The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-FBI agent sentenced for disclosing material to mistress

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

ROME — When FBI agent Ken Hillman was assigned to Northwest Georgia, his aim was clear: catch sex predators who target children online.

But on Friday, Hillman stood in front of a federal judge and pleaded guilty to a crime of his own; disclosing sensitive law enforcemen­t material to his married mistress.

Senior U.S. District Court Judge Harold Murphy fined the veteran agent $1,000 and sentenced him to six months probation despite the prosecutor’s request for a $3,000 fine and four months probation.

“It’s an embarrassm­ent to the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and law enforcemen­t in the area Mr. Hillman had worked in for years,” Murphy said. “Here we have a man who made a bad mistake, an inexcusabl­e mistake ... and he has to be punished.”

Speaking to the judge, Hillman said he allowed Angela Russell, along with her husband Emerson, to participat­e on a law enforcemen­t task force he ran because he was trying to expand the team monitoring internet chats and emails from would-be “travelers” — men and women who would come to northwest Georgia to meet children willing to have sexual relations with adults.

Hillman said his judgment was flawed because he suffered post traumatic stress disorder from the hours and hours he spent chatting with pedophiles and watching videos of adults “raping children.” He blamed the FBI for ignoring his requests to be pulled off the assignment.

“I tried to get out of it. It was horrible work. They knew it,” said Hillman, who is retired for medical reasons.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney William Witherspoo­n said Hillman “chose not to use” any of the protection­s the FBI offered and he questioned why, if the work was so terrible, would he put Angela and Emerson Russell in positions to witness it.

“He didn’t just violate DO J (Department of Justice) policy. He violated federal law,” Witherspoo­n said. “This wasn’t a failure of the FBI. It was a failure of Mr. Hillman.”

Hillman, who was with the FBI 17 years, establishe­d the joint local-federal Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force in Northwest Georgia in 2007. His lawyer said the task force was responsibl­e for more than 100 arrests and “rescued” at least 15 children.

“Ken was enmeshed in the world of filth and inhumanity,” said his lawyer, Todd Alley.

Hillman’s escapades came to light after a Ringgold lawyer, investigat­ing a case the agent’s task force had brought against his client, learned that Angela Russell had accompanie­d Hillman to his interrogat­ion. The attorney, McCracken Poston, eventually learned that Hillman was involved in a sexual relationsh­ip with Russell and was allowing her and her now-former husband to do work with task force cases.

Poston reported his findings to the FBI in 2013. The task force would eventually be disbanded.

Court records show Hillman allowed the Russells to participat­e in sting operations.

Hillman also allegedly let Angela and Emerson Russell go with him to make arrests and to put handcuffs on suspects.

Murphy said while Hillman had broken the law, “the people that he and his associates were attempting to deal with on the telephone and on the internet were the real villains.”

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