St. Louis – from globe-democrat.com – David P. Hawkey, 24, of Florissant was sentenced to 72 months in prison last Thursday, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Hawkey was reportedly caught up in an undercover sting investigating subjects who attempt to purchase children, or their services, for commercial sex.
Hawkey, 24, of Florissant, pleaded guilty last December to two felony counts of using interstate facilities to commit the crime of attempting to obtain a minor for the purposes of committing a commercial sex act.
According to court documents:
* On July 27, 2009, officers received an email in response to an internet advertisement that had been placed by law enforcement working in the undercover capacity. The advertisement indicated that young females of an indeterminate age were available. The e-mail was from Hawkey inquiring about the age and price for the girls. The undercover officer informed Hawkey that he had a 16-year-old girl and a 14-year-old girl and each was $80 for a half hour and $160 for an hour, or $300 for both. Hawkey replied that he wanted the “younger one,” and requested nude pictures of the girl. Hawkey further indicated that he wanted full service, which is a term that is used to denote sexual intercourse. Hawkey was given a telephone number to make further arrangements. The undercover agent and Hawkey arranged to meet at a location in St. Louis County. Hawkey paid the undercover agent in cash and was arrested by the FBI, St. Louis County Police and Maryland Heights Police.
“Even in the heartland of America, children are being forced into prostitution,” said Mike Kaste, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI St. Louis Division. “That’s why the FBI and its partners are proactively catching child predators in undercover stings before they destroy a child.”
from www.sltoday.com -David P. Hawkey, 24, one of three men arrested in an underage sex sting last summer, was sentenced Thursday in federal court to six years in prison. The FBI had used Craigslist online ads to lure adults looking for sex with young girls. Hawkey, of Florissant, pleaded guilty in December of using interstate commerce for a commercial sex act. In exchange for the plea, prosecutors dropped a sex trafficking charge that carries a 10-year mandatory minimum. Prosecutors said Hawkey had agreed to pay $80 for sex with a 14-year-old girl. Another of the men charged, Matthew S. Nichol, 44, of St. Charles County, previously pleaded guilty and was sentenced to six years in prison. The third defendant, the Rev. James Patrick Grady, 58, then-pastor of St. Raphael the Archangel Church in south St. Louis, has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled for trial next month.
