PREACHER, A REGISTERED SEX OFFENDER, ARRESTED ON 500 COUNTS OF CHILD …

CRIME

Detectives served a search warrant at his home.

A minister and registered sex offender has been arrested on 500 counts of child pornography possession.

Charles Calvin Andrews, 66, of Englewood, was arrested Tuesday. Detectives first started investigating him after an IP address was linked to child porn downloads.

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office said detectives executed a search warrant at his home. They claim Andrews had downloaded more than 500 images to his computer, including at least 50 that investigators say depicted sexual battery of a child.

A probable cause affidavit filed in Sarasota County lists Andrews as a preacher at Osprey Church of Christ in Osprey, Fla. 10News attempted to reach the church twice by phone, but the line would not connect. We have contacted the church by email and will update this story if we get a response.

According to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Andrews is a registered sex offender with a prior sexual abuse conviction from 2006 in Alabama.

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Source: https://www.13wmaz.com/mobile/article/news/crime/preacher-a-registered-sex-offender-arrested-on-500-counts-of-child-porn/67-f939fe30-3f0c-4da3-b4be-f097ea212117

GA. SUPREME COURT OVERTURNS SEX OFFENDER’S CONVICTION FOR FAILING TO …

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The state supreme court overturned the conviction of a sex offender who failed to register his address when he moved from Houston to Bibb County.

The court ruled that the original indictment against Prentiss Jackson was faulty and incomplete.

According to a court summary of the case, Jackson pleaded guilty to statutory rape in 2004.

He registered his address in Houston County, as required by law, the court says.

Under the state’s sex offender registry, if he moves to a new county he has to notify sheriff’s in both counties of his new address.

In 2011, Houston County officers could not locate Jackson at his Warner Robins address and learned that he’d moved to Macon.

Jackson’s lawyers argued, and the state court agreed, that the indictment stated only that he had failed to register. It didn’t state that he failed to notify the Bibb and Houston sheriff’s when he moved.

The indictment is void because it failed to describe the crime Jackson was actually accused of.

The state appeals court ruled against Jackson, but the Georgia Supreme Court says it ruled unanimously in his favor.

In 2012, Jackson received a 30-year sentence for failing to register, with six years to serve in prison. According to state Department of Corrections records, he’s served four years of that term.

Here is the state Supreme Court summary of the case:

JACKSON V. THE STATE (S16G0888)

A man currently serving a 30-year sentence for failing to register as a sex offender – with the first six years of his sentence behind bars – has had his conviction and sentence reversed under a decision today by the Supreme Court of Georgia.

In a unanimous opinion, written by Justice Robert Benham, the high court finds that the indictment was insufficient and defective because it failed to inform him of the “essential elements” of the crime with which he was being charged.

To withstand a legal challenge, “an indictment must: (1) recite the language of the statute that sets out all the elements of the offense charged, or (2) allege the facts necessary to establish violation of a criminal statute,” the opinion says. “In this case, however, neither of these methods for creating a legally sufficient indictment was followed.”

According to the facts of the case, in June 2004, Prentiss Ashon Jackson pleaded guilty to one count of Statutory Rape. Under Georgia Code § 42-1-12, as a convicted sex offender, Jackson was required to register with the sexual offender registry, which he did, listing an address in Houston County where he lived in Warner Robins. Jackson knew that under state law, if he planned to move from that address, he had to register his new address within 72 hours prior to any change. Under subsection (f) (5) of § 42-1-12, if one moves to another county, the law requires him to register not only within the allotted time with the sheriff where he last registered but also with the sheriff in the county where he is moving.

In June 2011, Houston County officers were unable to contact Jackson at his Warner Robins address. They subsequently learned he had moved to Macon in Bibb County and was living with his girlfriend. Jackson had not registered the new address and was arrested in January 2012. At a preliminary hearing, he said he had moved to Macon because his home in Warner Robins had no electricity or water, according to briefs filed in the case.

