Ex-RNC Staffer Gets More Than 12 years In Prison In Child Porn Case

g5000

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Nov 26, 2011
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I guess we know where the actual child groomers and rapists are.


A former GOP staffer and Republican National Committee aide who admitted to being part of a ring that traded child pornography involving babies was sentenced Thursday to more than 12-and-a-half years in prison Thursday.

[snip]

Prosecutors said Verastigui also fantasized online about killing children while abusing them.



But wait! There's more!

A Trump Commerce Department official has been jailed since November on federal charges of receiving and possession of child pornography.

[snip]

According to a pretrial detention memo filed on Nov. 17, prosecutors charge that Hageman was “an active participant, often soliciting child pornography or commenting on it,” and “invited at least one other person who he knew to be interested in child pornography and bestiality to the chat.”
 
I guess we know where the actual child groomers and rapists are.


A former GOP staffer and Republican National Committee aide who admitted to being part of a ring that traded child pornography involving babies was sentenced Thursday to more than 12-and-a-half years in prison Thursday.

[snip]

Prosecutors said Verastigui also fantasized online about killing children while abusing them.



But wait! There's more!

A Trump Commerce Department official has been jailed since November on federal charges of receiving and possession of child pornography.

[snip]

According to a pretrial detention memo filed on Nov. 17, prosecutors charge that Hageman was “an active participant, often soliciting child pornography or commenting on it,” and “invited at least one other person who he knew to be interested in child pornography and bestiality to the chat.”



Yeah, overwhelmingly the groomers are democrats.

Glad they got this scumbag off of the streets though.

No, go protect your groomers....
 
I guess we know where the actual child groomers and rapists are.


A former GOP staffer and Republican National Committee aide who admitted to being part of a ring that traded child pornography involving babies was sentenced Thursday to more than 12-and-a-half years in prison Thursday.

[snip]

Prosecutors said Verastigui also fantasized online about killing children while abusing them.



But wait! There's more!

A Trump Commerce Department official has been jailed since November on federal charges of receiving and possession of child pornography.

[snip]

According to a pretrial detention memo filed on Nov. 17, prosecutors charge that Hageman was “an active participant, often soliciting child pornography or commenting on it,” and “invited at least one other person who he knew to be interested in child pornography and bestiality to the chat.”

Stinking groomer!!!
MAGA
 
I guess we know where the actual child groomers and rapists are.


A former GOP staffer and Republican National Committee aide who admitted to being part of a ring that traded child pornography involving babies was sentenced Thursday to more than 12-and-a-half years in prison Thursday.

[snip]

Prosecutors said Verastigui also fantasized online about killing children while abusing them.



But wait! There's more!

A Trump Commerce Department official has been jailed since November on federal charges of receiving and possession of child pornography.

[snip]

According to a pretrial detention memo filed on Nov. 17, prosecutors charge that Hageman was “an active participant, often soliciting child pornography or commenting on it,” and “invited at least one other person who he knew to be interested in child pornography and bestiality to the chat.”
Progs do push this type of behavior. They just have to flesh out the hypocrisy of those who are not for it and do it. The end result is it still exists. Perhaps getting tough on this will reduce it.
 
I guess we know where the actual child groomers and rapists are.


A former GOP staffer and Republican National Committee aide who admitted to being part of a ring that traded child pornography involving babies was sentenced Thursday to more than 12-and-a-half years in prison Thursday.

[snip]

Prosecutors said Verastigui also fantasized online about killing children while abusing them.



But wait! There's more!

A Trump Commerce Department official has been jailed since November on federal charges of receiving and possession of child pornography.

[snip]

According to a pretrial detention memo filed on Nov. 17, prosecutors charge that Hageman was “an active participant, often soliciting child pornography or commenting on it,” and “invited at least one other person who he knew to be interested in child pornography and bestiality to the chat.”
Alaska: Rep. Dean Westlake, D, submitted resignation letter Dec. 15, 2017, after being accused by several women of inappropriate behavior.

