Penticton Herald

‘ Cheer’ star arrested on kiddie porn charges

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CHICAGO — Jerry Harris, the star of the Netflix documentar­y series “Cheer,” was arrested Thursday and charged with producing child pornograph­y, three days after twin boys filed a lawsuit alleging he sent them sexually explicit photos of himself and cornered one of them in a bathroom and begged for oral sex.

According to the complaint, Harris admitted during an interview after FBI agents raided his home in the Chicago suburb of Naperville on Monday that he had asked one of the teens to send him photograph­s and videos of his penis and buttocks on Snapchat.

He also admitted that he repeatedly asked the teen, identified only as Minor 1, between December 2018 and March of this year for such photograph­s and videos.

Further, Harris admitted to requesting and receiving on Snapchat child pornograph­y from “at least between 10 to 15 other individual­s he knew were minors,” according to the complaint.

Harris, who was taken into custody on Thursday, will remain in jail until at least Monday after a judge ordered him to return for a detention hearing on Monday morning.

The boy’s mother told the newspaper that both of her sons had spoken to the FBI, and the lawsuit alleges that she also reported the allegation­s to Fort Worth police, the FBI and others.

The complaint contends that the mother contacted authoritie­s after she saw messages from Harris on one of her son’s cellphones. Prosecutor­s said they recovered several text messages between Harris and the boys, as well as Harris’ admission that he had solicited pornograph­ic images and videos from the boys and had sent explicit images of himself.

Harris, 21, was the breakout star of the show that followed the cheerleadi­ng team from Navarro College in Corsicana, Texas, as it sought a national title.

Harris did not respond for comment from USA Today, and attempts by The Associated Press to find a phone number for Harris have not been successful.

In interviews with USA Today at their Texas home, the boys —who are now 14 years old —described a pattern of harassment both online and at cheer competitio­ns, which began when they were 13 and Harris was 19. They said it continued for over a year.

“Cheer” was an instant success when it was released in January, and Harris drew fans for his upbeat attitude and his encouragin­g “mat talk.”

Earlier this year, he interviewe­d celebritie­s on the red carpet at the Academy Awards for “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.”

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