JACKSON —
Two men have been indicted in Mississippi on sex trafficking charges related to a video that authorities say shows them having sex with a girl who is 3 or 4 years old.
Marco Laquin Rogers and Jeremy Atral Hodges, both 26, were indicted Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Jackson on one count each of child sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion and one count each of selling or buying of children.
Court records say both men are from Mississippi, but Rogers had been living in Atlanta and Hodges in Cambridge, Mass.
Rogers’ lawyer, Kevin Camp, said Friday that the charges against his client are related to the video’s production. Camp said he doesn’t think his client had sex with the child, but he also said hasn’t seen the video or other evidence in the case.
A complaint that initially charged Rogers on Oct. 1 said the video shows both men having sex with the child.
Camp said he is contesting the charges in the indictment.
“The indictment doesn’t allege that he had sex with the girl,” Camp said.
The U.S. attorney’s office had no comment.
The sex trafficking charge says the men transported the child “knowing that she would be caused to engage in commercial sex acts.” The other charge says they “did employee, use, persuade, induce, entice and coerce a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction.”
The complaint that initially charged Rogers in October said authorities served him with a court order on Sept. 28 compelling him to allow agents to photograph scars on his stomach and right leg. The affidavit says the scars matched those on the man in the video.
Court records say the investigation began Sept. 6 in Cambridge, Mass., after Hodges asked another man there if he liked young girls and showed him explicit images of children on his cellphone.
Hodges told the man that he knows someone who had “hooked him up with a couple of young girls,” according to an affidavit filed with a criminal complaint against Rogers.
The man kicked Hodges out of his house and called police, the affidavit said.
The affidavit, written by a Homeland Security Investigations agent, said Rogers was listed under the name “Black Perv” in Hodges’ phone.
Hodges allegedly told authorities that Rogers had access to a 3-year-old girl he uses for “sexual acts.” The complaint also said Rogers traveled with the child to Atlanta, Jackson and Memphis, Tenn.
U.S. Magistrate Judge F. Keith Ball in Jackson ruled on Oct. 29 that Rogers should be held without bond.
Hodges is being held in Middlesex County, Mass., where he has been charged with more than 20 counts of possession of child pornography and dissemination of child pornography. A hearing on those charges is scheduled for Thursday.
State News
2 indicted on charges of sex trafficking child
- State News
-
-
Tchnology can speed emergency response
Recent national tragedies have reminded us once again how important it is to stay in touch with loved ones and emergency response officials for breaking news. Being technology-ready before disaster strikes is critical to saving lives, connecting friends and family, and assisting first responders.
I -
Miss. seniors get another shot to pass grad tests
Mississippi officials are trying to retest hundreds of high school seniors who flunked exams that are required for graduation.
-
Only abortion clinic in Miss. fights to stay open
It can’t meet the mandates of a 2012 state law and the governor wants to shut it down, but Mississippi’s only abortion clinic is not about to quietly retreat.
-
Ex-BP engineer claims feds withheld evidence
A former BP engineer charged with deleting text messages about the company’s response to its 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico urged a federal judge Tuesday to sanction Justice Department prosecutors for allegedly withholding evidence in the case, a claim the prosecutors deny.
-
Amtrak unveils locomotives to replace aging fleet
When Amtrak unveiled the first of 70 new locomotives Monday at a plant in California, it marked what the national passenger railroad service hopes will be a new era of better reliability, streamlined maintenance and better energy efficiency.
-
Miss. health agency to resume pregnancy work
Mississippi Medicaid officials will resume paying state Health Department workers to help women with high-risk pregnancies.
-
EPA, other US agencies expand urban waters effort
The Environmental Protection Agency, the White House and other federal departments announced Friday that they are expanding a program for restoring and improving urban waterways nationwide.
-
Miss. governor says he could run Medicaid program
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant says he thinks he can run Medicaid even if lawmakers don’t reauthorize the program or set its budget by the time the state’s new fiscal year starts July 1.
-
Louisiana levee plan concerns Mississippi leaders
Mississippi Republican Sen. Thad Cochran has proposed amendments to a federal water resources bill to protect coastal areas from flooding or storm surge threats that might result from a new flood control proposal for Louisiana.
-
Hurricane center chief focusing on water hazards
Last year’s hurricane season drove home some big lessons, the nation’s chief hurricane forecaster said Tuesday: Storm surge and flooding are dangerous and difficult to predict, and sometimes it’s even harder to communicate that sense of urgency to the public.
- More State News Headlines
-
Tchnology can speed emergency response




