TRENTON – According to officials, Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced that a man was convicted at trial of distributing explicit images of minors online using a file-sharing network.
He was one of 40 offenders arrested in “Operation Statewide,” an explicit images of minors operation by the New Jersey Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, which includes the New Jersey State Police, Division of Criminal Justice. U.S. Homeland Security Investigations, and numerous state, county, and local law enforcement agencies.
Officials say, John M. Rudy, 57, of Flemington, was found guilty late yesterday, January 14, by a Hunterdon County jury of charges of distribution of 25 or more items of explicit images of minors (2nd degree), storing or maintaining 25 or more items of explicit images of minors using a file-sharing network (2nd degree), and possession of 100 or more items of explicit images of minors (3rd degree).
The verdict followed a trial before Superior Court Judge Angela F. Borkowski. Sentencing for Rudy is scheduled for April 17.
Deputy Attorneys General Supriya Prasad and Thomas Huynh tried the case for the Division of Criminal Justice Financial & Cyber Crimes Bureau, with assistance from the New Jersey State Police Digital Technology Investigations Unit (DTIU) and Technical Assistant Gabrielle Pichler.
The state presented testimony and evidence that Rudy knowingly used file-sharing software to make more than 25 items of explicit images of minors readily available for any other user to download from a shared folder on his computer.
While monitoring a peer-to-peer file-sharing network popular with sex offenders, a detective of the New Jersey State Police DTIU downloaded more than 50 items of explicit images of minors from a shared folder at a computer I.P. address that was subsequently traced to Rudy.
Rudy was arrested on June 9, 2016 when members of the DTIU, assisted by the Hunterdon County Prosecutor’s Office and the Raritan Township Police Department, executed a search warrant at his home and seized numerous devices, including a desktop computer, 97 flash drives, and eight S.D. cards.
Forensic examinations revealed that all of the flash drives and S.D. cards that were functional (all but 10 devices) contained some explicit images of minors, and one included over 100 items of explicit images of minors.
“By sharing explicit images of minors online, this defendant participated in a criminal network that promotes and perpetuates the brutal sexual exploitation of children,” said Attorney General Grewal. “Our multi-agency efforts to patrol the internet and put these offenders in prison reflect our commitment to protect children and ensure justice for those who have been victimized. I commend our attorneys and trial team, as well as all of the detectives and investigators who helped secure this verdict.”
“We will continue to work with the State Police and law enforcement at all levels to disrupt the online market for these vile materials and send those who distribute them to prison,” said Director Veronica Allende of the Division of Criminal Justice. “We are sending a loud and clear message that those who commit these crimes will face serious consequences.”
“The criminals who operate these file-sharing networks online depicting explicit images of minors are no less dangerous than those who peddle narcotics on the street.
Their enterprise thrives on the pain and suffering of the victims and their families, and their deplorable behavior is a scourge on society,” said Colonel Patrick Callahan of the New Jersey State Police.
“We will continue to lead the charge against those who target our children by working cooperatively with our federal, state, and local partners, whose collective resolve to bring child predators to justice is unwavering.”
Operation Statewide was a 2016 multi-agency explicit images of minors sweep coordinated by the New Jersey State Police, as lead agency for the New Jersey ICAC Task Force, which led to arrests of 40 men in 2016, including defendants in every county of New Jersey.
During the operation, investigators linked all of the defendants to the alleged use of the internet to download and distribute explicit images of minors.
Peer to Peer, or P2P, file-sharing networks play a significant role in the distribution of explicit images of minors. There is an extensive library of images and videos known to law enforcement, and these electronic files can be traced in various ways on the internet.
Detectives downloaded explicit images of minors that the defendants allegedly offered from their computers on P2P networks, tracing the files to their origin locations.
The file-sharing networks used by offenders to distribute explicit images of minors. Operate in the same manner as websites used for privately sharing music or movies. Those in possession of illegal images can make them available on computers that they control for others to download.
Because many of these videos and photos of explicit images of minors keep recirculating, they result in the perpetual re-victimization of the children who were sexually assaulted or abused to produce them.