The old line "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn't." -- ahh, if only some would apply this line of critical thinking when talking to 15 year old girls online. Even after heavy media exposure, both locally and nationally, people are still falling victim to the Lee County Sheriff Department's successful cybersex sting operations.
Questions are posed though. Sheriff Johnson states "
actually committed once they make contact with an under age child and they entice them for some type of sexual purpose" -- the "child" in these cases is a deputy posing as one, not an actual child. The biggest question of all though is why, after massive exposure on these types of operations, do people continue to fall for it?
Justin Windham, 30, of Booneville faces a felony charge of enticement of a child to meet for sexual purposes. From WCBI :
Authorities say 30 year old Justin Windham made the drive from Booneville to Lee County, on Tuesday (June 30), with the understanding that he would have sexual relations with a 15 year old girl. When Windham arrived at the meeting place the girl wasn't there, but Lee County Sheriff's Deputies were.
The 15 year old that Windham had allegedly been chatting with on-line was actually an undercover officer.
"The crime is actually committed once they make contact with an under age child and they entice them for some type of sexual purpose," Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson explained Thursday (July 2), as Windham was awaiting his initial appearance before Justice Court Judge Pat Carr. "The meeting is just for us to positively identify the individual that's talking to us."
Because the Internet was used, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is involved with the felony case.
Justin Windham's bond has been set at $50 thousand.
The Lee County Sheriff's Department started its on-line investigations in May of 2006. Windham is the seventeenth suspect to be arrested in the ongoing operation.
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