
Saskatchewan man sentenced after sharing child sexual abuse material with FBI agent
Thirty-two-year-old Matthew Norman Ballek was sentenced on June 30 to 46 months in prison, followed by a six-year term of supervised release after pleading guilty in October to possession of child pornography, the D.C. attorney's office said in a news release.
Prosecutors say Ballek started communicating with an undercover member of the FBI's child exploitation task force on an online dating app in January 2024.
The application, which was not named in the release, is sometimes used by those with a sexual interest in children, according to the release.
'Ballek contacted the undercover agent and, believing he was communicating with a pedophile, expressed an interest in child pornography,' the release said.
'Ballek sent the undercover agent three video files via an encrypted messaging application. Those video files depicted adult men raping a toddler and prepubescent boys.'
He was arrested on Feb. 7, 2024 in D.C.
Ballek may soon be subject to deportation proceedings, the U.S. attorney's office says.
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Article content 'If they already have trouble respecting someone simply because that person happens to have a vagina, then they aren't going to listen to that person with a vagina explain how disrespecting people with a vagina is harmful,' another commented. Article content 'Seemingly, ninety per cent of my work is trying to talk white teenage boys off the alt-right ledge,' according to another comment researchers paraphrased using an AI tool because the user didn't respond to requests to use verbatim quotes. Article content Another knew of a 7th grade teacher who said the boys in his class 'have taken to calling all women and girls 'holes' and anybody who is friendly or polite to girls a 'simp.'' Article content While some teachers remarked that female students pushed back and called out male classmates for spouting Tate-inspired anti-woman hate, teachers also worried that the rise in misogynistic rhetoric will lead to 'tangible safety threats like gender-based violence in schools,' the researchers wrote. Article content 'I had a student write a paper in graphic detail bout (sic) how SA (sexual assault) victims 'deserved' it and 'all women were asking for it' and a lot of other extremely alarming sentiments,' one user commented. 'The paper topic was nowhere close to anything like this, but he wrote it anyway.' Article content 'I've never heard such vitriol from young boys since this Andrew Tate guy came on the scene,' another said. Article content Some teachers suggested that boys were imitating Tate for attention. 'That kind of young boy likes to be ironically edgy because they're testing boundaries…. 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