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Press Release

Dallas Man Sentenced to 97 Months in Federal Prison on Drug and Child Obscenity Convictions

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Northern District of Texas
Defendant Also Possessed Equipment to Make Counterfeit IDs

DALLAS — A 40-year-old Dallas man who pleaded guilty last year to three federal felony offenses in an investigation that began when law enforcement learned he was claiming packages containing anabolic steroids from a postal center in Dallas, was sentenced today, announced John Parker, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas.

Nicholas Todd Freed was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Sam A. Lindsay to 97 months in federal prison. He has been in custody since his arrest in late January 2014 by a Task Force Officer with Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), as he was attempting to claim a package containing anabolic steroids at the Deep Ellum Postal Center in Dallas. Pursuant to the arrest, law enforcement discovered Freed possessed a counterfeit U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) credential and badge. Freed was charged in a federal criminal complaint with attempting to possess anabolic steroids and falsely making, forging, counterfeiting and altering a USMS seal. Later, the investigation revealed that Freed also possessed numerous thumb drives containing images of minors engaging in obscene, sexually explicit conduct.

Freed pleaded guilty in November 2014 to a three-count superseding information charging one count of attempted possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, one count of possession of a document-making implement with intent that it be used in the production of false documents, and one count of possession of obscene visual representations of the sexual abuse of children.

In early January 2014, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in San Francisco identified a U.S. Postal Service Express Mail parcel, arriving from Singapore, as suspicious. The parcel contained approximately 1,087 grams of an oily liquid, later determined to contain an anabolic steroid, and it was addressed to JPEG Press, 3100 Main Street #1, Dallas, Texas 75226, which is the address of the Deep Ellum Postal Center. CBP notified HSI in Dallas of the parcel and its contents.

The ensuing investigation determined that the account for the rental box at the postal center was opened with fictitious information, and the box frequently received similar packages. On January 28, 2014, when the HSI task force officer approached Freed who was at the postal center to pick up the package, he discovered Freed was carrying a USMS badge and apparent counterfeit USMS credentials identifying him as a USMS Chief Inspector.

Later that day during a consensual search at Freed’s residence, law enforcement seized computers and computer equipment as well as other items Freed used to make false government identification documents, including laminating materials, blank plastic cards the size of a driver license, pages of magnetic strips for the backs of identification cards, ink consistent with the Texas seal on state licenses and identifications cards, a laminating press, hologram materials of official government seals, pages of names and identities used in the production of the false identifications, and head shots.

Upon further examination of the seized thumb drives, the task force officer discovered visual depictions of minors, including prepubescent minors, engaging in obscene, sexually explicit conduct.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s HSI , CBP, and the Balch Springs and Dallas Police Departments investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Keith Robinson prosecuted.

Updated June 26, 2015