In the indictment, a Houston County grand jury charged Jackson with “failure to register as a sex offender,” stating in the indictment that Jackson “did fail to register his change of address with the Houston County Sheriff’s Office within 72 hours of the change as required under Official Code of Georgia Annotated § 42-1-12.” During trial, Jackson’s defense attorney made an oral motion asking the court to direct a verdict in his favor, arguing the indictment was defective because it failed to allege that Jackson was a convicted sex offender and that he was required to register under the statute. The trial judge denied his motion. In June 2012, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of failing to register as a sex offender, and Jackson was sentenced to 30 years, to serve six in prison without the possibility of parole and the remaining 24 years on probation. Jackson appealed to the Court of Appeals, which concluded that the indictment was not “fatally defective” because it charged Jackson with violating a specific penal statute and incorporated the terms of the Code section “Because the evidence supported Jackson’s conviction, the trial court properly denied his motion for a directed verdict,” the appellate court ruled. Jackson then appealed to the state Supreme Court, which agreed to review the case to determine whether the Court of Appeals erred in finding that Jackson’s indictment was not defective.

In today’s opinion, the high court finds the Court of Appeals erred and has reversed its judgment.

The problem with the Court of Appeals’ reasoning “is that the indictment referenced the entire multi-part, 14-page Code section, which includes numerous requirements with which a convicted sexual offender must comply,” the opinion says. “The indictment merely asserted that appellant failed to register a change of address with the Houston County sheriff’s office within 72 hours of that change of address as required by § 42-1-12. But even subsection (f) (5), which sets out the steps that must be followed to update a sexual offender’s registration, contains multiple requirements.”

In its 2010 opinion in Henderson v. Hames, the Georgia Supreme Court restated the longstanding principle that, “An indictment is void to the extent that it fails to allege all the essential elements of the crime or crimes charged.” “That principle is founded upon the constitutional guaranty of due process.”

As authority for its assertion that Jackson’s indictment was not deficient, the State relied on the Court of Appeals’ 2008 opinion in Shabazz v. State and its 1990 opinion in State v. Howell, which stated that as long as an indictment charges that the accused’s acts violated a specific penal statute, it will withstand a challenge that it is defective “despite the omission of an essential element of the charged offense.”

However, today’s opinion says that withstanding such a challenge “requires more than simply alleging the accused violated a certain statute. Accordingly, Howell and Shabazz are overruled, along with later opinions relying on these two cases, to the extent they hold that an indictment alleging merely that the accused’s acts were in violation of a specified criminal Code section is not defective.”

“Further, such an indictment would not provide the accused with due process of law in that it would not notify the accused of what factual allegations he must defend in court,” the opinion says. “Likewise, it would not allege sufficient facts from which a trial jury could determine guilt if those facts are shown at trial.” Here, the indictment states that Jackson’s offense was, “failure to register as a sex offender.” But Jackson did not fail to register as required by § 42-1-12; he failed to update his registration with his change of address and follow the requirements to do so. “In other words, the indictment does not inform the accused of what alleged action or inaction would constitute a violation of even subsection (f) (5) of the Code section, which subsection was not even referenced in the indictment.”

In conclusion, the indictment “did not recite a sufficient portion of the statute to set out all the elements of the offense for which he was tried and convicted,” the opinion says. “Likewise, the indictment did not allege all the facts necessary to establish a violation of subsection (f) (5) of § 42-1-12.”

“Only if additional factual allegations had been asserted in the indictment would it be clear what acts or omissions the grand jury had found probable cause to believe the appellant had committed, and what acts or omissions the trial jury would be required to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that appellant had committed in order to find him guilty as charged.”

Attorney for Appellant (Jackson): Russell Walker

Attorneys for Appellee (State): George Hartwig, III, District Attorney, Marie Banks, Asst. D.A.

Source: https://www.13wmaz.com/mobile/article/news/local/ga-supreme-court-overturns-sex-offenders-conviction-for-failing-to-register/439754373

Loophole allows sex offenders to evade registration | 11alive.com, Feb 5, 2015 … “This is a sex offender who has fallen between the cracks,” said Vernon Keenan, the Director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the agency …

11Alive tracks down a sex offender that had failed to register to expose the loophole that let him get away with it.

