Ex-prof Scott Ward gets 25-year sentence for child porn
Ward pleaded guilty to charges of child pornography and lying to the U.S. State Department last fall
· September 30, 2009, 3:55 am
Former Marketing professor Scott Ward was sentenced to 25 years in prison yesterday after pleading guilty to four counts of child pornography and one count of lying to the U.S. State Department
Ward, who was sentenced in the Federal District Court of Southeastern Pennsylvania, was arrested at Dulles International Airport in 2006 after a luggage search turned up child pornography on his laptop and on DVDs in his suitcase. A later search of his then-Huntsman Hall office revealed more porn.
In addition to receiving 25 years imprisonment, the sentence mandated that Ward pay $100,000 in restitution and remain on probation for life.
Ward is currently serving a 15-year sentence for similar charges. He entered the court yesterday in handcuffs and was embraced by his attorney Mark Sheppard.
The hearing was presided over by U.S. District Judge Petrese Tucker. Tucker delivered the sentence at around noon yesterday after hearing testimony from U.S. attorney Bea Witzleben and the defense.
The central point of debate revolved around the sentencing guidelines regarding the group of the crimes Ward committed.
The defense argued that three incidents related to the child pornography charges should be grouped as one incident when determining Ward’s sentence because they were “temporally related.”
But Witzleben argued the sentencing guidelines did not allow for this grouping and should be treated as three distinct incidents.
The defense further implored Tucker to adhere to justice in sentencing the “elderly” Ward, who at 66, would already be serving a minimum of 12 years from his previous sentence.
This single sentence was sufficient, the defense argued, and Ward should not be sentenced to prison time beyond these remaining 12 years.
Citing the arguments of Ward’s probation officer and a psychologist, the defense said that Ward’s “capacity for recidivism” — or the possibility that he would be a repeat offender — “is virtually nil,” especially in light of the psychological treatment he has been ordered to receive.
On the other hand, Witzleben cited the sentencing guidelines as evidence that Ward was eligible for 44 years of imprisonment, effectively a life sentence.
One witness, Federal Agent Richard Stingle, was called as a witness on behalf of the U.S. government.
The witness gave testimony primarily to the evidence he personally recovered at the time of Ward’s arrest in 2006.
The defense argued on behalf of Ward that he is not trying to escape justice, but complained the prosecution was “just piling on the punishment.”
Tucker ultimately decided Ward should serve a concurrent sentence of 25 years.
He will be 91 years old when he is released.





Comments (1)
Replicounts
October 12, 2009, 3:14 pm
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There's something wrong here. The "child porn" Ward was charged with manufacturing and importing was himself having sex with a 16-year-old in Brazil. Since the age of consent in Brazil is 14, straight or gay, the sex was legal where it occurred.
Ward was also charged with lying on a visa application to get the boy into the U.S. (showing an ongoing relationship, in case that matters). In Pennsylvania the age of consent is 16, so the sex would have been legal here as well. And it would probably be legal in Massachusetts (age of consent usually 16), where Ward has a home.
The extreme penalties for importing child porn into the U.S. were intended for traffickers and other commercial operators who exploit and harm children to make the porn. This case has nothing to do with the original intent of that law, for two reasons. First, Ward clearly intended personal use only, as selling or distributing the videos or stills to anyone would be career suicide. Also, the sex did not occur in order to make the pictures, which were incidental to an ongoing relationship.
The vastly excessive 25-year sentence reflects the culture war, not the need to protect children. Americans have been intimidated from finding their voice and speaking out appropriately -- on abusive prosecutions, corporate abuses, absurd wars, and more. The resulting lack of accountability has hurt this country.
-- John S James www.RepliCounts.org New replicating accounts, for mass sponsorship of online content
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