Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Former suburban cop had 35 child porn pics, videos: prosecutor­s

- BY ZACK MILLER

An ex-police officer and sergeant in the south suburbs had dozens of images on his phone depicting children as young as 8 years old engaged in sex acts, Cook County prosecutor­s say.

Bail was set at $1 million Saturday for Tory Bridgefort­h, 37, the former Dixmoor police officer and Robbins sergeant who now faces three felony charges of child pornograph­y possession.

Bridgefort­h, a Chicago Heights resident, was arrested Wednesday after authoritie­s searched his phones and found 35 pictures and videos that sometimes included “prepubesce­nt” girls, prosecutor­s said during a livestream­ed bail hearing.

Six of the videos depicted the same girl engaging in sex acts with a man, while others showed another pair of minors, according to prosecutor­s, who suggested additional charges could be forthcomin­g.

The Cook County Sheriff’s Police Internet Crimes Against Children Unit received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children about child pornograph­y found on an email account that was later traced to Bridgefort­h, authoritie­s said.

After surveillin­g Bridgefort­h and later arresting him during a traffic stop, police recovered three phones from his vehicle, prosecutor­s said. The phones allegedly contained multiple videos with timestamps and file names matching those from the initial tip.

Bridgefort­h allegedly confirmed he was the sole user of the phone number and email accounts the sheriff’s office had been tracking, and told them he had been using his phone to view child pornograph­y, though he refused to give the passcodes to the phones, according to the sheriff ’s office.

During Saturday’s hearing, Bridgefort­h’s lawyer called the charges a “misunderst­anding,” asserting that his client was the one who’d tipped off law enforcemen­t.

Bridgefort­h was let go from the Dixmoor Police Department last May. Prosecutor­s allege he possessed the child pornograph­y while he was still an officer.

He lost his position as a Robbins sergeant after a 2018 investigat­ion into an incident in which Bridgefort­h allegedly brought three children — a 12-year-old and two 13-year-olds he’d met on a call the previous day — to an abandoned house where he gave them edibles, alcohol and juice before bringing them home.

That didn’t result in criminal charges, but he was terminated by the Robbins department soon after, prosecutor­s said.

Bridgefort­h was also charged with aggravated discharge of a firearm in 2018, though he later pleaded guilty to a lesser misdemeano­r charge of disorderly conduct, according to prosecutor­s.

Judge Susana Ortiz called Bridgefort­h “a danger to any children whatsoever, [including] his own,” while setting bail at $1 million. “I do consider them to be crimes of violence.”

If he were to post the $100,000 required for his release from jail ahead of trial, Ortiz barred Bridgefort­h from using devices that can electronic­ally store informatio­n, or from using the internet aside from “necessary activities” such as paying bills.

Ortiz also barred Bridgefort­h from contacting anyone under the age of 18 — including his 12-yearold daughter, for whom he is sole caretaker, and two 7-year-old children he cares for with his current girlfriend.

 ?? COOK COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ?? Tory Bridgefort­h
COOK COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Tory Bridgefort­h

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