Two Bridgeport Men Among 14 Arrested In FBI Undercover Operation

Fairview Heights, Ill. – U.S. Attorney Steven D. Weinhoeft and FBI Special Agent in Charge Sean M. Cox announced today that 14 men have been federally charged for attempting to engage in sexual activity with minors. The cases are the result of an FBI led operation involving multiple federal and state law enforcement agencies that targeted online predators attempting to meet minors for sex. Over 50 law enforcement agents were involved in the operation.

U.S. Attorney Steven Weinhoeft said, “Instead of lurking on playgrounds, modern predators hide behind electronic devices using social media and texting apps to access young children.” Weinhoeft continued, “Serious dangers are no further away than a child’s cell phone or tablet, and we strongly urge parents to monitor their children’s online activity, be aware of who their children are talking with, and have conversations about how to stay safe online.”

SAC Cox echoed those remarks: “Over this past weekend, FBI Agents from Springfield and St. Louis partnered with law enforcement to conduct an operation to identify child predators. These are some of the most difficult, and yet the most important, investigations we work with our partners to make a positive impact in our communities and protect our children. In today’s world, children have a much larger presence on social media platforms than they had in the past, which places them at far greater risk of becoming a victim to online sexual predators. These arrests should serve as a reminder to parents everywhere of the importance of monitoring the computer usage of their children and staying active in their lives.”

During the two-day operation, undercover agents pretended to be minors in a variety of online texting, social media and message board platforms and apps. All of the defendants contacted these profiles online, engaged in sexually explicit discussions with the undercover agents and arrived at a residence with the intent to engage in sexual acts with minors. Some of the defendants also propositioned the undercover agents to send them pornographic photos, traveled across state lines for the purpose of illicit sexual activity with a minor, and/or offered to pay money to engage in sexual activity with a minor. All of the defendants were arrested after arriving at the undercover residence. Several defendants arrived with items intended for the fictitious minors, including alcohol, sex toys, lubricant, condoms, methamphetamine, and in one case, a dog leash and a dog collar with the name of the undercover profile engraved on it. No actual minors were harmed.

All of the defendants were charged by criminal complaint between June 28-29, 2020. U.S. Attorney Weinhoeft said, “Sex trafficking and child exploitation continue to impact our communities, and we will aggressively enforce the law against those who would prey upon children.” The identities of the 14 men who were charged in the East St. Louis Division of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois, as well as their charges, are set out in the table below:

Name Age City Charges

Brett Brimberry 28 Glen Carbon, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Richard L. Britt 38 Granite City, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor; Interstate Travel to Engage in Illicit Sexual Conduct

Urich Gaines 32 Belleville, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Kayln E. Hoggat 27 Bridgeport, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor; Attempted Production of Child Pornography

Kevin Kamler 30 O’Fallon, MO Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Brian Lotz 56 Collinsville, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Anthony Parrish 33 Swansea, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Philip M. Reis 55 O’Fallon, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Gerald S. Sewell 56 Belleville, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor; Interstate Travel to Engage in Illicit Sexual Conduct

James R. Sears 35 Bridgeport, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Travis Shubert 29 Granite City, IL Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Preston Thomas 57 St. Louis, MO Attempted Enticement of a Minor

Nicholas Wright 35 O’Fallon, MO Attempted Enticement of a Minor; Interstate Travel to Engage in Illicit Sexual Conduct; Attempted Sex Trafficking of a Child

Vallie F. Zeller 43 St. Louis, MO Attempted Enticement of a Minor; Interstate Travel to Engage in Illicit Sexual Conduct; Attempted Production of Child Pornography

Between June 29-July 1, 2020, all 14 defendants will have an initial appearance in front of United States Magistrate Judges Mark Beatty or Gilbert Sison at the federal courthouse in East St. Louis. Each of the offenses is alleged to have occurred in Madison County, Illinois. If convicted, the defendants each face a minimum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and could receive as much as life behind bars. The offenses also carry a possible lifetime term of supervised release and fines of up to $250,000.

Pending trial, all 14 defendants will be held without bond or released on electronic monitoring and other strict conditions mandated by the Adam Walsh Act.

A complaint is merely a charge against a defendant. Under the law, a defendant is presumed to be innocent of the charge until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt to the satisfaction of a jury.

