St. Louis, MO – Loren “Sensei” Copp, 50, former owner of
Dojo Pizza located at 4601 Morganford Road, St. Louis, MO, was sentenced to 65
years in prison for production and attempted production of child pornography;
possession of child pornography; and the use of interstate facilities to
persuade or coerce a minor to engage in sexual activity. Copp appeared today
before U.S. District Court Judge Audrey Fleissig who also ordered restitution
in the amount of $294,000.
In December 2018, Copp was convicted of eight counts of
child sexual exploitation and enticement involving four victims.
According to testimony presented at trial, for several years
defendant Copp groomed and sexually abused two minor females who had been in
his custody since 2009. The grooming process began when defendant Copp began
touching the victims’ buttocks while playing “the butt game,” which then led to
him touching their vaginas and breasts. Eventually, Copp began raping both
girls, and he would record the sex acts with a cell phone or video recorder.
While at the Dojo Pizza property, Copp would rape each girl multiple times a
week, and while there he took pornographic pictures of one victim’s genitals
and breasts. Copp would also watch pornography with one of the victims in his
office at the Dojo Pizza property.
During trial, there was also evidence of Facebook chats
between three minor female victims and a Facebook account utilized by Copp,
which purported to be used by a 13 year-old named “Chrissy.” The Facebook
account depicted a facial image of a minor female for the profile picture, and
this same Facebook profile picture of “Chrissy” was found on Copp’s computer,
along with multiple pornographic images of the three victims that were sent to
the “Chrissy” Facebook account. Additionally, within the Facebook chats between
“Chrissy” and the minor victims, there were multiple references to sexual
activity and/or sexually explicit conduct occurring between the victims, as
well as one particular victim and Copp. Also, there were coercive and deceptive
emails sent from a Yahoo email account directed towards one minor victim, which
were between Copp’s Gmail account and the Yahoo account. The majority of the
Yahoo emails were sent from the same IP address attached to emails
sent/received from Copp’s Gmail account. The subscriber information and backup
emails used for the “Chrissy” Facebook account, as well as the Yahoo email
account, were linked to Copp.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the St. Louis
Metropolitan Police Department, the Regional Computer Crime Education and
Enforcement Group (RCCEEG) and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security –
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), investigated the case.
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