The son of a county prosecutor is facing charges related to child pornography. Four other men are also charged. The Dayton Daily News says,

“Defendants did knowingly conspire to make, print, publish and cause to be made, printed or published any notice advertisement seeking and offering to retrieve, exchange, buy, produce, display, distribute and reproduce any visual depiction, the production of which visual depiction involved the use of minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct,” according to the indictment.

Those are serious charges though it sounds as if they are not charged with actually creating child porn or molesting anyone. It sounds as if the men published ads offering to do all of that, which is exactly what law enforcement does when they set up an online sting: they make offers to do something illegal — provide sex with minors, for example — and then charge the fools who respond.

If the county sheriff had placed the child porn ads and let fools respond, that prosecutor would now be working late hours on all the resulting cases instead of telling the world about his son’s difficult childhood.

In this case, Butler County (OH) Prosecutor Michael Gmoser tries to explain how his son could have come to be involved in such sordid activities.

On Monday, Michael Gmoser told his staff that after years to of trying to conceive, he and his wife, Olga, adopted a “special 7-month-old child.”

“He was perceived to be highly intelligent,” Gmoser said. “But we knew we would always have to deal with Jason on his own terms.”

Jason Gmoser developed attachment and development disorders that made it difficult to bond with his parents.

“To say he was a difficult child was an understatement,” Michael Gmoser said.

Michael Gmoser said his son did excel at science and computers and attended Miami University, but had to drop out.

“He went downhill with depression, self esteem issues and a horrible weight problem … he became reclusive,” Michael Gmoser said.

He added there were several diagnosis to explain his son’s condition, including Asperger syndrome and bipolar disorder.

Yes, a very sad case. All of that might (or might not) help explain how the prosecutor’s son came to make the choices that led to his arrest.

In 2010, Jason Gmoser was admitted to the psychological ward of a local hospital after he had a psychotic episode, with Jason saying he had inappropriately touched a child.

An investigation concluded Jason had “touched the leg of this young fellow,” Michael Gmoser said, but Jason believed he had done something terrible.

The mother of the boy sought and received a protection order against Jason, according to Michael Gmoser.

Jason Gmoser was then taken to Texas to one of the best facilities money can buy, Michael Gmoser said.

“But money can’t buy everything,” Michael Gmoser said, pausing and appearing to hold back tears.

Nope. Money can’t buy everything.

Now that the county prosecutor has to watch his own son go under the steamroller that is our criminal justice system, one can’t help but wonder if he will appear to hold back tears when other sex crime defendants explain how circumstances could have led to their crimes.

I don’t wish this on anyone, not even someone who could learn valuable lessons from the experience.

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