ATLANTA — When a civilian is convicted of something as heinous as rape or child molestation, under the Adam Walsh Act, they are to be fingerprinted, have their DNA taken and name added to the sex offender registry before being released from prison. But in the military it’s an honor system – ironically for those who’ve already proven dishonorable.

When 11Alive’s Rebecca Lindstrom typed in the name Basil Kingsberry, he was nowhere to be found. According to court documents, Kingsberry is an army specialist convicted of rape and forcible sodomy while serving oversees. His crime legally requires him to register.

“This is a sex offender who has fallen between the cracks,” said Vernon Keenan, the Director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the agency responsible for maintaining the statewide registry.

When a sex offender is released from a military prison, the Department of Defense asks where they plan to go, then sends that community a letter. There’s little oversight to make sure that they do. Kingsberry told the military he was headed to Mississippi, but ended up in Georgia instead.

The GBI says the military’s paperwork was confusing and led them to believe his conviction had been set aside – or overturned.

“Two occasions we asked the military to provide us with further documentation regarding his offense and conviction,” explained Keenan. “We did not receive any additional paperwork from the military.”

As a result, the GBI told Kingsberry he did not need to register.

It’s a nationwide problem. In August, the Inspector General released a report, confirming the military was following the law, but noted, its inability to register sex offenders enabled them to evade registration. According to the military’s own data, approximately 40% of its inmates require sex offender registration. But the US Marshal Service says it found in a review of 193 people released in 2013, as many as 35 of them had failed to do so.

The Department of Defense isn’t breaking any laws. The military isn’t required or even able to register a sex offender, but there are some lawmakers who say it’s time for that to change.

California Congresswoman Jackie Speier is a member of the House Armed Services committee. She plans to introduce a bill that would treat military sex offenders the same as the rest of us.

“To require everyone before they’re released from military prison to be fingerprinted, to have their DNA taken and to be identified as a sexual predator,” said Speier.

And Georgia Congressman Hank Johnson has asked to co-sponsor it.

“We are producing victims, often children. I think we must have some clear cut guidelines to protect the public from sexual predators,” said Johnson.

Because Kingsberry isn’t the only one living under the radar. Just in Georgia, there’s Steven Lucas, who according to court records, was convicted of having sex with a 14-year old family member while serving at Moody Air Force base. We also learned about a man named Charles Caley who, according to the same military records, used sexually explicit pictures of children to “gratify his lust.”

“What has really distressed me is how willing the military has been not to hold people accountable who commit violent felonies,” said Speier.

The Department of Defense would not comment on pending legislation, but did issue a written statement regarding the IG’s report. In it a spokesperson Nate Christensen said:

The Department takes this issue very seriously and categorically does not condone the heinous behavior of convicted sexual offenders; that behavior simply has no place has no place in our military or society. While the Department fully complies with existing law requirements under the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), we recognize that due to jurisdictional issues there are gaps in former military members actually reporting to the appropriate state sex offender registry post release from the Military Service or Military Prison.

That is why we are in the process of developing Department-wide policy and a partnership with the United States Marshals Service which will ensure that convicted sex-offenders fully comply with the law, as it is intended.

We went looking for Kingsberry, retracing his steps and talking with family. According to Kingsberry’s Facebook page he attended Chattahoochee Tech in Marietta — a rapist, among students, with no one the wiser.

He was convicted in Fulton County for soliciting an undercover officer for sex and in October, was arrested in South Carolina for assault and battery.

To get us to stop digging, Kingsberry gave us a call. Kingsberry didn’t want to talk on camera, but did promise to register. A few hours later, we found his name, where many say it should have been all along — on Georgia’s sex offender registry.

The GBI admits they had no idea Kingsberry was back in Georgia and law enforcement in DeKalb County says it wasn’t even looking for him. They were all grateful though for his phone call that day, asking if he could register.

