Skip to main content
Press Release

Dover Man Sentenced to 41 Months in Federal Prison for Stalking Three Women for Multiple Years

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of New Hampshire
District of New Hampshire

Dover Man Sentenced to 41 Months in Federal Prison for

Stalking Three Women for Multiple Years

 

CONCORD – A Dover man was sentenced on October 14, 2025 in federal court in Concord for stalking three women he was in intimate relationships with over a period of five years by using anonymous phone numbers and email accounts to create a fictious stalker, United States Attorney Erin Creegan announces.

Jason Subirana, age 48, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Steven J. McAuliffe to 41 months in prison, 3 years of supervised release, a $15,000 fine, and ordered to pay $12,110.82 in restitution. Subirana pleaded guilty to three counts of cyberstalking on May 20, 2025.

“For five years, this defendant weaponized personal relationships to inflict fear, humiliation, and emotional harm on his victims,” said U.S. Attorney Creegan. “Cyberstalking is not a crime that happens only online—it causes lasting damage in the real world. This sentence holds the defendant accountable for his campaign of intimidation and demonstrates our commitment to protecting victims from those who misuse technology to harass and control others.”

“What Jason Subirana did was simply outrageous and now he’ll pay a hefty price for his crimes,” said Ted E. Docks, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Boston Division. “Mr. Subirana engaged in a five-year cyberstalking campaign during which he betrayed the trust of his victims and inflicted significant and lasting emotional harm. This sentence holds him accountable for using today’s technology in such a despicable way.”

Between November 2016 - December 2021, the defendant stalked three women he was in close personal relationships with. He used more than 50 anonymous phone numbers, provided by TextNow, and anonymous email accounts to send over 650 harassing messages to the three victims from a fictious stalker. He attempted to manipulate his victims and cause emotional distress.

In addition to sending harassing communications to the victims, the defendant also sent himself harassing messages from the fictious stalker using anonymous accounts. The defendant collected compromising information about the victims and then sent the compromising information to himself under the guise that he received it from “the stalker.” The defendant then actively distanced himself from “the stalker” by accusing innocent individuals of being his victim’s “stalker.”

The Federal Bureau of Investigation led the investigation. Assistant U.S Attorney John Kennedy prosecuted the case. 

Updated November 13, 2025