These cases fall under the umbrella of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. Led by the United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who sexually exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.usdoj.gov/psc. For more information about internet safety education, please visit www.usdoj.gov/psc and click on the tab “resources.”

The investigation was led by the FBI-Springfield Division, with the assistance of the FBISt. Louis Division, U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, the Belleville Police Department, the Collinsville Police Department, the Edwardsville Police Department, the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, the Illinois State Police, the Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville Police Department, the St. Louis County Police Department, the Swansea Police Department, and the United States Secret Service. Additional assistance was provided by the United States Marshals Service, the Alton Jail, the Monroe County Jail, and the St. Clair County Jail. The 14 defendants’ cases will be prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Chris Hoell, Ali Burns, Karelia Rajagopal, and Laura Reppert.

Jobless Rate Drops To 18.1% In Wabash County

As more businesses opened up last month, the unemployment rate in Wabash County dropped from one of the highest levels ever recorded in April. In May, the Wabash County dropped to 18.1%, down from the 24.5% mark the previous month. The jobless rate in May of 2019 was 3.3%.

According to the Ilinois Department of Employment Security, employment gains in the area were posted in government, trade, transportation, and utilities, and information. Employment losses were reported in the manufacturing, leisure and hospitality, construction, professional and business services, and financial activities.

Wabash County had the highest jobless rate in May in the Mt. Carmel-Olney area and the third highest in all of southern Illinois where the highest rate was 19.1% in Franklin County and the lowest was in Richland County at 11.5%.

Mayor Urges Masks For Fantastic 4th Weekend

A big crowd is expected to be in Mt. Carmel this weekend for the Fantastic 4th celebration and while other parts of the country are showing signs of COVID-19 spiking, Mayor Joe Judge doesn’t want that happening here. At last night’s City Council meeting, Judge urged everyone attending the various events this week to mask up…

The highlight of the weekend is the fireworks Saturday night as Riverview Stadium will be open to the public for viewing…with some restrictions. Judge said various rows of the stadium will be cordoned off from spectators as IDPH guidance allows for multiple groups of 50 people or more as long as there is appropriate distancing among those groups….

Mt. Carmel is one of a handful of communities in the Tri-State that is going ahead with fireworks on the 4th as many others have cancelled or postponed their shows because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Judge said another change this weekend is Rotary Corn Day on Sunday which this year will be a drive-thru only event. But don’t think about getting a head start and showing up early as Judge said the road to the Mabel Courter Youth Center where the meals will be available won’t even open until 10:30 Sunday morning.

Spectators will not be allowed in the highlighted rows for the 4th of July fireworks.

Spectators will not be allowed in the highlighted rows for the 4th of July fireworks.

Illinois Reopening Casinos And Video Gaming Wednesday

Starting Wednesday, July 1, Casinos statewide and video gaming in restaurants that are now allowed to have dine-in service will resume operations, but with restrictions. The Illinois Gaming Board approved the move after all operations were halted March 16. State Sen. Dave Syverson said resuming video gaming is a win for not just state and local governments that will get needed tax revenue, but also for small businesses who’ve been stifled for three months. 

Senior Center Distributing Free MRE's Until 1:30 Today

Three pallets of meals ready to eat (or MRE’s) are being distributed today at the WC Cafeteria and Senior Center at 115 East 3rd Street in Mt. Carmel. The meals are from FEMA and didn’t cost the City of Mt. Carmel anything. They’re available for those 60 and over until 1:30pm on a first-come, first-served basis by driving thru the awning at the senior center. Each person will receive 2 boxes that contain 14 shelf stable meals free. Mayor Joe Judge and City Commissioner Chandler Madden joined senior center workers in unloading the pallets this morning.

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Pritzker Announces All Regions Have Met Health Metrics to Move to Phase 4

Chicago – Thursday, Governor JB Pritzker announced that every region of the state meets the health benchmarks to advance into Phase 4 of the Restore Illinois plan. Ahead of the transition today, Gov. Pritzker announced several new efforts to build on the state’s robust response to COVID-19 and help keep Illinoisans safe.  

 “We’ve seen what’s happened in other states that have allowed politics or short-term thinking to drive decision-making. Many other states are now seeing significant increases in cases, hospitalizations, and intensive care bed usage and they’re being forced to move backward and stay at home – that’s not the story in Illinois,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Here, we have been gradually restoring business and leisure activities in a highly deliberate manner, guided by doctors’ advice. Illinoisans are following the mitigations that we can each do ourselves, like wearing face coverings, keeping 6 feet distance between us, and washing our hands frequently. It’s because of the people of Illinois that we’re seeing a trajectory of relative success where other parts of the country are not.”

