Times of Suriname

Man who fled US after child porn charges was hiding out in Guyana

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A Southern Colorado man, who skipped the (US) United States shortly after being charged with the transporta­tion of child pornograph­y, was said to have made his way to Guyana on a falsely acquired passport. According to the US Department of Justice (DoJ), Ronald Ray Horner, 58, of Huerfano County ended up in Trinidad and Tobago after being deported from Guyana. DoJ documents released on Friday showed that a Diplomatic Security Service Special Agent subsequent­ly spoke with Horner in Trinidad and Tobago, confiscate­d the passport, and arranged for his transporta­tion back to the United States. During the summer of 2016, Horner was indicted in the District of Montana for the offence of Transporta­tion of Child Pornograph­y. As a result of that offence, he appeared in court, and was released on bond, subject to various conditions. Two of those conditions were that he was required to surrender his passport and was ordered not to obtain another one. According to the DoJ, on August 9, 2016, the defendant went to the United States Post Office in Walsenburg, Colorado and submitted an applicatio­n for a passport. DoJ documents stated that he claimed that he had lost his passport, explaining, “Passport was left in suitcase after vacation (Jan 2016). Suitcase had torn seam and was discarded. I forgot the passport was in the suitcase.”

He further explained that he threw the suitcase in a dumpster outside a Mini Mart in Walsenburg, Colorado in January 2016. He submitted these forms, along with the requisite forms of identifica­tion, as his applicatio­n for a new passport. Shortly thereafter, Horner received a new passport in the mail. He left Colorado, traveled to Mexico on September 3, 2016, and then made his way through multiple countries in South America, including Brazil and Uruguay, before landing in Guyana. Following the defendant’s return to the United States, he was convicted of Transporta­tion of Child Pornograph­y in Montana and sentenced to 154 months. In a statement released on Friday, the DoJ explained that Homer was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Philip A. Brimmer to serve 27 months in federal prison, followed by three years on supervised release for making false statements in the applicatio­n and use of passports.

(Kaieteur News)

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