Alaska: Rep. Zach Fansler, D, resigned effective Feb. 12, 2018, after being accused of slapping a woman hard enough to rupture her eardrum during a sexual encounter after a night of drinking. He pleaded guilty June 21 to a misdemeanor harassment charge.

Arizona: Rep. Don Shooter, R, expelled from office Feb. 1, 2018, by an overwhelming House vote after an investigation substantiated a lengthy pattern of sexual harassment toward women, including a fellow lawmaker. Shooter lost a comeback bid in an Aug. 28 Republican state Senate primary.

California: Assemblyman Matt Dababneh, D, resigned effective Jan. 1, 2018, after a lobbyist said he pushed her into a bathroom during a Las Vegas social event and engaged in lewd behavior in front of her. A lawyer hired by the Legislature substantiated the claims following an investigation. A legislative panel denied his appeal Aug. 24. Dababneh has sued his accuser for defamation.

California: Assemblyman Raul Bocanegra, D, resigned in November 2017 after allegations that he had kissed or groped multiple women without their consent.

California: Sen. Tony Mendoza, D, resigned Feb. 22, 2018, after an investigation found he likely engaged in unwanted “flirtatious or sexually suggestive” behavior with six women, including four subordinates, a lobbyist and a young woman in a fellowship with another lawmaker.

California: Sen. Sebastian Ridley-Thomas, D, resigned Dec. 27, 2017, citing unspecified health reasons after sexual harassment complaints were filed against him. A report by an outside investigator hired by the Assembly, which was publicly released Jan. 16, 2019, substantiated complaints that Ridley-Thomas had kissed an employee, held her hand and called her several times after she made it clear she wasn’t interested in 2016.

Colorado: Rep. Steve Lebsock, D, expelled from office March 2, 2018, by an overwhelming House vote after an independent investigator determined there were credible claims he had harassed five women, including a fellow lawmaker. Elected as a Democrat, Lebsock changed his party affiliation to Republican on the day he was expelled.

Connecticut: Rep. Angel Arce, D, resigned effective April 9, 2018, after the Hartford Courant reported that he had sent affectionate text messages to a 16-year-old girl in 2015.

Florida: Sen. Jeff Clemens, D, resigned in Oct. 27, 2017, shortly after a news report that he had extramarital affair with a lobbyist. The House speaker had said that because a lobbyist is dependent on legislators, “the facts here raise a very real question of sexual harassment.”

Hawaii: Rep. Joseph Souki, D, agreed March 21, 2018, to resign by the end of the month as part of a State Ethics Commission settlement of allegations that he sexually harassed multiple women by subjecting them to unwanted kissing, touching and sexual language. The settlement also called for him to pay $5,000 to the state, make a public apology and not seek office for two years.

Illinois Rep. Nick Sauer, R, resigned Aug. 1, 2018, after an ex-girlfriend claimed Sauer had posted nude photos of her on a fake social media account under her name. Sauer had been a member of the House Sexual Harassment and Discrimination Task Force. Indicted Jan. 9, 2019, on 12 felony counts of disseminating private sexual images involving two people.

Maine: Rep. Dillon Bates, D, resigned Aug. 20, 2018, a little over two weeks after a media report claimed that he had romantic relationships with female students while working as a teacher and coach. Bates also resigned from coaching and teaching positions.

Massachusetts: Senate President Stan Rosenberg, D, resigned May 4, 2018, after a Senate ethics report concluded he failed to protect the Senate from his husband, Bryon Hefner, who was indicted on sexual assault charges. Rosenberg had stepped aside in December 2017 from his leadership position because of the investigation into allegations that his husband sexually abused several men, including some who had dealings with the Legislature.

Minnesota: Sen. Dan Schoen, D, resigned effective Dec. 15, 2017, following several allegations from women.

Nevada: Sen. Mark Manendo, D, resigned in July 2017 after a law firm concluded that he violated the Legislature’s anti-harassment policy and behaved inappropriately toward female staffers and lobbyists.

