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Sugar Cookie

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A North Logan man was booked into the Cache County Jail Friday after he admitted to using the internet to entice a teenage boy for sex, according to police.

According to a probable cause statement, 54-year-old Nicholas Deelstra called the FBI to report he had been the victim of a scam on Craigslist.

Deelstra told FBI officials he had solicited sexual activity with a 16-year-old boy through Craigslist, the probable cause statement said.

“[Deelstra] reported to the FBI that [the boy] never showed up and a person claiming to be [the boy]’s father was now demanding he send money to cover car repairs because [the boy] had damaged the vehicle while trying to go meet [Deelstra],” a detective wrote in the probable cause statement.

The FBI referred the case to Logan Police, who interviewed Deelstra Friday morning.

Police advised Deelstra of his Miranda rights, and Deelstra agreed to speak with a detective.

“During the course of the interview, [Deelstra] admitted [the boy] told him he was 16 years of age but he still agreed to meet up with [the boy] for sexual acts,” the detective wrote.

Deelstra also gave Logan Police access to his smartphone, and police said they found sexually explicit messages and photos exchanged between Deelstra and the boy.

http://fox13now.com/2017/09/11/nort...r-after-reporting-craigslist-scam-police-say/

4431699100000578-4876514-image-m-4_1505225933039.jpg
 
According to a probable cause statement, 54-year-old Nicholas Deelstra called the FBI to report he had been the victim of a scam on Craigslist.

Deelstra told FBI officials he had solicited sexual activity with a 16-year-old boy through Craigslist, the probable cause statement said.

“[Deelstra] reported to the FBI that [the boy] never showed up and a person claiming to be [the boy]’s father was now demanding he send money to cover car repairs because [the boy] had damaged the vehicle while trying to go meet [Deelstra],” a detective wrote in the probable cause statement.
That particular scam is called "the badger game". In practice, the con man manipulates the pigeon into a compromising situation then threatens to expose the pigeon unless the pigeon pays for the con man's silence.

--Al
 
That particular scam is called "the badger game". In practice, the con man manipulates the pigeon into a compromising situation then threatens to expose the pigeon unless the pigeon pays for the con man's silence.

--Al
He sure showed them he wasn't going to get victimised.
:hilarious:
 
Nicholas the Dickolas.
Clever fellow going to the authorities.
I thiink he might have gotten better traction if he had gone to the BBB over false advertising!

Gads some people are just too retarded for words.
You know damn well he has met some boys in the past too.
Hope they cut his nuts off and staple them to his chin as a warning to others.

Sounds like a lucrative scam with closet cases like this gimp skulking around
looking for Cream of Sum Yung Guy
 
Sounds like a lucrative scam with closet cases like this gimp skulking around
looking for Cream of Sum Yung Guy
James Michener used it in the historical novel Centennial and Richard Bachman used it in Blaze. Michener's character used the threat of exposure as an adulterer to get the pigeon to pay, while Bachman's character used the threat of exposure as a homosexual, or at least as a man who had sex with men.

This Deelstra guy, though? Seems he didn't much give a fat rat's mangy red ass about possibly being outed as a pederast.

--Al
 
Last edited:
November 21, 2017

A former state worker who called the FBI to report a scam on Craigslist and ended up in jail for soliciting sex from a purported teen has been sentenced to time-served and probation.

Nicholas Deelstra, 55, called the FBI in late August to tell them he had solicited sex with a 16-year-old boy on Craigslist and agreed to have the teen come to his house in North Logan, according to court documents. But the boy never showed up.

Deelstra pleaded guilty in October to one count of third-degree felony attempted sexual sexual exploitation of a minor, and the other counts were dismissed.

On Monday, Judge Thomas Fillmore gave Deelstra credit for 73 days he had already spent in jail, and ordered him to complete 60 hours of community service as part of a 36-month probation.

Department of Workforce Services spokesman Nate McDonald said Tuesday that Deelstra was no longer employed by the department.
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2017/11...gslist-scam-to-fbi-is-sentenced-to-probation/
 
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