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Press Release

Registered Sex Offender Is Sentenced To 50 Years On Child Pornography Charges

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of North Carolina

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Today, Chief U.S. District Judge Frank D. Whitney sentenced Brady Leon Beck, Jr., 40, of Monroe, N.C. to 50 years in prison on child pornography and related charges, announced Jill Westmoreland Rose, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina. Beck was also ordered to serve a lifetime of supervised release and to register as a sex offender after he is released from prison.

 

Director Robert Schurmeier of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, Chief Kerr Putney of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, and Chief Robert C. Helton of the Gastonia Police Department join U.S. Attorney Rose in making today’s announcement.

 

According to filed court documents and information introduced at the sentencing hearing, in or around June 2014, Beck used his cellular phone to produce an image of child pornography of a three-year-old child victim. In November 2014, court records indicate that law enforcement became aware that Beck had shared child pornography via email with another individual. Law enforcement executed search warrants and seized electronic and computer devices that belonged to Beck. A forensic analysis of the devices revealed that Beck possessed images of children, ranging in age from infant to approximately 15 years of age, being sexually abused. Law enforcement also conducted a search of an email account associated with Beck, and discovered that Beck had sent and received child pornography with others, including sending the images of the three-year-old child victim.

 

Beck is a registered sex offender, which stems from his 2004 conviction of second-degree rape of a 10-year-old female victim. He pleaded guilty in December 2016 to one count of transportation of child pornography and one count of committing a felony offense involving a minor while registered as a sex offender. Beck is currently in federal custody and will be transferred to the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons upon designation of a federal facility. All federal sentences are served without the possibility of parole.

 

The investigation was led by the SBI, CMPD and the Gastonia Police Department. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Charlotte prosecuted the case.

 

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in 2006 by the Department of Justice, aimed at combating the growing online sexual exploitation of children. By combining resources, federal, state and local agencies are better able to locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue those victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov

Updated March 21, 2017