The Columbus Dispatch

Woman, inmate found guilty of traffickin­g kids for sex

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CLEVELAND — A man in prison for child rape and an Ohio woman were convicted Friday in Cleveland of dozens of counts related to the sex traffickin­g of children as young as 9 years old.

The jury convicted Andre Boynton, 42, and Anika George, 39, of North Royalton, on charges that include human traffickin­g, conspiracy and multiple counts of child rape and child pornograph­y, Cleveland.com reported. They are scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 25. George’s attorney declined to comment Saturday. Boynton’s attorney did return telephone messages seeking comment.

Prosecutor­s said Boynton, serving a life sentence in Ohio for raping a 14-year-old girl in 2008, ordered George over a prison phone to abduct boys from Cleveland and bring them back to her apartment. That’s where prosecutor­s said she used a cellphone to record her having sex with four boys and the boys having sex with a 14-year-old developmen­tally disabled girl. Prosecutor­s said the abductions and rapes occurred over a monthlong period in 2014. Both were also convicted of voyeurism charges for what prosecutor­s said was George photograph­ing 11 disabled elderly people in various stages of undress at a suburban Cleveland nursing home where she worked.

“I don’t think this building has ever seen this level of depravity,” Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley said after the verdicts.

Boynton instructed George how to record the rapes and how she should transfer recordings of the assaults to memory cards to deliver to him in prison. No cards were found in a search of his cell.

 ?? [TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] ?? Ron Grantham, 55, hangs his tie-dye creations at Goodale Park to photograph them. Grantham said he learned how to tiedye when he picked up some riders in 1993 headed to a Grateful Dead show and has sold his work at Comfest for the past 20 years.
[TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] Ron Grantham, 55, hangs his tie-dye creations at Goodale Park to photograph them. Grantham said he learned how to tiedye when he picked up some riders in 1993 headed to a Grateful Dead show and has sold his work at Comfest for the past 20 years.

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