PHASE 4 METRICS

 

All four Restore Illinois health regions have met the IDPH health benchmarks to advance into Phase 4. Metrics include reductions of positivity rate and hospital admissions and availability of hospital surge capacity.

On a statewide level, Illinois flattened the curve, passed the peak and saw a sustained decline in key metrics since the coronavirus pandemic began. Looking at 7-day rolling averages – which smooth out daily fluctuations and allow trends to emerge – Illinois is seeing marked declines in cases, deaths, case positivity and covid-related hospitalizations.

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TESTING & CONTACT TRACING

As all four regions of the state move into Phase 4 of the Restore Illinois plan on June 26, the state has built up its daily testing capabilities, surpassing 30,000 tests in a 24 hour period for the first time today.

Illinois is continuing to build on this progress, launching 12 mobile community testing teams. The testing teams will move throughout the state to mitigate and suppress emerging outbreaks, including places like meatpacking plants, nursing homes, or other traceable gatherings.

The mobile teams will operate in partnership with a network of commercial labs that the state has contracted with which will allow test results to be quickly delivered.

The state also continues to build up its statewide contact tracing capacities, increasing the ranks of contact tracers by 20% since June 1 for a total of over 550 active contact tracers across the state. 250 new tracers will join their ranks in the coming weeks as Illinois continues to scale up operations, including using new technology to multiply the state’s effectiveness in its contact tracing efforts.

In addition, all of Illinois’ 97 local health departments have applied for funding support totaling $230 million to increase contact tracing. Those funds will be disbursed in the next few weeks.

Community based organizations will have the opportunity next month to obtain funding through the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) to collaborate on contact tracing efforts alongside their local public health departments.

COUNTY LEVEL RISK METRICS

The state is also launching a new county level risk assessment tool which will help individuals, families and community groups inform their choices about personal and family gatherings, as well as what activities they choose to do.

The county-level indicators are similar to the Restore Illinois criteria and support the state’s framework. By applying the same metrics to each county, IDPH is using a standardized approach to monitor the state as a whole. Each county will be assessed to determine whether it is meeting or exceeding each indicator target. Using a color-coded system, counties will be able to determine whether they are meeting or not meeting set targets.

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) is monitoring several indicators that measure the health burden of COVID-19 in each Illinois county and capture a county’s ability to respond.

These metrics are intended to be used for local level awareness of each county’s progress during Phase 4 and will help local leaders, businesses, local health departments, and the public make informed decisions and promote healthy behaviors.

To view the online county risk assessment tool, visit here.

The state continues to urge all residents to follow the mitigations that we know will stop or slow down the spread of COVID-19; maintaining 6 feet of physical distance, hand washing regularly, and, wearing a face covering.

To view the guidelines for all industries reopening in Phase 4, visit here.

State Stays Timely With Payments To Wabash County

The state continues to stay current with its’ payments to Wabash County. Treasurer Beverly McBride told the county board recently that her office has received the June income payment of $23,000, which was almost exactly the same as June of 2019. The county has also received the salary reimbursements for the assessor, public defender, and state’s attorney for a total reimbursement of $14,796.82. The county’s share of the cannabis tax for this month was $135.11.

May Wabash County State's Attorney Report

The shut down of local courts because of COVID-19 is reflected in Wabash County State’s Attorney Cassandra Goldman’s report for May. Just one misdemeanor case was filed last month and no felonies. There were just two DUI cases and one careless driving case filed to go along with 24 traffic cases. Just under $2,000 in fines were levied and just under $1,800 in restitution was ordered. No notices for deceptive practice were sent out last month.

Property Tax Prepayment Deadline Extended

The deadline to pre-pay your property taxes in Wabash County has been extended by at least another month. Treasurer Beverly McBride said the deadline was to have been June 30th, but she will probably allow the prepayments until July 31st and then re-evaluate at that time. As of last week, McBride said $67,000 had been pre-paid so far.

She also reported that mobile homes taxes continue to be paid with a little over $6,300 coming in so far leaving a balance of $22,456 to be paid. Most of the taxpayers are using the drop box or mailing them to her. Although some are paying cash and come to her office after being screened by the security office.