- Office of Attorney General Maura Healey
Media Contact
Emalie Gainey
Salem — An Everett man has been found guilty on human trafficking and deriving support from prostitution charges in connection with coercing a woman into sexual servitude at several Massachusetts hotels, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today.
Steven Diaz, age 34, of Everett, was found guilty today by an Essex Superior Court jury on the charges of Trafficking of Persons for Sexual Servitude and Deriving Support from Prostitution. He will be sentenced on Friday, June 17 at 12 p.m. in Essex Superior Court.
“This defendant preyed on a vulnerable woman and coerced her into engaging in commercial sex with multiple men,” said AG Healey. “People victimized by the egregious crime of human trafficking have not chosen this path for themselves and we will aggressively prosecute those who exploit others for their own profit.”
The AG’s Office, with assistance from the Essex District Attorney’s Office, began an investigation in May 2014 after Massachusetts State Police arrested Diaz and Marquis Campbell, of Hyde Park, following a motor vehicle stop during which a woman in the backseat asked the state trooper for help. They were later indicted by a Statewide Grand Jury in July 2014.
Authorities allege that Campbell and Diaz picked up the woman days before the arrest and coerced her into providing sexual services for a fee in hotels in several Massachusetts communities, namely Saugus and Danvers, over a three-day period.
Diaz, allegedly along with Campbell, took photos of the woman and subsequently used them to post advertisements offering sexual services on websites known to advertise prostitution. They transported the victim to hotels and to outcalls, coerced her to engage in sexual acts with multiple men, monitored the money being earned, and ultimately collected all of the proceeds.
Campbell also allegedly used threats of violence against the victim and raped her. He is charged with Trafficking of Persons for Sexual Servitude, Kidnapping, Deriving Support from Prostitution, and Rape (two counts). His trial is scheduled for Sept. 12 in Essex Superior Court.
This case was prosecuted by Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Snook, of the AG’s Human Trafficking Division, and Assistant Attorney General Kristyn Dusel, with assistance from Division Chief Deb Bercovitch. Nikki Antonucci, Chief of the AG’s Victim Services Division, Financial Investigator Daniel DeAngelis, and Paralegals Stephanie Haven and Emily Bartlett also assisted in the case. The investigation was conducted by the Massachusetts State Police assigned to the AG’s Office and investigators from AG Healey’s Digital Evidence Lab, with assistance from Massachusetts State Police and the Essex District Attorney’s Office.
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