Jury Convicts East St. Louis Man of Producing Child Pornography Attempting to Tamper with Victim's Testimony

Jury Convicts East St. Louis Man of Producing Child Pornography Attempting to Tamper with Victim's Testimony

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys on Oct. 29, 2020. It is reproduced in full below.

East St. Louis, Ill. - This afternoon, a federal jury in East St. Louis, Illinois, returned a

guilty verdict against Avery Smartt, Jr. The 43-year-old East St. Louis native was convicted of

producing child pornography and attempting to tamper with the victim’s testimony before trial. The

charges were contained in a two-count superseding indictment filed in August 2020. The original

indictment against Smartt - charging only production of child pornography - had been returned two

years earlier.

Evidence at trial showed that Smartt engaged in a months-long sexual relationship with a

15-year-old girl, beginning in September 2016. Smartt was a truck driver, and during the course of

their relationship he took the underage girl with him on out-of-state trips, including a long drive

from Illinois to California. In court, the victim testified that it was on those trips that Smartt

took sexually explicit photographs of her. FBI agents seized Smartt’s cell phone and discovered

numerous sexually explicit images of the victim. The trial also featured DNA evidence showing that

Smartt had fathered a child with the girl.

While he was in the Clinton County jail awaiting trial, Smartt sent letters to friends and family

members asking them to contact the victim and encourage her to change her testimony. These letters

formed the basis for the tampering charge.

Sentencing has been scheduled for Feb. 3, 2021, in front of Chief United States District Judge

Nancy J. Rosenstengel. Smartt faces 15-30 years in prison for producing child pornography. He also

could receive as much as 20 years in prison for attempting to tamper with the victim’s testimony.

Due to the ongoing pandemic, a number of safety precautions were implemented during the trial,

including social distancing, newly-installed plexiglass barriers, and a variety of sanitizing

procedures. Spectators watched the trial via closed circuit television in an adjacent courtroom.

The investigation was conducted by the FBI, the Illinois State Police Metro-East Crime Laboratory,

the Alton Police Department, and the East St. Louis Police Department. The case was

prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Laura V. Reppert and Christopher R. Hoell.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys

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