PENSACOLA, FLORIDA – Elvin Castron-Murcia, 20, a Honduran
native residing between Louisiana and Tennessee, pleaded guilty today to
traveling for illicit sexual conduct and transporting a minor for criminal
sexual activity. The guilty plea was
announced by Lawrence Keefe, United States Attorney for the Northern District
of Florida.
In May 2018, a 12-year-old female, “ENN,” went missing from
Navarre after her mother discovered her communicating on Facebook with a
19-year-old male using the name “Elvin C. Murcia.” Several neighbors had observed a black Honda
Civic with Tennessee license tags parked near ENN’s residence in Navarre,
Florida. A search of ENN’s cellular
telephone and Instagram social media account revealed images of ENN in a
vehicle with a male who appeared to be the same person using Murcia’s Facebook
account.
The next day, ENN’s mother was able to communicate with ENN
via Facebook Messenger, and law enforcement officers determined the cellular
telephone used for the conversation was located in Tennessee. A state trooper soon observed the black Honda
Civic with Tennessee tags and stopped the vehicle in Alabama. ENN was identified as the vehicle passenger,
and Murcia, who was using a license issued in a stolen identity, was later
identified as the driver. Images and
videos on Murcia’s phone located after a forensic examination confirmed that
Murcia and ENN were in an online relationship that began when ENN was just
11-years-old. Law enforcement officers
were able to obtain pharmacy video in Tennessee depicting Murcia purchasing
birth control with ENN the day before the traffic stop and subsequent arrest of
Murcia. Later in May, law enforcement
officers confirmed that Murcia was illegally present in the United States and
that the identity he was utilizing was that of a true citizen of Puerto Rico.
The defendant is being detained. The sentencing hearing is scheduled for May
20, 2019, at 9:00 a.m. at the U.S. Courthouse in Pensacola.
Castron-Murcia faces a maximum of 30 years in prison for the
traveling for illicit sexual conduct and a minimum of 10 years and a maximum of
life in prison for the transporting a minor for criminal sexual activity.
The case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Santa Rosa County
Sheriff’s Office, the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, and the United States
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations. Assistant United States Attorney David
Goldberg is prosecuting the case.
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