Washington: Sen. Kevin Ranker, D, resigned Jan. 12, 2019, amid an investigation into allegations of sexual harassment and hostile workplace issues raised by a woman who worked as a legislative assistant for him during the 2010 session. Released weeks after he left office, the investigation by an outside law firm found that Ranker sexually harassed the woman and created a hostile work environment for her once she left to work for a state agency.

Alaska: Rep. Justin Parish, D, directed to undergo additional sexual harassment training after a sexual harassment complaint in February 2018 outlined a series of unwanted flirting, touching and phone calls to a woman.

California: Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia, D, removed from all legislative committees May 18, 2018, and required to attend sensitivity and sexual harassment policy training after outside investigators determined she used vulgar language in violation of the chamber’s sexual harassment policy. The investigation initially cleared her of allegedly groping a former legislative staff member in 2014, but legislative leaders reopened the case in June after her accuser appealed. In November, an investigator said Garcia had been “overly familiar” with the staffer but said there wasn’t enough evidence to substantiate the groping claim and said Garcia did not retaliate against him for filing a complaint.

California: Sen. Bob Hertzberg, D, formally reprimanded March 8, 2018, by the Senate Rules Committee and told not to hug people anymore after an investigation concluded that his frequent embraces made multiple female colleagues uncomfortable.

Colorado: Rep. Paul Rosenthal, D, suspended as vice chair of a legislative committee in November 2017 after being accused of groping a political activist during his first campaign for a House seat in 2012. Complaint was dismissed Jan. 4, 2018, apparently because the alleged incident took place before he was elected, but Rosenthal was subsequently permanently removed from his committee leadership post.

Illinois: Sen. Ira Silverstein, D, resigned in November 2017 as majority caucus chairman after a victims’ rights advocate publicly accused him of sending inappropriate messages to her; a legislative inspector general recommended in January that Silverstein receive counseling from the Senate’s ethics officer but said his inappropriate comments did not constitute sexual harassment. Silverstein, a state senator since 1999, lost in the Democratic primary March 20, 2018.

Illinois: Rep. Lou Lang, D, resigned as deputy House minority leader May 31, 2018, less than an hour after a medical marijuana activist accused him of sexual harassment and verbal abuse during interactions over the past four years related to legislation. A legislative inspector general said in September there was insufficient proof Lang had harassed her. Lang announced Jan. 7, 2019, that he had resigned his seat to join a lobbying firm.

Iowa: Sen. Nate Boulton, D, suspended his campaign for governor May 24, 2018, a day after The Des Moines Register reported that three women alleged he touched them inappropriately several years ago. A woman filed an ethics complaint against him Nov. 17 alleging he inappropriately touched her at a bar in 2015, before he won election. The Senate Ethics Committee dismissed the complaint Dec. 20 for lack of jurisdiction.

Kentucky: Sen. Julian Carroll, D, removed in July 2017 as the minority whip for Senate Democrats after he was accused of groping a man in 2005.

Maryland: Del. Curt Anderson, D, removed from leadership positions as deputy whip and chairman of a subcommittee on criminal justice on Aug. 24, 2018, after an investigation by a legislative ethics panel into allegations of sexual assault, unwanted kissing and inappropriate comments. The panel also recommended he go through “intensive harassment awareness and prevention training.” A panel report released Sept. 7 said it couldn’t resolve conflicting accounts of an alleged 2004 sexual assault of a legislative staffer but found Anderson violated the anti-harassment policy in other instances.

New Mexico: Sen. Michael Padilla, D, ousted in December 2017 as Democratic majority whip by the caucus after decade-old allegations that he had sexually harassed women in a prior job. Padilla also dropped out of the lieutenant governor’s race.

New Mexico: Rep. Carl Trujillo, D, defeated in the June 5, 2018, Democratic primary while fighting allegations of sexual misconduct. A report released by a special counsel in July backed up allegations by a former lobbyist of inappropriate advances toward her in 2013 and 2014. But a sexual harassment case was dismissed Nov. 28 after the woman decided not to testify to a House ethics subcommittee.

