WASHINGTON
- Andrew T. Maliska, 27, of Nashville, Tennessee, pled guilty on Monday, June
17 to cyberstalking in the District of Columbia following an investigation into
the creation and circulation of doctored images, related postings, and the personal
information of the victim.
The
announcement was made by U.S. Attorney Jessie K. Liu and John P. Selleck,
Acting Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office.
Maliska was
indicted by a grand jury on one count of cyberstalking and indicted on two
counts of identity theft. The indictment was unsealed on May 24, 2018, in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
According
to the government’s evidence, Maliska resided in the District of Columbia from
September 2009 until June 2013, where he studied at a local university and met
the victim. The indictment alleges that during the course of his friendship
with the victim, Maliska without authorization, accessed and obtained
non-sexual images from the victim’s social media accounts. According to the
indictment, Maliska then doctored those images to sexualize them and posted
them on various online forums.
The
indictment alleges that Maliska also posted the victim’s name, phone number,
and address on an escort website in May of 2015. This posting resulted in the
victim receiving multiple inquiries from individuals seeking escort services
from her. The indictment further alleges that the nature of the other postings
were pornographic, racist, and defamatory.
The victim
and her family filed a civil suit against Maliska in October of 2015. The
following year, the victim and her family obtained a civil settlement in which
Maliska acknowledged the postings and content were authored by him, stated he
would remove the content, and agreed that he would refrain from engaging in
further defamatory postings of the victim.
As alleged
in the indictment, in August 2017, after Maliska entered into the civil
settlement, he continued to commission sexual images of the victim, posted
about the victim, and reactivated a fake social media account in her name. The
indictment alleges that Maliska used the victim’s name, biographical
information, and images to create the fake social media account. Maliska used
the fake social media account to befriend and communicate with others online.
The charge
of cyberstalking carries a statutory maximum of five years in prison and
potential financial penalties.
This case
was investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office. It was prosecuted by
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Youli Lee and Charles Willoughby, paralegal Diane
Brashears, and former Assistant U.S. Attorney Sumit Mallick, of the U.S.
Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. Assistance was provided by
Assistant U.S. Attorney Byron Jones of the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Middle
District of Tennessee and Bianca Evans, formerly of the U.S. Attorney’s Office
for the District of Columbia.
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