Monterey Herald

Sex traffickin­g plea deal unending `nightmare' for Texas mom

- By Jake Bleiberg

Irma Reyes' mind raced as her husband drove through the predawn darkness toward a courthouse hundreds of miles from home: Don't they know my daughter matters?

Reyes had been barely able to eat since she heard that Texas prosecutor­s planned to let the two men charged with sex traffickin­g her daughter walk free. She was going to court to try to stop them.

Reyes' daughter was 16 in 2017, when men she knew only as “Rocky” and “Blue” kept her and another girl at a San Antonio motel where men paid to have sex with them. Now, the cases against Rakim Sharkey and Elijah Teel — who police identified as the trafficker­s — have seen years of delay, a parade of prosecutor­s, an aborted trial and, ultimately, a stark retreat by the government.

They are among thousands of cases under a cloud of dysfunctio­n at the office of Texas Attorney General

Ken Paxton, who has risen to national prominence fighting court battles that affect people nationwide even while facing legal troubles including a criminal investigat­ion by Justice Department officials. Traffickin­g cases in particular have cast doubt on how the agency uses millions of state tax dollars on an issue that Republican leaders trumpet as a priority while attacking Democrats' approach to border security.

A spokeswoma­n for the attorney general's office, Kristen House, declined to answer questions for this story.

“It's like a nightmare that I can't wake up from,” Reyes said.

At the courthouse in January, Reyes' stomach churned as she thought of the deal for the two men: five years of probation. The original charges carried potential sentences of decades in prison.

“You will not find a stronger corroborat­ed case,” said Kirsta Leeburg Melton, who oversaw the attorney general's human traffickin­g unit

until late 2019. “And I'm sick. It's wrong.”

In court, Reyes listened as the judge summarized the cases' twists and turns: years lost to the pandemic, delays due to “turnover in the attorney general's office,” days of testimony last year only for several people to catch COVID-19 and prompt a mistrial.

She listened in disbelief as the new prosecutor

told the judge that Reyes' daughter was “on the run.” Now 22, the young woman left home after a fight, Reyes said, but they keep up a steady stream of text messages.

Then, Sharkey and Teel pleaded “no contest” to aggravated promotion of prostituti­on. The judge, Velia Meza, sentenced the men to seven years of probation, despite prosecutor­s recommendi­ng five, noting they wouldn't have to register as sex offenders.

Reyes thought of her daughter as she approached the front of the courtroom to make a victim's impact statement.

The AP is withholdin­g the young woman's name, in keeping with its policy to avoid identifyin­g victims of sexual assault and other such crimes. Reyes told AP she spoke about this story with her daughter, who did not want to comment or be interviewe­d directly.

Reyes said that as a girl, her daughter was bullied and would run away from home. By her teens, she started using drugs, and in 2017 she was sent to a rehabilita­tion center.

Court records show it was only days after Reyes' daughter and another girl ran away from rehab that their photos were advertised online for “dates.” They met “Blue” outside a motel, where they couldn't afford a night's stay. He introduced them to “Rocky.” The pair rented the girls a room, helped set up meetings with men who'd pay for sex, and collected half the money, according to the records.

Reyes daughter later testified at trial that police found them after she got scared and called her mom because “Rocky” hit her. Asked to identify “Rocky,” the young woman pointed across the courtroom at Sharkey.

Sharkey's lawyer, Jason Goss, maintains the jury would have acquitted his client but told AP he had no choice but to plead no contest to the reduced charge because a sentence of up to life in prison was too risky. Teel's attorney, Brian Powers, didn't respond to requests for comment.

After the judge declared a mistrial last June, Reyes, her daughter and the prosecutor agreed to bring the case again. But that prosecutor resigned without explanatio­n soon after, amid a wave of seasoned lawyers quitting the attorney general's office over practices they said were meant to slant legal work, reward loyalists and drum out dissent.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Irma Reyes makes a statement in Judge Velia Meza's courtroom in San Antonio on Jan. 23. Reyes feels like “collateral damage” in the plea deal that let the two men charged with sex traffickin­g her teenage daughter walk free.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Irma Reyes makes a statement in Judge Velia Meza's courtroom in San Antonio on Jan. 23. Reyes feels like “collateral damage” in the plea deal that let the two men charged with sex traffickin­g her teenage daughter walk free.

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