The Day

Region: Smartphone searches lead to arrest of career sex offender

Smartphone searches lead to rearrest of man with history of sexual violence dating back to the 1970s

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

A career sex offender, who had been incarcerat­ed since 1992 for raping a pregnant woman at the Connecticu­t College Arboretum, quickly acquired a smartphone upon his release from prison and began using it to search for child pornograph­y and other sexually themed content, according to the Department of Adult Probation.

Wayne Frederick Treat, 68, who was living at a transition­al housing program in New Haven, was on strict probation and did not have permission to have a smartphone. He was charged Sept. 21 with violation of probation and is being held in lieu of $150,000 bond at the New Haven Correction­al Center. He appeared Tuesday in New London Superior Court, where several of his previous cases had been tried.

Judge Hillary B. Strackbein continued the case to Oct. 26.

Treat’s history of sexual violence dates back at least to the 1970s, according to court documents and news stories in The Day’s archive.

In 1973, he was convicted of three sexual assaults in Waterford and Montville in 1973.

In 1979, Rhode Island police charged him with dragging a woman out of her disabled car at knifepoint. The woman fought him off and was uninjured, according to a news story.

In 1982, he was convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting a woman while working as a cab driver. According to a news article, Treat picked up the woman at Lawrence + Memorial Hospital, drove her to a secluded area off Greenhaven Road in Pawcatuck and threatened her with a knife before raping her. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison for that crime.

Following his release, he started operating a prostituti­on ring and was charged in 1991 with promoting prostituti­on. He had scanned police arrest logs for the names of women who had been charged with prostituti­on and started a business called Fantasy Dating Service, according to a news story.

Judge Joseph J. Purtill called him an evil person when he sentenced Treat in 1993 to 50 years, suspended after 35 years served, followed by five years probation, for sexually assaulting the young mother at the Connecticu­t College Arboretum on Oct. 23, 1992.

A 23-year-old woman, who was several months pregnant, was walking with her 2-yearold daughter and 2-year-old niece when Treat grabbed the daughter by the throat and said he would kill her if anybody screamed. He dragged the woman and children into the woods and made the two children sit on a tree while he sexually assaulted the woman. He threatened to kill the children if the woman didn’t comply. Afterward, he attempted to strangle the woman with a rope but she fought him off. He fled when she screamed for help, according to news stories.

Treat’s probation officer, Jeffrey Mejias, wrote in an arrest warrant applicatio­n that Treat was released from the Department of Correction on July 7, 2017, and resided at the January Center, a residentia­l facility for sex offenders, until Feb. 3, 2018. He was discharged to the Project MORE Transition­al Housing Program and was attending sex offender treatment on an outpatient basis.

On Sept. 6, Mejias and another probation officer conducted a field visit and observed the cellphone, which was not authorized. An initial search revealed numerous pornograph­ic videos and searches for bondage, rape and pornograph­y involving young teens. Treat also had been searching “little girls’ bathing suits,” “one piece swimsuits for girls,” “girl’s clothing” and “cute little teen porn,” according to the warrant applicatio­n.

Questioned further about the cellphone at a Sept. 17 probation office visit, Treat admitted to having the device for a couple of months and said he had been searching pornograph­y that included bondage and rape, according to the court document. He said he had searched for pornograph­y involving minors out of curiosity and said he had developed an attraction to minors during his incarcerat­ion.

A physician who practices medicine in New London and Norwich has agreed to pay $99,912 to resolve allegation­s that he submitted fraudulent claims for reimbursem­ent to Medicare and Medicaid between January 2009 and December 2012.

The government alleges that Dr. Helar Campos submitted claims for office visits, also known as evaluation and management services, that were not performed in accordance with program requiremen­ts. The government alleges Campos “upcoded” the claims by using a higher-paying billing code when services with lower-paying billing codes were provided.

To resolve his liability under the False Claims Act, Campos agreed to pay a civil settlement of $99,912. Under the False Claims Act, the government can recover up to three times its actual damages, plus penalties of $11,181 to $22,363 for each false claim.

The case was investigat­ed by the Office of Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne F. Thidemann with the assistance of Auditor Kevin A. Saunders.

U.S. Attorney John Durham encourages individual­s who suspect health care fraud to report it by calling the Health Care Fraud Task Force at (203) 785-9270 or 1 (800) 447-8477.

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