Courtroom scene illustrating former staffers Juan R. McCullum and Dorene Browne-Louis pleading guilty in the cyberstalking leak of Delegate Stacey Plaskett's private images.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Former Plaskett Staffers Pleaded Guilty in Leak of Explicit Images

Immagine generata dall'IA
Verificato

Virgin Islands Delegate Stacey Plaskett, the U.S. territory’s non-voting member of the House of Representatives, was the target of a cyberstalking scheme in which two former staffers copied and distributed her private nude images and videos in 2016 in an effort to damage her re-election campaign. The case led to federal and local charges against ex-aides Juan R. McCullum and Dorene Browne-Louis, who both ultimately pleaded guilty.

In March 2016, then-staffer Juan R. McCullum offered to help repair Stacey Plaskett’s malfunctioning, password‑protected iPhone by taking it to an Apple Store, according to court filings and news reports. Plaskett provided the password so the device could be unlocked during the repair process. Investigators later found that McCullum copied private nude images and videos of Plaskett and her husband, Jonathan Buckney‑Small, from the phone without their consent.

By July 2016, after McCullum had left Plaskett’s office, he created email and Facebook accounts under a fake name and sent the images and videos to political figures in the U.S. Virgin Islands, reporters, and others, encouraging that the material be circulated in Plaskett’s congressional district, prosecutors said.

Court documents and local coverage state that McCullum informed another former Plaskett aide, scheduler Dorene Browne‑Louis of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, that he had the explicit material. Browne‑Louis, who had also left Plaskett’s office by then, provided McCullum with email addresses and other contact information drawn from campaign files to facilitate distribution of the images. She also forwarded one of the nude images to an individual working on the campaign of a challenger in Plaskett’s 2016 Democratic primary, according to prosecutors.

Both ex‑staffers were indicted in 2017 and later pleaded guilty to a combination of federal cyber‑related offenses and District of Columbia charges involving the disclosure of sexual images. McCullum admitted to conspiracy, cyberstalking‑related conduct, and local counts including conspiracy to disclose sexual images and attempted unlawful publication of a sexual image. Browne‑Louis pleaded guilty to one federal cyber charge and a D.C. conspiracy‑to‑disclose‑sexual‑images offense, and separately admitted to being an accessory after the fact under a related plea agreement.

In written victim‑impact statements submitted to the court, Plaskett said her family’s privacy had been “invaded” and “pillaged” by the distribution of the images, describing a deep sense of exposure and humiliation. She also wrote that women in the Virgin Islands recognized the episode as an effort to “bring a Black woman down,” and expressed particular anger that a playful family video featuring the couple’s then‑toddler‑aged daughter was exploited to cast their family in a distorted and sexualized light.

Buckney‑Small likewise addressed McCullum in his own statement, accusing him of trying to portray him as “morally inept” with his child and recounting the emotional strain of confronting someone he believed had attacked his family, according to court records.

In March 2018, McCullum was sentenced in federal court in Washington, D.C., to one year and one day in prison on a sentence of one year and 361 days with all but that period suspended, along with two years of probation and 100 hours of community service. Browne‑Louis was sentenced the following month to two years of supervised probation and ordered to pay a fine, but did not receive a prison term, according to court proceedings summarized by local outlets.

Plaskett, who serves on the House Intelligence Committee, later drew separate media attention in 2019 during a House Oversight Committee hearing involving former Trump attorney Michael Cohen. At that time, she was reported to have exchanged messages seeking additional information related to the hearing, a matter that critics seized on in an unsuccessful effort to censure her in the House. The censure measure failed on a largely party‑line vote.

Cosa dice la gente

Discussions on X about former Plaskett staffers pleading guilty to leaking her explicit images are extremely limited, with only a few low-engagement posts resurfacing the 2016 incident skeptically or neutrally, often in the context of recent Epstein revelations. Sentiments are predominantly negative or victim-blaming, questioning the 'revenge porn' narrative and suggesting staff dissatisfaction or more to the story. No high-engagement, diverse opinions found.

Articoli correlati

Former National Security Advisor John Bolton in a Maryland federal courtroom, pleading not guilty to charges of mishandling classified materials.
Immagine generata dall'IA

John Bolton pleads not guilty to classified documents charges

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

Former White House National Security Advisor John Bolton pleaded not guilty on October 17, 2025, to 18 federal counts related to mishandling classified materials. He surrendered to authorities in Maryland and appeared in court in Greenbelt. The case involves allegations of sending top-secret information to his wife and daughter via personal email and messaging apps.

Following the initial partial release of Jeffrey Epstein files on December 19, the DOJ removed over a dozen documents from its website over the weekend, prompting further criticism from both parties. Deputy AG Todd Blanche defended the actions on NBC's 'Meet the Press' as solely for victim protection, amid accusations of legal violations and political cover-up.

Riportato dall'IA

Michigan Democratic Sen. Elissa Slotkin says she is facing a federal investigation after participating in a video that urged military members to refuse illegal orders. The video, released in November, featured six Democratic lawmakers with military or intelligence backgrounds and drew sharp criticism from President Trump. At least three of the participants report being contacted by federal prosecutors.

U.S. lawmakers from both parties are demanding answers about a September U.S. strike on a suspected drug-smuggling boat in the Caribbean that killed survivors of an initial attack, amid intensifying questions over the operation’s legality. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has confirmed he authorized the first strike but says a follow-up attack that sank the vessel was ordered by Admiral Frank Bradley, prompting debate over whether the actions violated U.S. or international law.

Riportato dall'IA Verificato

Members of the House and Senate Armed Services committees have viewed the full video of a September 2 U.S. military strike on a suspected drug-smuggling boat, after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth declined to release the footage to the public. The viewing has sharpened partisan divisions over the Trump administration’s expanding campaign against Venezuela-linked narcotics networks.

In un'evoluzione della declassificazione in corso dei fascicoli Epstein, il DOJ statunitense ha pubblicato una foto di Donald Trump dal file 468 venerdì 19 dicembre, l'ha rimossa poche ore dopo a seguito di reclami sui diritti delle vittime e l'ha ripubblicata domenica dopo le redazioni. L'immagine, che mostra Trump con donne in bikini, ha alimentato dibattiti sulla trasparenza contro la protezione, riecheggiando rimozioni più ampie di file riportate in precedenza.

Riportato dall'IA

A Daily Wire article speculates on a hypothetical White House 'naughty list' featuring eight lawmakers from both parties who have criticized or obstructed President Donald Trump's administration in 2025. The piece details their actions, including protests, social media attacks, and policy disputes. It portrays these figures as unified in opposition to Trump.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta