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Friday, January 23, 2009 Channing Phillips (202) 514-6933
 
  
District man sentenced to 8 years in prison for child sexual abuse
 

WASHINGTON - A 38-year-old District of Columbia man, Kevin A. McSwain, was sentenced today in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia by the Honorable Neal Kravitz to 8 years in prison, to be followed by ten years of supervised release, for sexually abusing a 15-year-old girl, U.S. Attorney Jeffrey A. Taylor announced today. The defendant will also have to register as a sex offender for ten years upon his release from prison.

McSwain entered a guilty plea on Friday, October 17, 2008, to one count of First Degree Child Sexual Abuse. According to the government's evidence, on March 21, 2008, two 15-year-old girls knocked on the door to the defendant's apartment on 12th Street in Northeast Washington, D.C. (PSA 502) to ask to use a phone to call for a ride home because the buses had stopped running. When the girls were unable to reach a family member for a ride, the defendant told them they could stay until the buses began running again. During the night, the defendant took the victim to a bathroom where he forced her to perform oral sex on him. Following the sexual abuse, the defendant told both girls to get into his car, and that he would give them a ride home. The two girls left the apartment with him, but rather than enter the car, the two girls ran. One of the girls went to the Fourth District police station, where she reported the sexual abuse.

In announcing the sentence, U.S. Attorney Taylor praised the hard work of several members of the Metropolitan Police Department: Detective Jeffrey Folts of MPD's Youth Division, Officer Demika Hutchings of the Fourth District, and Mobile Crime Lab Evidence Technician James Savage. In addition, the U.S. Attorney acknowledged the great work of Victim Advocate Tracey Hawkins, Paralegal Specialist Cynthia Muhammad, Legal Assistant Donice Adams, and the entire Litigation Technology Support Unit. Finally, the U.S. Attorney commended the work of Assistant U.S. Attorney David M. Rubenstein, who indicted and prosecuted the case.