U.S. Atty.: Monona man sentenced for child porn after hiding camera in smoke detector

U.S. Atty.: Monona man sentenced for child porn after hiding camera in smoke detector







A Note: On the bigger picture; FYI: Smoke Detectors are just one of the places the depraved, oftentimes organized criminals, hide cameras etc...then they even orchestrate events to get a victim forced into being there; in a certain place, at a certain time, then more terrible orchestrated events occur until a film is nothing but severe trauma and horror for the victims.

Be Aware! Spread the Good Word! Stay Alert! Stay Vigilant! Warn and Protect our Youth! We must continue to have each other's backs always!

#anticorruption #antihumantrafficking #PornHarms #ShutitDown #NotOnOurwatch #EndIt N.O.W.

Heart Line 💜 1-888-383-483-4838

U.S. Atty.: Monona man sentenced for child porn after hiding camera in smoke detector

Scott Blood (Source: Dane Co. Sheriff's Office)
By Nick Viviani | Jun 12, 2020
 
MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) -- A 49-year-old Monona man was sentenced to more than a decade in a federal prison after being convicted on a child pornography charge.

According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, Scott Blood pleaded pleaded guilty in March to receiving and possessing child pornography. On Thursday, a federal judge sentenced him to 12 years in prison, followed by 20 months of supervised release.

Prosecutors said Blood had hidden a camera in a smoke detector on which law enforcement agents found "numerous" sexually explicit images of children. Blader's office noted the judge in his case pointed to that "grotesque invasion of the victims' privacy" as the reason for Blood's extended sentence.

Blood also reportedly had hundreds of conversations carried out via Kik in which he either would discuss his sexual interest in minors or with kids themselves from whom he would obtain pornographic material.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Jeffrey Epstein's accusers can now seek compensation from fund | | cbs46.com

Can the Government Throw You Out of Work? (Not in Some States!)