North Carolina: Rep. Duane Hall, D, defeated in the May 8, 2018, Democratic primary by first-time candidate Allison Dahle after rejecting calls to resign because of a media report in which people alleged Hall used sexual innuendo and made unwanted sexual advances. Hall admitted to inappropriately kissing one woman but denied harassment allegations.

Oklahoma: Rep. Will Fourkiller, D, advised in February 2017 to get sensitivity training and blocked from interacting with the Legislature’s page program for a year after being accused of making inappropriate comments to a high school page in 2015.

Pennsylvania: Sen. Daylin Leach, D, announced in December 2017 that he would “step back” from his campaign for a congressional seat after allegations that he behaved inappropriately toward female employees and campaign aides. Announced in February 2018 that he would not run. In January 2019, the Senate Democratic caucus hired a law firm to look in to a woman’s claim that Leach had coerced her into a sex act in 1991 when she was age 17 and he was a 30-year-old attorney defending her mother in a criminal case. Leach sued the woman and two others for defamation. A Democratic lawmaker has circulated a letter calling for Leach’s expulsion.

Rhode Island: Rep. Cale Keable, D, removed as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee on Oct. 29, 2018, after a months-old email surfaced in which Democratic Rep. Katherine Kazarian accused him of sexual harassment. Keable was defeated in the Nov. 6 election.

Washington: Rep. David Sawyer, D, suspended on May 9, 2018, as chairman of the House Commerce and Gaming Committee. Resigned chairmanship after a summary of an outside investigation released June 11 said Sawyer sent a House employee multiple “inappropriate and offensive” text messages and violated House policies on harassment, decorum and ethics. Media previously reported that several women accused Sawyer of inappropriate behavior toward them both before and after he first was elected in 2012. Lost re-election in the Democratic primary; registered as a lobbyist for the 2019 session. Fined $1,000 by the Legislative Ethics Board, which said in a Jan. 29, 2019, report that Sawyer had improperly required his staff to discuss issues related to the harassment allegations against him.

Wisconsin: Rep. Josh Zepnick, D, removed from legislative committees in December 2017 after being accused of kissing two women against their will at political events several years ago. Defeated in the Aug. 14 Democratic primary by attorney Marisabel Cabrera.

California: Assemblywoman Autumn Burke, D, included in sexual misconduct complaint records released Feb. 2, 2018, for participating in an inappropriate discussion about anal sex. She was notified of the complaint in February 2017.

Massachusetts: Rep. Paul McMurtry, D, accused by several lawmakers in a Jan. 16, 2019, story in the Boston Globe of grabbing the backside of a newly elected female lawmaker during a Dec. 13 reception for new lawmakers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The House speaker said a special committee is investigating reports of inappropriate conduct during the event but did identify anyone.

Missouri: Rep. Joshua Peters, D, warned in February 2017 that any further complaints of inappropriate language or behavior would be dealt with more severely as the House Ethics Committee dismissed a sexual harassment complaint brought against him by state Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal.

New York: Sen. Jeff Klein, D, accused in January 2018 of sexual harassment in 2015 for allegedly forcibly kissing a former Independent Democratic Conference staff member who has asked for an investigation by the Joint Commission on Public Ethics.

Oregon: Rep. David Gomberg, D, mentioned in a Jan. 3, 2019, report by the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries as having been accused of inappropriate touching and making sexualized comments in 2013.

Pennsylvania: Rep. Tom Caltagirone, D, faced calls by Gov. Tom Wolf to resign after reports in December 2017 that House Democrats authorized paying about $250,000 to settle a sexual harassment claim from a legislative assistant against Caltagirone in 2015.

Texas: Sen. Borris Miles, D, accused in a December 2019 report by the Daily Beast of sexually propositioning an intern in 2013 when Miles was a state House member. Miles refused calls to resign from a group that backs female Democratic candidates.
 
I don't give a damn about a political party and blaming one over the other it is stupid and moronic. Anyone can be a molester of children, it is not a party thing.

Let's put out the death penalty for child molesters, oh wait, that is cruel and unusual, we must try to rehab those that cannot be rehab. This is where politics should but out as well and get rid of these worthless pieces of life.
 

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