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d-28352House OversightOther

Prosecutor Villafafia praised for child‑sex case; teen Adam McDaniel sentenced for enticing a minor

The passage details a routine federal sex‑offense prosecution and highlights a career prosecutor’s accolades. It contains no novel allegations, financial flows, or links to high‑ranking officials, lim U.S. Attorney’s Office Assistant U.S. Attorney (AUSA) Villafafia recognized for victim advocacy. Teen from Texas traveled to Florida to meet a 14‑year‑old he had been chatting with online. McDaniel p

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #021733
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage details a routine federal sex‑offense prosecution and highlights a career prosecutor’s accolades. It contains no novel allegations, financial flows, or links to high‑ranking officials, lim U.S. Attorney’s Office Assistant U.S. Attorney (AUSA) Villafafia recognized for victim advocacy. Teen from Texas traveled to Florida to meet a 14‑year‑old he had been chatting with online. McDaniel p

Tags

legal-exposurehouse-oversightcriminal-prosecutionsex-offensesinterstate-crimevictim-advocacy

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EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
behalf of crime victims. She received the 2011 National Crime Victims’ Rights Service Award as well as the Attorney General’s Project Safe Childhood Award. He also pointed out that the parents of the victim in the Texas man’s case wrote a letter thanking Villafana at the conclusion of the case. “AUSA Villafafia has spent her 18-year career advocating tirelessly on behalf of victims of some of the most serious crimes in Florida, and has received numerous awards for her successful prosecution of major cases,” Biran said, adding that Villafafia has “made South Florida a safer place for children and adults alike.” Enticing a minor By all accounts, Adam McDaniel was an awkward and shy Texas teenager who spent countless hours on his computer, socializing with girls on the internet. In 2005, McDaniel, then 19, traveled from Texas to Fort Lauderdale, where he hopped into a taxi and headed to Boca Raton to meet up with a 14-year-old girl he had been talking to online for about a year. He picked up the ninth grader at a high school basketball game, and drove her to a Marriott, hotel where they spent the night, court records show. When she failed to come home that evening, her parents called Boca Raton police. Officers tracked the pair down at the hotel the next day, where they found them in bed, clad in little more than their underwear, according to court records. McDaniel was arrested on federal sex charges, and pleaded guilty on Oct. 6, 2006, to enticing a minor into sexual conduct by means of interstate commerce, which carried a sentence of from five years up to 30 years in federal prison.

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