Online sex predator sting nets 24 arrests in Lee County
Josue Cardosa arrived at a
house Monday, expecting to meet 14-year-old "Liz," the girl who
posted an online personal ad titled "Get Me Pregnant W4M."
As
Cardosa, 22, of San Carlos Park, would learn after deputies rushed and
handcuffed him, finding a condom in his pocket, "Liz" was an
undercover agent and the real poster of the perversely titled personal.
Cardosa
and two other south Lee County residents were among the 24 men arrested in the past week as part of an online sexual
predator sting disclosed Tuesday by the Lee County Sheriff’s
Office.
Between
May 27 and Monday, investigators say the two dozen men arrived at an
undisclosed location, expecting to meet teenage girls, only to find deputies
ready to make an arrest. Those from south Lee County were Cardosa; 30-year-old
Jose Pacheco, of San Carlos Park; and 20-year-old Caleb Barnhouse, of south
Fort Myers.
Lee
County sheriff’s officials said the sting, three months in the making and
titled "Operation Safe Summer," used
online ads, chat rooms and social media sites to locate men looking for sex
with underage girls. In each case, online and text conversations turned sexual
and a meet-up was arranged. When the men arrived, deputies initiated the
takedown.
"We
not only search for people out there on the streets, but we’re on the Internet,
the phone lines, everywhere we need to be to catch predators," Lee County
sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Dektas said.
Sheriff’s
officials called the online and text messages "very graphic," with
the suspects describing "horrible" acts they intended to commit.
Online
sex stings have become commonplace across the country in recent years, aimed at
taking potential predators offline.
In
October 2012, "Operation Spiderweb" netted 40 arrests, at least 31 of
which resulted in convictions or plea agreements. (Resolutions for two of the
30 cases couldn’t be found.)
Among
those successfully prosecuted: Alain Guevara, of Lehigh Acres, serving a 3 ½
year prison term; Gary Hall, of Cape Coral, scheduled for release from prison
in 2019; and William Nockengost, of Cape Coral, early in a 19-year sentence on
solicitation and attempted sexual battery charges.
But
online sex predators stings haven’t been without legal challenges, evidenced by
the seven men arrested by Lee County deputies in "Operation
Spiderweb" who were acquitted by a jury, had their charges dropped or were
never formally charged.
In
one case, prosecutors dropped charges after it became clear a Collier County
man didn’t know the age of the teen he was supposedly soliciting. In another
case, law enforcement offered to give a defendant gas money to meet them,
leading to accusations of entrapment, a motion to dismiss and, ultimately, the
dropping of charges.
Danielle
O’Halloran, a Fort Myers-based lawyer who represented one of the seven
defendants, said "there were some problems and issues with the police
work" in "Operation Spiderweb" that led to the legal issues.
"Law
enforcement is making a movement to get these sex predators off the street, and
everybody should appreciate that. I appreciate that," O’Halloran said.
"However, you should make sure you’re protecting the rights of people who
aren’t doing anything illegal online. You have to look at these cases very
closely, and I think it’s not as open-and-shut as law enforcement would lead
you to believe."
Lee
County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Tony Schall noted law enforcement’s burden to
make an arrest is probable cause, while prosecutors face the higher burden of
"beyond a reasonable doubt."
"Would
we like to see 100 percent prosecuted? Of course," Schall said. "But
we respect what they move forward with and what they don’t."
Regardless
of legal outcomes, the recent arrests are a reminder of the potential dangers
lurking online, sheriff’s Lt. James Amrich said.
"The
best advice to give is as a parent, you need to monitor what your children are
doing, both on their smartphones and other media devices," Amrich said.
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