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Man Who Abused Young Girl Sentenced to 25 Years in
Federal Prison for Producing Child Pornography
Federal Prison Sentence to Run Consecutively to 16-Year State Prison Term
An Ecuadorian citizen who lived in Los Angeles was sentenced today to 25 years
in federal prison for producing and possessing child pornography, a sentence that will
run consecutively to a 16-year term the defendant received in state court for sexually
abusing a young girl.
Freddy Paz, 46, who lived in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles, was
sentenced by United States District Judge John F. Walter, who called Paz a “monster.”
Paz pleaded guilty earlier this year to several federal criminal charges, admitting
that he took digital photographs and videos of a young girl as she posed nude and
engaged in sex with Paz. The abuse started when the girl was 9 and continued until she
was 11. Paz had access to the victim over a two-year period because he often babysat
for the victim and her younger brother while their mother was at work.
In 2006, Paz was convicted in Los Angeles Superior Court of continuous sexual
abuse of a child under 14 and was sentenced to 16 years in state prison. Because Paz
made multiple videos and took approximately 1,700 pictures that depicted his on-going
sexual abuse of the victim – and because he possessed more than 7,000 pornographic
photos of other children – the Justice Department authorized the filing of federal
charges in 2007. On May 14, 2009, Paz pleaded guilty to production of child
pornography, receipt of child pornography and possession of child pornography.
As a result of his guilty pleas, Paz faced a mandatory minimum sentence of 15
years in prison and a maximum sentence of 60 years. When Judge Walter issued the
25-year sentence, he specifically said that this would run consecutive to the 16-year
term handed down by the state court, meaning that Paz has received a cumulative
sentence of 41 years in the state and federal cases.
The case against Paz was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
and the Los Angeles Police Department.
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