Charge
of the Albany Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); and
New York State Police Acting Superintendent Keith Corlett.
As part of his guilty plea, Martinelli admitted to knowingly
exchanging sexually explicit photographs with a fourteen-year-old girl over the
Internet, as well as trading child pornography online while on supervised
release from a prior federal felony conviction. That prior conviction from
January 14, 2011 was for Martinelli’s failure to register as a sex offender,
for which he was sentenced to serve 14 months imprisonment, to be followed by a
ten-year term of supervised release. Martinelli was required to register as a
sex offender based upon a child pornography adjudication under the Uniform Code
of Military Justice that was imposed while he was serving in the U.S. military.
In the current case, Chief United States District Court
Judge Glenn T. Suddaby sentenced Martinelli to serve 240 months’ imprisonment
for his child pornography crimes and 5 years’ imprisonment for violating the
conditions of his supervised release by committing those crimes. Judge Suddaby ordered that the terms of
imprisonment be served consecutively, for a total of twenty‑five
years’ imprisonment.
This case was investigated by the United States Probation
Office, the New York State Police Major Crimes Unit, and the FBI Syracuse
Mid-State Child Exploitation Task Force, a federal task force that investigates
cases involving the sexual exploitation of children. The task force consists of FBI Special Agents
and New York State Police Investigators from Troop D, Bureau of Criminal
Investigation. The case was prosecuted
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Carina H. Schoenberger.
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