WASHINGTON – The
Justice Department announced today that Brian Forbes of Hartford,
Conn., was sentenced today to 156 months in prison for his involvement
in a sex trafficking ring that victimized minor girls and coerced
young women to engage in commercial sex acts against their will. Forbes
was also ordered to serve 3 years of supervised release and to
pay $16,339 in restitution to his victims. Forbes was charged
in a 64-count superseding indictment, along with nine other co-defendants,
on Aug. 8, 2006. Mr. Forbes pleaded guilty on March 4, 2007,
to three counts of sex trafficking of minors, two counts of sex
trafficking adult women (through force, fraud, or coercion) and
one count of conspiracy to use interstate facilities to promote
prostitution.
Evidence
presented at the plea hearing revealed that Brian Forbes found
and enticed young females, including minors, from states adjacent
to Connecticut, and used a variety of threats to force the young
women into providing sexual services to the ring’s clients in and around Hartford,
Conn. Forbes used a variety of unlawful means to force the
victims to repeatedly provide sexual services to the ring’s
clients. Those means included physical threats and unlawful
restraint.
Eight others,
including co-defendant Shanaya Hicks, also pleaded guilty in
this case. On
April 1, 2007, Hicks was sentenced to 46 months in prison. Co-defendant
Dennis Paris was convicted at trial in June of 2007 for sex trafficking
of minors, sex trafficking of adults (through force, fraud, and
coercion), conspiracy, use of an interstate facility to promote
prostitution, and money laundering. Paris is scheduled to
be sentenced on April 14, 2008.
“The defendant used sexual assaults, beatings, and lies
to force young women and girls into prostitution in Connecticut. He
was one of a chain of people who brutally exploited these women,” said
Grace Chung Becker, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice
Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Today’s
sentence, like those of his co-defendants, sends a strong message
that those who hold and brutalize others in sex trafficking rings
will be apprehended and punished.”
“The lengthy prison term imposed today is an appropriate
one for an individual who victimized minors and enslaved women,
forcing them to commit sexual acts against their will and under
the threat of violence,” stated Nora R. Dannehy, Acting U.S.
Attorney for the District of Connecticut.
Human trafficking prosecutions such
as this one are a top priority of the Department of Justice. In the last
seven fiscal years, the Civil Rights Division, in conjunction with the U.S. Attorneys Offices,
has increased by nearly seven-fold the number of human trafficking cases filed
in court as compared to the previous seven fiscal years. In FY 2007, the
Department obtained a record number of convictions in human trafficking prosecutions.
This case
was investigated by a law enforcement task force lead by Detective
Deborah Scates of the Hartford Police Department, Sergeant Chris
McKee of the Windsor Police Department, Special Agent Chris Grispino
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Special Agent Douglas
Werth of the Internal Revenue Service. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Jim Genco and Special Litigation Counsel Andrew J. Kline of the Department
of Justice’s Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
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