Saturday, June 4, 2016

Mark Salling Arraigned for Child Pornography Charges

From: PEOPLE
Mark Salling plead not guilty to charges of receiving and possessing child pornography on Friday. 

The former Glee actor was named in a two-count indictment on May 27, alleging he received and possessed videos and still images of child pornography involving young girls, for which he was arrested in December 2015. According to investigators, the laptop, a hard drive, and a USB flash drive seized from Salling's residence allegedly contained thousands of images and videos depicting child pornography. 

A handcuffed Salling looked nervous during the proceedings as he and his attorneys approached the judge to plead not guilty. If convicted, he could be sentenced to from 5–40 years in prison. 


"He is going to be wearing an ankle bracelet for monitoring," Thom Mrozek, spokesman for United States Attorney's Office, told reporters. "He has been ordered to not have any contact with children, the Internet and drugs." 

If the actor wants to use the Internet, he must obtain permission from federal authorities, and he must also stay away from from the individual who tipped off the authorities about the alleged crimes. 

Salling is out on a $150,000 bond, with the actor putting up $100,000 of his own money and an attorney friend from Texas putting up the remaining $50,000. One of the conditions of his release is authorities have the right to go to his home at any time to check on him. The actor must also surrender his passport and obtain permission if he wants to travel for work.

According to Department of Justice, receiving child pornography carries a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in federal prison and a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years. Possessing child pornography also carries a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison. 

"The charges are very serious," criminal defense attorney Lou Shapiro told PEOPLE, but – depending on what was found in his possession and if he is convicted – Salling could potentially avoid jail time. 

"If he had a few images, a few videos, he could get out of prison altogether," says Shapiro, who is not involved with the case. "If he had boatloads of them, that's a different matter. That's what it's going to come down to, the numerical amount." 

On Tuesday the executive producer of Salling's upcoming miniseries Gods and Secrets announced he was removed from the project. "He has been cut from the miniseries," Adi Shankar wrote in a statement. "I will personally be paying for the reshoots, and I hope that Mark finds inner peace."

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