Trans porn company owners sentenced for forcing 7-year-old girl into sexual exploitation

Prosecutors argued during the trial that the young girl had been subjected to “a vortex of darkness” after being removed from her mother

Members of what has been described as a “family-owned transgender pornography production company” have been sentenced in connection to the sexual abuse of one of the member’s children.

One of these members, Marina Volz, a biological male who identifies as a woman, has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for forcing “her” 7-year-old daughter to participate in sexual acts, Anna Slatz reported for Reduxx.

Volz, born Matthew, was arrested back in 2019 after the New Jersey Department of Child Protection became aware that Volz was creating pornography in a home where a child lives.

Following the execution of a search warrant, authorities found that the child in question had likely been exposed to sexually explicit material.

Electronic devices were subsequently seized from the property, and an examination later uncovered several sexually-explicit photos and videos of the child, Slatz reported.

The child was then removed from the premises. The child’s mother lived in Oregon during the span of the abuse.

In addition to Volz, three others were arrested that were part of the pornography company, that reportedly specialized in fetish, taboo, and BDSM content.

Volz, alongside trans-identified male Ashley Romero, took the young girl from her mother and had transported her to New Jersey to use the child in the sexual exploitation material industry.

See Also:

The stone head of Guatemala that history wants to forget

Following Volz’s arrest, the child now resides with relatives, and Volz has surrendered all parental rights.

Prosecutors argued during the trial that the young girl had been subjected to “a vortex of darkness” after being removed from her mother.

According to Slatz, “Assistant Somerset County Prosecutor Brian Stack said the four, who had formed a sadistic family unit, were ‘incapable of redemption,’ noting that none had taken responsibility for the harm they’d done.”

Read more: The Post Millennial