Jacksonville, Florida – United States District Judge Marcia
Morales Howard has sentenced Brian Ray Dunlap (67, St. Augustine) to 14 years
and 7 months in federal prison for attempting to entice two young children to
engage in sexual activity. Dunlap was also ordered to serve a 10-year term of
supervised release and to register as a sex offender.
Dunlap had pleaded guilty on July 25, 2019.
According to court documents, evidence, and testimony, on
October 6, 2018, a detective with the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, who
was posing online as a custodial family member of two children ages 9 and 12,
received an email message from Dunlap. Over the next three days, Dunlap and the
undercover detective exchanged emails and text messages about Dunlap’s desire
to meet the children to engage in sexual activity with them. Dunlap advised
that he was an amateur photographer and that he wanted to “[t]ake their
pictures naked” and perform oral sex on them. Dunlap provided the undercover
detective with graphic details about the sexual acts that he wished to perform
on the two children, and he offered to pay the undercover detective $200 for
sex with the children. Dunlap told the undercover detective that finding someone
that would permit him to have sex with their children was “a dream come true.”
On October 9, 2018, Dunlap traveled to a prearranged
location in St. Johns County to meet and have sex with the two children and was
arrested.
This case was investigated by the St. Johns County Sheriff’s
Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Jacksonville. It was
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney D. Rodney Brown.
It is another case brought as part of Project Safe Childhood,
a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice to
combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. Led by the
United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation
and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and
local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who sexually
exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims. For more information
about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.
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