Evidence Showed Defendant
Trafficked Over 5 Women, Including a 16-Year-Old
WASHINGTON — Terrell Armstead, 29,
of Baltimore, Maryland, was convicted on Monday of sex trafficking by force,
fraud, and coercion, announced U.S. Attorney Timothy J. Shea, Special Agent in
Charge of the FBI Washington Field Office’s Criminal Division Timothy M.
Dunham, and Chief of the Metropolitan Police Department Peter Newsham.
U.S. Attorney Shea stated: “The
defendant exploited his young victims as if they were commodities to be
controlled and sold. The prosecution of human trafficking is a priority for the
U.S. Attorney’s Office. We will fight to protect these vulnerable victims.”
“The FBI has no greater mission
than to protect our nation’s children from harm and take traffickers off the
streets in our community,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Dunham. “I would
like to thank the men and women of the FBI and our partners, who work
tirelessly every day to bring justice for the victims of these heinous crimes.
We will continue to work to protect our community from those who exploit women
and children for their own personal gain and greed.”
Armstead was found guilty on March
16 following a jury trial in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia before the Honorable Amit P. Mehta. Armstead was convicted of sex
trafficking a woman, Victim E, by force, fraud, and coercion between June and
September 2018. Armstead faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years in
prison and up to life in prison. Armstead is currently serving time on a
separate conviction in Maryland.
On Sept. 13, 2019, in a related
case also before Judge Mehta, Armstead pled guilty to conspiracy to obtain
firearms in Virginia and to transport them into the District of Columbia to
resell them illegally, and to unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted
felon. Those convictions carry, respectively, potential sentences of up to five
and 10 years in prison. Sentencing for that case is pending.
According to evidence presented at
trial, from March 2015 until September 2019, Armstead trafficked, in the
District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and elsewhere, several young women
for commercial sex, including Victim A (whom Armstead began trafficking when
she was only 16 years old) and Victim E. In total, five women testified about
Armstead’s role in sexually exploiting them for money. Armstead operated his
“pimping” enterprise by recruiting these young women as commercial sex workers,
then advertising them in online forums (like Backpage.com), having them work in
strip clubs to meet “customers,” and prostituting them on “the blade,” the
commercial sex track in downtown Washington, D.C. Armstead promoted himself on
social media, purporting to live a life of luxury with the money he took from
the women he prostituted. He controlled and manipulated the victims, including
by threats of force and by brandishing various weapons (including large
automatic weapons), by taking and controlling all the proceeds from their
commercial sex work, by limiting their contact with friends and family (such as
smashing a cellphone), and by controlling their access to transportation and
even their own identification documents.
The evidence showed that, among
other things, Armstead prostituted Victim A out of hotels beginning when she
was only 16 years old. The government’s evidence also included Backpage.com
ads, linked to Armstead’s online accounts, posted at the time showing 16‑year‑old
Victim A and other girls being sold for sex as far back as March and April
2015.
The evidence also showed that
Armstead lured Victim E across the country based on false promises of fantastic
success and financial comfort and security. Instead, after three months of
Armstead’s trafficking, Victim E left the D.C. area with nothing. Witnesses
also testified about violent episodes in which Armstead assaulted his victims,
including a horrifying incident in which Armstead forced a loaded gun into
Victim A’s mouth while having sex with her.
Finally, the evidence showed that
Armstead engaged in extensive efforts to obstruct the investigation and trial.
His own recorded jail calls showed him directing Victim A to lie to
investigators — and the evidence showed him continuing to contact Victim A to
affect her testimony, up to and including at trial.
In announcing the conviction, U.S.
Attorney Shea, Special Agent in Charge Dunham, and Chief Newsham commended the
assistance provided by officers and agents of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and Metropolitan Police Department Child Exploitation and Human
Trafficking Task Force; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives; and the D.C. Department of Corrections. They also acknowledged the
efforts of those who handled the case from the U.S. Attorney’s Office,
including Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kenya Davis and Amy Larson, Paralegal
Supervisor Mary Downing and Paralegal Specialist/Contractor Kenny Nguyen.
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