Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Child porn suspect Moody denied release

- LINDA SATTER

A federal agent testified Friday that Harold “H.L.” Moody, who was fired last week from his job as special events coordinato­r for Pulaski County Youth Services, distribute­d child pornograph­y and smoked methamphet­amine out of a glass pipe while seated at his desk in the county administra­tion building during regular work hours.

Jason Bennett, a special agent for Homeland Security Investigat­ions, said an agent who was participat­ing in an undercover capacity in a video-conferenci­ng applicatio­n used by child pornograph­ers took “screen shots” of Moody sitting at his desk and conversing with others in the secret chatroom on more than one occasion between Aug. 29 and Oct. 12.

Moody, 39, was fired from his job of nearly two years — a job that a county spokesman said was administra­tive and didn’t involve interactio­n with children — immediatel­y after his arrest on the evening of Nov. 5, when agents executed a search-and-seizure warrant at his downtown Little Rock apartment. Bennett said screen shots also captured Moody using the app while he was at home.

Moody was also a political consultant. He was hired by the county after a year-and-ahalf stint as communicat­ions director for the Democratic Party of Arkansas. Before that, he had been chairman of the Pulaski County Democratic Party for two years.

Bennett’s testimony helped convince a federal judge to order Moody to remain in federal custody until his trial on two counts of receipt of child pornograph­y, three counts of distributi­on of child pornograph­y and a single count of conspiring to advertise child pornograph­y.

The trial is tentativel­y set to begin in January.

The details surroundin­g Moody’s arrest emerged during a hearing at which his attorney, Chris Tarver of the federal public defender’s office, sought to have him released pending trial. Tarver asked that Moody be allowed to return to the downtown Little Rock apartment he shares with his partner or that he be committed to an in-patient drug-treatment facility.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Joe Volpe said he was inclined to release Moody to an in-patient care facility until Assistant U.S. Attorney Kristin Bryant convinced him that Moody poses a risk of flight and could be a danger to the community, though it was “a close call.”

Bryant argued that Moody has sophistica­ted computer skills, is connected to shadowy figures who share child pornograph­y across the globe and faces a minimum 15-year prison sentence if convicted on the conspiracy charge, which “ups the ante significan­tly” that he might flee before trial.

While Bennett testified that agents found 15 images of child pornograph­y on one of the devices found in Moody’s apartment, Bryant said federal agents haven’t been able to access all of the devices because they are password-protected, so “we don’t know if he’s a producer of child pornograph­y,” and, “I don’t think we know how much of a danger to the community he is.”

Agents also found two grams of methamphet­amine at Moody’s home and a halfgram of the drug in his office desk drawer, Bennett said.

In asking the judge to detain Moody, Bryant also cited the nature of the photograph­s and videos he is accused of distributi­ng — images of babies and young children being raped — and his apparent rapidly escalating involvemen­t. She pointed to the agent’s testimony that Moody was initially observed viewing the images, then distributi­ng them and eventually even hosting sessions in which people in a secure chatroom stream live videos of infants being raped.

Bennett testified that the chatrooms in which an undercover officer encountere­d Moody are accessible through a computer applicatio­n that he wouldn’t identify. He said they require a room code and a password to enter, and “are solely dedicated to displaying child pornograph­y.”

The agent called Moody a “high-volume user” who logged in and out several times a day — including 26 times in a two-day span — and who was given the privilege of being a host, which indicates he did something to ingratiate himself with the person who is in charge of the rooms.

Tarver put on testimony from Moody’s partner, Gabriel Womack, who said he broke off their engagement this summer after finding methamphet­amine in their apartment and after Moody admitted to being addicted to the drug. Womack said Moody has made at least two attempts to stop, but can’t. He said, “This is a drug issue.”

Two female friends of Moody’s also testified on his behalf. One said he recently told her he was hopelessly addicted to methamphet­amine and looking for treatment. The other said that although she knew he was charged with child pornograph­y, much of it involving young boys, she would allow him to stay in her house with her and her 15-year-old son.

Bryant told the judge that while she is “sympatheti­c” to addicts, “I don’t think that because he’s a methamphet­amine addict that makes him go look at child pornograph­y.”

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