Defendant Was Convicted at Trial; Previously Accused of
Inappropriate Sexual Conduct with Minors
Fairbanks, Alaska – U.S. Attorney Bryan Schroder announced
that Eric Whitebread, 43, resident of North Pole, Alaska, was sentenced on
Friday, Feb. 15, 2019, by U.S. District Judge Ralph R. Beistline, to 15 years
in prison, to be followed by a 35-year term of supervised release, for
distribution and receipt of child pornography.
According to evidence presented at trial, on two different
days in June 2015, Whitebread distributed files of child pornography through an
online file-sharing network. Upon
execution of a search warrant at Whitebread’s North Pole residence, law
enforcement located his computer.
Located on the computer were 618 images of child pornography that had
been downloaded through the file-sharing network between July 14, 2015, and
August 24, 2015. Contextual evidence
discovered by law enforcement during a forensic examination of Whitebread’s
computer – including data recovered from millions of lines of computer code –
located numerous indicators that child pornography was being downloaded and
viewed on the computer at times when Whitebread’s text messages showed him to
be home and online. In addition, the
computer did not show any activity at times the evidence showed Whitebread was
away from the house.
Whitebread, his wife, and two other witnesses testified in
the defense case. Each stated that
multiple people came and went from Whitebread’s property and had access to the
computer, and that the password was posted on a Post-It note left on the
device. This testimony was inconsistent
with the fact that the computer was seized from Whitebread’s private residence
without any Post-It notes. Whitebread and
his wife also stated that the account through all of the child pornography activity
occurred was a locked account to which they did not have access, and that they
only accessed the computer for work purposes, and only through a separate
account that had been created in June 2015.
In rebuttal, law enforcement demonstrated that this testimony was false,
as the separate account was actually created in November 2013.
As part of sentencing, the United States introduced evidence
that the defendant had previously been accused of inappropriately touching a
minor child, and of having been engaged in a sexual relationship with a
15-year-old when he was in this 20’s.
At sentencing, Judge Beistline described the evidence
against Whitebread as “overwhelming.”
Judge Beistline noted that Whitebread had attempted to obstruct justice
with his false trial testimony, was in “complete denial” about what he had
done, and that he “had shown absolutely no remorse” for his conduct. Judge Beistline went on to add that by
downloading and distributing child pornography the defendant had “victimized
helpless minors by contributing to the market for child pornography.” Because of the marketplace for child
pornography, the defendant “must be deterred, and others similarly-situated
must be deterred,” said Judge Beistline.
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), and the Anchorage Police Department, Crimes Against
Children Unit (CACU). Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Anne Veldhuis and Kyle Reardon prosecuted the case.
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