Big
Spring, Texas, Man Sentenced to Nearly 14 Years
in Federal Prison, Without Parole, on Child Porn
Conviction
LUBBOCK,
Texas - Wendell Joe Angel, 53, of Big Spring, Texas,
was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Sam R.
Cummings to 165 months in federal prison following
his guilty plea in September to one count of interstate
receipt of child pornography, announced U.S. Attorney
Richard B. Roper of the Northern District of Texas.
Judge Cummings also ordered that Angel serve a lifetime
of supervised release.
According to documents filed in the case, Angel
admitted that in the early part of 2007, he became
interested in child pornography. He began using
the peer-to-peer software file sharing program,
Limewire, to download music and eventually started
using the program to download adult, then child,
pornography. He admits that although he never intentionally
traded child pornography with anyone, he was aware
that Limewire was a file sharing program and that
others could view and download material saved in
his Limewire library. Besides using Limewire to
view and obtain child pornography, Angel accessed
the material using a "lolita bbs" link
on the excite.com website.
Wendell Joe Angel admitted downloading sexually
explicit images of girls who were 10-years-old or
older. He transferred the child pornography images
and video files he downloaded from the Internet
onto CDs that he stored in a locked gun safe in
his residence.
In August 2007, a Special Agent with the FBI conducted
a keyword search for child pornography images using
a peer-to-peer software and downloaded 18 images
of child pornography. It was determined that these
images were downloaded from Angel's computer in
Big Spring, Texas. Two months later, an undercover
police officer, conducting the same keyword search,
downloaded additional images of child pornography,
again determining the source of the images was from
a computer located at Angel's residence. On April
22, 2008, a search warrant was executed at Angel's
residence. He was shown all of the images and he
identified them as images he had downloaded from
the Internet onto his home computer.
This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood,
a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic
of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched
in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by
United States Attorneys' Offices and the Criminal
Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section
(CEOS), Project Safe Childhood marshals federal,
state and local resources to better locate, apprehend
and prosecute individuals who exploit children via
the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue
victims. For more information about Project Safe
Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov.
U.S. Attorney Roper commended the investigative
efforts of the FBI and the Howard County District
Attorneys Office. The case was prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Steven M. Sucsy of the Lubbock, Texas,
U.S. Attorney's Office.
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