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Ex-minister Pleads Guilty to Child Porn Charges By Martha Deller Fort Worth Star-Telegram March 20, 2009 http://www.star-telegram.com/crime_courts/story/1269164.html A former Methodist minister pleaded guilty Thursday to federal charges that he traded sexually explicit, sometimes violent, images of children with other users of an Internet service, federal officials announced. Steve Richardson, former pastor of First United Methodist Church in Royse City, was arrested in September after federal agents seized a computer from his office. He admitted possessing an external hard drive that contained more than 600 images of child pornography, according to acting U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks of the Northern District of Texas. The arrest followed an undercover investigation by a federal agent who communicated with Richardson over Google Hello, an Internet service that enables users to connect with one another’s computers to share photos. Using his Internet identity, "cowboysspades," Richardson sent a child pornography image and requested images of child pornography from the agent. When the agent gave an excuse for being unable to send the images, Richardson terminated the chat. In a brief hearing Thursday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Irma C. Ramirez, the 36-year-old former pastor pleaded guilty to one count of transporting and shipping child pornography and one count of possession of child pornography. At a June 15 sentencing hearing, Richardson faces a maximum prison term of 20 years on the transporting charge and 10 years on the possession charge and a $250,000 fine on each charge. He must register as a sex offender and could be ordered to serve a lifetime of supervised release. Richardson was suspended from his clergy duties after his Sept. 24 arrest, according to Bishop W. Earl Bledsoe of the North Texas Conference of the United Methodist Church. Bledsoe said Richardson surrendered his credentials after the Board of Ordained Ministry placed him on involuntary leave effective Dec. 1. He is no longer a United Methodist pastor. Bledsoe said children must be protected from economic, physical, emotional and sexual exploitation and abuse, according to the social principles of the denomination. Anyone who violates those principles will be dealt with "firmly and decisively" through church discipline, he said. "We do not tolerate the victimization of children in any form," Bledsoe said in a statement. MARTHA DELLER, 817-390-7857 mdeller@star-telegram.com |
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