WASHINGTON – Cleoretta Allen, 41, of Louisville, Kentucky,
pleaded guilty today in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of
Kentucky to two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion and one
count of interstate transportation for prostitution.
According to court documents, the defendant used violence,
threats, fear, and intimidation to coerce two young women to engage in
commercial sex acts in the Louisville area between September 2017 and October
2017. Allen also transported the victims
from Kentucky to Georgia to engage in commercial sex. On Oct. 31, 2017, the victims contacted the
police, which resulted in the defendant’s arrest.
“This defendant abused the victims and coerced them to
engage in commercial sex for her gain,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric
Dreiband for the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. “The Department
of Justice will continue to work tirelessly to seek justice on behalf of
victims and survivors of human trafficking.”
“Our basic task in law enforcement is to protect the most
vulnerable in this community,” said U.S. Attorney Russell M. Coleman of the
Western District of Kentucky. “This successful investigation and prosecution
demonstrates that principle is just how we do business in the Western District
of Kentucky.”
“Human traffickers have no limits and will find victims
anywhere,” said Special Agent in Charge James Robert Brown Jr. of the FBI’s
Louisville Field Office. “Through
investigations like this with our law enforcement partners, FBI Louisville is
fiercely focused on freeing victims from the abusive life of sex trafficking
and bringing to justice those who exploit them.”
In accordance with the plea agreement, the defendant faces a
sentence of 15 to 19.5 years in prison. She is further subject to a maximum
fine of $250,000 per count of conviction, as well as mandatory restitution to
the victims. Sentencing will be scheduled on a later date.
This case was investigated by the FBI in Louisville,
Kentucky, the Louisville Metro Police Department, and the Jefferson County
Sheriff’s Office. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Amanda E. Gregory of the Western District of Kentucky and Special Litigation
Counsel William E. Nolan and Trial Attorney Kate Alexander of the Civil Rights
Division’s Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
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