A person who was already serving a 240 -year life imprisonment in the federal jail was on Monday for a petition deal for tampering cases of two 2013 Lake County children.
On February 12, 41 -year -old Daniel Ekstrom convicted the child on 12 February for tampering with the child. The argument deal underlined the 40 -year term, which runs technically after the federal tenure.
His defense lawyer Adrian Gujman said Ekstrom wanted to “accept responsibility”.
Deputy Prosecutor Tara Villarial said that it involves the same victim from the federal case. The argument was “fair” and asked Judge Salvador Vaske’s to accept it.
Eckstrom refused to speak in court.
Court documents suggest that Eckstrom has frequent sexual relations with a preton girl from December 2003 to May 2013. In the second county case, Eckstrom accepted two other preteen girls in 2012 and 2013, according to their petition deal.
The judge said that Ekstrom said through a presentation investigation report that he had regrets whatever he does. Is this true, the judge asked.
“I will always regret the rest of my life,” Ekstrom responded.
Ekstrom convicted the US district court in Hammond in 2014 in 2014 after production and distribution of thousands of child pornography images.
32-year-old Ekstrom was accused of having sex and filming with three minor girls, then distributed and distributed videos and images through his Yahoo email and various colleagues-to-letters network. According to the Post-Tribune archives, their punishment for the construction of sodomasochistic images was extended, hunting on sleeping girls, suffering a girl from marijuana and attached to the pattern of abuse for many years.
A victim called him “manipulation and evil”, according to the court filing.
US District Judge Philip Simon said that he agreed to pay $ 250,000 to Zen Do No. 1 as part of an agreement, but his financial condition is such that the victim is not likely to see a lot of that money, US District Judge Philip Simon said.
At that time, Simon said that it was a “most disturbing case”, which he saw in a dozen years on the bench.
The later archives of the tribune contributed.