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Guilty

Lead admin of child sex abuse website pleads guilty, faces 20 years to life

DOJ: Website had “section devoted to the sexual abuse of infants and toddlers.”

Jon Brodkin | 150
The bars of a jail cell are pictured along with a man's hand turning a key in the lock of the cell door.
Credit: Getty Images | Charles O'Rear
Credit: Getty Images | Charles O'Rear
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A man described as the lead administrator of a child sexual abuse website pleaded guilty to engaging in a child exploitation enterprise and faces a sentence of at least 20 years and possibly life in prison. The website was “dedicated to the advertisement and distribution of images and videos depicting child sexual abuse,” the federal government said.

William Michael Spearman, a 57-year-old from Alabama, pleaded guilty yesterday in US District Court for the Southern District of Florida, the US Department of Justice announced. Four other defendants were previously convicted of crimes related to “their involvement with the same website,” the DOJ said.

“The website included a section devoted to the sexual abuse of infants and toddlers, a section devoted to images and videos depicting children being subjected to pain and torture, and a section devoted to avoiding detection by law enforcement,” the DOJ said. “As the lead administrator, Spearman managed numerous ‘staff’ members, directed them how to help run the site, recommended other users for promotion, kept records of child pornography files advertised and distributed over the site, presided over staff meetings, praised and scolded users, and counseled users and other managers about the function and expectations of the website. Spearman also advertised and distributed images over the website.”

Spearman is scheduled to be sentenced on August 31. He “faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life in prison,” the announcement said.

Website had 100+ registered users

FBI Special Agent David Backlund described details of the case in a November 2022 affidavit. The website—referred to as “target website” in the affidavit—had at least 100 registered members who accessed their accounts with passwords, Backlund wrote.

Website users “traffic in child pornography images and videos via the posting of web links within messages,” the affidavit said. “These links allow a user to navigate to another website, such as a file-hosting website, where images and/or videos were stored in order to download these images and videos. When posting the links, users of the target website also generally include descriptive text that provides information about the sexual acts and age and gender of the child victim depicted in the linked-to child pornography files. The target website provides rules that instruct users to share child pornography in this manner.”

Defendant Selwyn Rosenstein was previously convicted of conspiracy to advertise child pornography, five counts of advertisement of child pornography, and possession of child pornography, the DOJ said. He was sentenced to 28 years in prison and ordered to pay $85,000 in restitution to victims.

Defendants Gregory Good, Robert Boyles, and Matthew Garrell were convicted of conspiracy to advertise child pornography and conspiracy to distribute child pornography. Their sentencing hearings are scheduled for August.

Shared URLs led to sexual abuse images

The FBI found that Spearman “has, on more than three occasions, shared thousands of URL links to child pornography via the target website that were accessible to more than 10 other target website users,” the affidavit said.

The affidavit describes three occasions in which Spearman shared a “collection of links” to images of child sexual abuse, and in each case the affidavit details one of the links from the larger collection. One link allegedly shared by Spearman led to “child pornography files [that] depicted a young girl being sexually abused by an older woman,” the affidavit said.

Another link shared by Spearman led to an album containing 21 images showing prepubescent girls performing sex acts on men, the affidavit said.

Spearman is also said to have shared a link that “redirected to another website that contained 79 images of a known female victim who was estimated to be between the ages of seven and nine at the time of the abuse.”

Home search found laptop and thumb drive

The FBI executed a search warrant at Spearman’s residence in Madison, Alabama, in early November. “During the execution of the search warrant, after being advised of his rights, Spearman admitted to FBI agents that he was the subject user on the target website,” Backlund’s affidavit said. “He stated that he had been on the target website since approximately 2018, had shared child pornography over the site, and had taken steps to manage the site. He also stated that he maintained child pornography on devices in his residence.”

FBI agents searched a laptop in Spearman’s garage and found evidence of Spearman accessing the target website and a related website “that is also dedicated to child sexual exploitation,” the affidavit said. Agents also found a thumb drive containing “a large volume of child pornography,” Backlund wrote.

Spearman’s guilty plea to the count of engaging in a child exploitation enterprise is conditional and could be withdrawn if his pending motion to suppress evidence is granted.

“The defendant’s motion alleged the warrantless seizure of his Internet Protocol address (IP address) and sought to suppress all physical evidence seized and statements as fruit of the poisonous tree as a result of the execution of a search warrant of his residence and person,” according to the plea agreement filed by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida. “This office and the defendant agree that an order suppressing the subject evidence, or an appeal granting such relief, is case dispositive.”

As part of the plea agreement, the US Attorney’s Office agreed to seek dismissal of two of the three counts in the indictment of Spearman. The to-be-dismissed counts are conspiracy to advertise child pornography and conspiracy to distribute child pornography. Still, the plea agreement says the defendant understands that the court must impose a sentence of at least 20 years in prison “and may impose a statutory maximum term of life imprisonment.”

Listing image: Getty Images | Charles O'Rear

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Jon Brodkin Senior IT Reporter
Jon is a Senior IT Reporter for Ars Technica. He covers the telecom industry, Federal Communications Commission rulemakings, broadband consumer affairs, court cases, and government regulation of the tech industry.
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