How Could You?Hall of Shame-Group Home Worker Taylor Ray Freeman UPDATED

By on 2-06-2017 in Arizona, Group Homes, How could you? Hall of Shame, Taylor Ray Freeman, TMM Family Services

How Could You?Hall of Shame-Group Home Worker Taylor Ray Freeman UPDATED

This will be an archive of heinous actions by those involved in child welfare, foster care and adoption. We forewarn you that these are deeply disturbing stories that may involve sex abuse, murder, kidnapping and other horrendous actions.

From Tucson, Arizona, a “group foster home worker has been arrested on federal charges of distributing child pornography, records show.

Taylor Ray Freeman, 27, was booked into the Pima County jail on Jan. 10 and spent less than 24 hours in custody before being extradited by federal authorities to an undisclosed location, said Deputy Cody Gress, a Pima County Sheriff’s Department spokesman.

In a Dec. 27 online chat, Freeman, using the screen name “AMERICANPSYCHO06,” told an undercover police officer in Australia that he had a “sexual interest in children,” and said he had “naughty” pictures to trade, according to a complaint filed in federal court here.

 Freeman emailed the officer a photo of an underage girl on a bed with her genitalia exposed, and made obscene comments about what he’d like to do to her, the complaint shows.

Agents with Homeland Security Investigations tracked the email to his computer and on Jan. 10 a federal warrant was served at his home. Agents seized a smart phone, an internal hard drive, revealing photos and videos depicting child pornography, according to the complaint. It said Freeman told investigators he used his email address to send and receive pornography.

Freeman was arrested by the sheriff’s department that day and held in jail until he could be transferred to federal custody, Gress said.

On Jan. 11, U.S. Magistrate Judge Bernardo P. Velasco signed a detention order, saying Freeman would remain in federal detention until his trial. Velasco accepted the recommendation of Pretrial Services, which said there was a “serious risk” Freeman wouldn’t appear at trial, the order shows.

Arizona Department of Child Safety records show Freeman was hired in 2013 by local nonprofit TMM Family Services, which provides social services outreach. TMM’s executive director, Donald Strauch, did not immediately respond to the Star’s inquiry as to whether Freeman had contact with children.

TMM provides shelter services for up to 38 children ages 3 to 17, according to an Arizona Department of Economic Security license issued in 2011.”

Tucson foster-home worker is facing federal child-porn charges[Tucson.com 2/1/17 by Caitlyn Schmidt]

REFORM Puzzle Piece

Update: “A former employee at a Tucson foster group home will be spending the next eight years in prison and be subjected to state supervision for the rest of his life, a federal judge ruled Monday.

Taylor Ray Freeman, 28, was arrested last February after he told an undercover police officer in Australia that he was sexually interested in children and had explicit photos available for trade.

Freeman sent an image to the officer, and Homeland Security agents traced it back to his Tucson home, arresting him on federal charges of distribution and possession of child pornography.

In June, he accepted a plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, which agreed to drop the distribution charge if Freeman pleaded guilty to the two counts of possession.

Freeman was facing prison time ranging from 60 to 136 months.

In court Monday, U.S. District Court Judge James Soto said authorities downloaded more than 440 images and videos from Freeman’s computer and cellphone.

While his attorney, Nicki DiCampli, said she was not objecting to the term recommendation by Adult Probation Services, she said she didn’t find the calculation reasonable.

“No one can dispute that those images are horrendous, and no child should be put through that,” DiCampli said “The maximum sentence seems unreasonable based on the plea and who my client was.”

DiCampli argued that Freeman had no criminal history and supported his ex-girlfriend and their young son.

Freeman had an addiction to pornography that resulted in his becoming desensitized to the explicit images of children that would “pop up” on his computer when he accessed regular pornography sites, DiCampli said.

Freeman’s court-ordered psychosexual exam determined that he was at a moderate level to re-offend, DiCampli said.

“He’s not trying to blame anyone else. He made these choices,” she said.

“But he needed help.”

Freeman also addressed Soto, his shoulders hunched over as he spoke into the microphone, taking long pauses between each sentence.

“I’m disturbed by my own actions and I’m ashamed,” he said. “I was just so lost.”

Soto’s brow was furrowed throughout Freeman’s statement, during which he wavered between accepting responsibility and detaching himself from the situation.

“None of it was real at the time. I was falling into this fictional pattern and detaching from it,” he said. “I never want to be put in this situation again.”

Soto interjected. “Let’s be clear. You put yourself into the situation,” he said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Carin Duryee said Freeman was not an unintelligent guy and that it seemed like he was saying things that might be the right things to say.

“But he misses the point,” Duryee said. “He’s sexually interested in young girls and I don’t hear responsibility for that yet.”

Duryee said Freeman told his girlfriend that he was posing as a predator to conduct his own investigations, and referenced emails Freeman sent to the undercover police officer in which he talked about his attraction to several young girls under his care in the group home. Freeman also sent the officer nonsexual photos of the girls he described, Duryee said.

His seeking employment around young children, especially a job that required him to live in the group home 24 hours a day, sets him apart from most defendants, who try to avoid temptation, Duryee said.

“If you’re trying to stay away from chocolate, you don’t go work in a chocolate shop,” she said.

Soto sentenced Freeman to 97 months in prison and imposed 16 special conditions recommended in the pre-sentencing report, which included providing a DNA sample, being placed on the state’s sex-offender registry, polygraphs to determine if he’s compliant in his probation, sex-offender treatment, no use of social networking sites or computers with internet access and no contact with children except his own.

Freeman was also ordered to pay $9,000 in restitution — $3,000 per victim — which he’ll begin paying while he’s in prison at the rate of $25 every three months.

Freeman was hired in 2013 by local nonprofit TMM Family Services, according to Arizona Department of Child Safety records.”

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