The GBI says this is very much a public safety issue that needs a national solution. Keenan says in Georgia, the only government page with more public views than the sex offender registry – is the winning numbers from the lottery.

Source: https://www.11alive.com/article/news/loophole-allows-sex-offenders-to-evade-registration/132211379

Convicted Felon Imprisoned For Not Registering As A Sex Offender

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A former Columbus, Georgia resident and convicted sex offender who moved out of state and failed to register as a sex offender with local authorities was sentenced to prison for breaking the law, said Charlie Peeler, the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia. John Corriher, 54, of Salisbury, North Carolina was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Clay Land on Tuesday, May 19, 2020 to 34 months in prison and five years supervised release for failing to register as a sex offender, a federal offense. There is no parole in the federal system.

“All convicted sex offenders are required by law to register as a sex offender with the appropriate registration officials each and every time they move. Failure to do so is a federal crime and will result in prosecution by this office,” said U.S. Attorney Charlie Peeler. “I want to thank the Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office and the United States Marshals Service for tracking down the whereabouts of this offender and for their excellent work investigating the case.”

Corriher was convicted in Florida of unlawful sexual activity with certain minors in February 2001. Following his conviction, he eventually settled in Columbus and registered annually as a sex offender through the Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) from November 2010 through April 2016. Following his last registration, the defendant absconded. In February 2017, an arrest warrant was taken out by MSCO for failure to register as a state sex offender. The investigation was turned over to the United States Marshals Service (USMS) when Corriher was found to be living in Salisbury, North Carolina, where he did not register as a sex offender. He was apprehended by USMS on March 18, 2019.

The case was investigated by the USMS and the MCSO. Assistant U.S. Attorney Crawford Seals prosecuted the case for the Government.

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Source: https://allongeorgia.com/georgia-public-safety/convicted-felon-imprisoned-for-not-registering-as-a-sex-offender/

Man sentenced to prison in child molestation case

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FORT VALLEY, Georgia (41NBC/WMGT) –A 52-year-old man was sentenced to prison Wednesday in the August, 2018, molestation of a 13-year-old girl at a Fort Valley home.

Larry Tennyson Senior, pleaded guilty to three counts of child molestation and another related charge during a hearing in Peach County Superior Court. A judge sentenced him to serve 45 years. Tennyson must serve the first 25 years in prison. After his release he must abide by sex offender terms of probation.

If the case had gone to trial, the prosecutor would have presented evidence that Tennyson’s DNA was found on the girl’s body. The testing was performed after the molestation was reported. Other witness testimony also would have corroborated the girl’s account of the events.

Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/10/17/man-sentenced-prison-child-molestation-case/

Macon man pleads guilty to molesting 5-year-old, 25-year prison sentence

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MACON, Georgia (41NBC/WMGT) – A  judge sentenced a Macon man to prison after he pleaded guilty to molesting a 5-year-old. This comes from district attorney David Cooke’s office.

According to the news release, Lowe pleaded guilty to multiple counts of child molestation during a hearing on Aug. 6.

A Bibb County Superior Court judge sentenced 43-year-old Larry Lowe Jr. of Macon man to 40 years. Lowe must serve the first 25 years in prison.   

After Lowe’s release, he must abide by sex offender terms of probation.

Prosecutor’s evidence

According to the news release, prosecutors were prepared to show the following evidence if the case went to trial: 

  • Between Jan. 2010 and Sept. 2016, Lowe engaged in sex acts with a 5-year-old girl.
  • The law enforcement investigation started in 2016 after adults became aware of the molestation. 
  • The girl disclosed details of the sexual abuse during a forensic interview.

The news release says that prosecutors also had evidence showing Lowe molested another young girl (now an adult) when she was about 5-years-old.

Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/08/07/child-molestation-sentence/

Rapist sentenced to 30 years in prison for assault on 16-year-old girl

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MACON, Georgia (41NBC/WMGT) – A Riverdale man pleaded guilty to rape in Bibb County Superior Court on Thursday. This comes about a year after his arrest on allegations of kidnapping a teenage girl in Coweta County. 

 According to a news release from the Macon DA’s office, a judge sentenced 23-year-old Adrian J. Garcia-Zamarroon to 30 years in prison. After his release, he must abide by sex offender terms of probation for the remainder of his life. 

The Incident

If the case had gone to trial, prosecutors were prepared to present the following:

  • Garcia-Zamarroon and the girl, then 16, knew each other
  • On Aug. 24, 2018, Garcia-Zamarroon went to a Newnan business where the girl and her family worked. While there, Garcia-Zamarroon stabbed four people with a knife before kidnapping the girl 
  • Garcia-Zamarroon drove south on I-75 until the car ran out of gas in Monroe County. Still armed with a knife, Garcia-Zamarroon walked with the girl to a vacant house on Rivoli Road near the Bibb-Monroe County line
  • Garcia-Zamarroon raped the girl and threatened her life
  • Authorities found the car on the interstate and later saw Garcia-Zamarroon and the girl walking on Rivoli Road on Aug. 25, 2018. Deputies arrested Garcia-Zamarroon

Garcia-Zamarroon still faces charges in Coweta County and charges filed by the U.S. District Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia.

Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/08/01/320663/

Crimestoppers tip leads to arrest of one Top Most Wanted

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MACON, Georgia (41NBC/WMGT) – Bibb County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a Crimestoppers tip that led to the arrest of one of the Top 15 Most Wanted. 

Deputies say they received a tip that 32-year-old Kenon Mekeal Newbill was at a house on the 1100 block of Rocky Creek Road.

Authorities say as deputies approached the house, they noticed 55-year-old Andre Byron Newbill pull a gun out of his pocket. That’s when deputies drew their weapons.

Authorities say that deputies instructed Andre to put the gun down and he did. Deputies then arrested Andre without incident. 

Authorities say that they checked Andre and found that he was a felon.

Later, deputies say they entered the house and arrested Kenon without incident.

The charges

Deputies took Andre to the Bibb County Jail and charged him with the following:

  • Possession of a Firearm by a Felon
  • Carrying a Concealed Firearm

Authorities set Andre’s bond at $8,670.00.

Deputies took Kenon to the Bibb County Jail and charged him with the following:

  • Violation of Probation per a warrant
  • Failure to Register as a Sex Offender per a warrant

Authorities set Kenon’s bond at $11,200.00. 

Anyone with information 

If you have any information about this incident, call the Bibb County Sheriff’s Office at 478-751-7500. You can also call Macon Regional Crimestoppers at 1-877-68CRIME.

Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/06/28/crimestoppers-tip-top-most-wanted/

Perry man receives 20 year prison sentence for child pornography

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Home Bibb County Perry man receives 20 year prison sentence for child pornography

Brian Moody Ansley

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PERRY, Georgia (41NBC/WMGT) – A Houston Superior Court judge sentenced 23-year-old Brian Moody Ansley of Perry to 20 years in prison.

This is according to a news release from the Houston County DA.

The judge gave the sentence on June 21th following a June 17th guilty plea to five counts of Sexual Exploitation of Children (possession of child pornography).  

The news release also says that Ansley must adhere to sex offender conditions of probation. This requires him to register as a sex offender after his prison release.

Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/06/24/perry-man-child-pornography/

Macon man sentenced to prison for child molestation, pleaded guilty

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MACON, Georgia – The Bibb County Superior Court judge sentenced a Macon man to prison after he pleaded guilty to molesting a 4-year-old girl in 2016.

According to a Macon D.A. news release, a judge sentenced 31-year-old Dexter Jarrod Burnett to 20 years in prison.

After his release, Burnett must serve the sex offender conditions of probation. Burnett pleaded guilty to child molestation during a hearing in Bibb County Superior Court.

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Source: https://41nbc.com/2019/05/13/child-molestation-pleaded-guilty/