Thursday
September 02, 2010


News
Dan Haley
Inside Report
Crime
Obituaries
Calendar
Viewpoints
Lifelines
Sports
Journal Plus

Blogs

Community Guide
Special Sections

About Us
Feedback
Send us letters



Legal Notices






Search


Advanced Search

home : news : news

11/24/2009 10:00:00 PM Email this articlePrint this article 
Kevin G. Fuller
Related story:

Oak Park child porn suspect on electronic monitor
Columbia College prof released into father's custody

By BILL DWYER
Staff Reporter

First reported 11/20/2009 5:28 p.m.

When residents of the 1000 block of N. Taylor Avenue heard a helicopter circling at 6:30 a.m. Thursday, they didn't know that would mean the federal arrest of a neighbor.

Within several hours, cyber-crimes agents from the Chicago office of the U.S. Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, backed by Oak Park police, served a search warrant on the house at 1000 N. Taylor, seized a computer and took Kevin G. Fuller into custody. Neighbors say the 41-year-old biology professor at Columbia College was a quiet and polite man who lived in a modest corner house, kept the back yard well maintained and tended a parkway garden. A federal judge says he's a danger to the community.

Fuller was arrested and charged with one count of transporting and shipping child pornography. According to a criminal complaint filed Nov. 19, "images of infants and prepubescent children engaged in sexually explicit activity" were found on Fuller's home computer.

When he faced U.S. Magistrate Judge Susan Cox in U.S. District Court on Thursday afternoon, she ordered him held without bond at the Metropolitan Correctional Center through the weekend. On Monday, when he again faced Cox, she released him into the custody of his father, who has moved temporarily to Chicago from the family home in Georgia. The judge ordered that Fuller wear an electronic ankle bracelet while living in the downtown Chicago apartment that his father is renting. She specified that Fuller not use the Internet and that he have no contact with children.

The $100,000 bond that Fuller was released on is secured by two pieces of property owned by his parents. Through his attorney, Keith Scherer of Chicago, Fuller waived a preliminary hearing. Fuller's case will now be bound over to a federal grand jury. Scherer did not return a call seeking comment. According to his firm's Web site, one of Scherer's specialties is representing people accused of federal computer crimes.

On the day of his arrest, Fuller waived his Miranda rights and agreed to be interviewed. According to the affidavit, he said he used his home computer to both receive and distribute images of child pornography and to engage in e-mail discussions about sexual activity with infants and children.

Neighbors recall a quite, polite man

Greg Mistak, who lives with his wife and three children across the street from Fuller's address, said he was returning from a trip to the store early Thursday morning when he saw an Oak Park squad car and several large black SUVs around the house.

He didn't realize what had happened until he saw the story online Friday morning.

"He'd be out working in the yard," said Mistak, who noted that while he didn't know Fuller well, they shared an interest in beautifying their corner parkways with flowers and plantings.

"It's kind of a cliché," Mistak said. "He was quiet. A nice, personable guy."

That assessment was echoed by a neighbor 200 feet east on Berkshire. He said he saw Fuller and an older man coming and going, but didn't know their names, just that they were "good neighbors" who didn't cause problems and who "kept their yard up."

"That's really all I care about," the man said.

The 1,500-square-foot house at 1000 N. Taylor is owned by Chicago radio personality Bruce DuMont, who is president and CEO of Chicago's Museum of Broadcast Communications. Neighbors and public records indicate Fuller has lived at the address since 2003.

The men appear to have known each other since at least 1997. A newspaper article from that year in Fuller's hometown paper in Rockmart, Ga., notes that Fuller met President Bill Clinton at a Museum of Broadcast Communications fundraiser at the Chicago Cultural Center, and quotes DuMont. On the museum's Web site Friday, Fuller appeared in two photos, one at May 2009 banquet and another with the caption "MBC staff, volunteers and Junior Board." Those images have since been removed.

There was no answer at the door of DuMont's house Friday morning. DuMont has not returned phone messages left with his secretary or replied to e-mails.

Google was subpoenaed

The charge on the criminal complaint against Fuller is specific about a file sent in April. The affidavit details file sharing and messages that go as far back as February 2008.

In October, federal agents subpoenaed Google for access to an e-mail account that Fuller had with the Internet company. Found among those records, according to the affidavit, were images and messages about sexual abuse of children. Also found in that search was a Columbia College e-mail address, which was listed as the secondary address for Fuller's gmail account. Fuller used a computer at Columbia College dozens of times to access his home computer, according to the affidavit. That home computer, the affivadit quotes Fuller as saying, "belonged to, and was exclusively used by, him."

Fuller is the chair of the Columbia College Council and an associate professor of biology in Columbia's science and math department. Columbia's student newspaper reported Friday that Fuller's classes are being covered by another professor and that the school is "closely monitoring the situation" and will "take appropriate actions as needed."

'Not a victimless crime'

Dan Kill, a licensed clinical social worker in Oak Park, says that without a comprehensive psychological assessment of a person, he can't tell what would addict that person to child pornography. Kill did say, however, that most recent research on the subject suggests "a correlation between addiction to child pornography and one or both of two factors: depression and the subject's own childhood sexual abuse."

Kill, who is president of Thrive Counseling Center in Oak Park, draws a clear distinction between child pornography of any kind and pornographic images featuring consenting adults.

"It's not a victimless crime, as with adult pornography," Kill said, noting that adults can give their consent. Child pornography, he said, wreaks "devastating effects on the children and adolescents that (are) destroying their lives."

Fuller, a Georgia native, was a high school academic star who graduated from Duke University in 1990. He received a doctorate from the University of Chicago in molecular genetics and cell biology in 1994.

Transporting child pornography carries a mandatory minimum penalty of five years in prison. The maximum penalty is 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

CONTACT: bdwyer@wjinc.com





Reader Comments


Posted: Monday, November 30, 2009
Article comment by: Kdo

Adult pornography isn't a crime, however. An example of a victimless crime would be consentual prostitution.

Posted: Saturday, November 21, 2009
Article comment by: Jim Coughlin

What a nightmare for the neighbors. Good work by law enforcement. This arrest demonstrates the need for a national dialogue on the real threats to the safety of our children posed by predators. Their crimes are not solely sexual in nature but also involve establishing control over the victims. The urge to abuse and exploit children cannot be cured. Confinement for life in a secured facility might be the only answer.

Article Comment Submission Form
Please feel free to submit your comments.

Article comments are not posted immediately to the Web site. Each submission must be approved by the Web site editor. There may be a delay of 24-48 hours for any submission while the Web site editor reviews and approves it.

Note: All information on this form is required. Your telephone number and e-mail address are for our use only, and will not be attached to your comment.
Name:
Telephone:
E-mail:
Passcode: This form will not send your comment unless you copy exactly the passcode seen below into the text field. This is an anti-spam device to help reduce the automated email spam coming through this form.

Please copy the passcode exactly
- it is case sensitive.
Message:
   






Copyright 2010, Wednesday Journal, Inc.,
141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302, 708-524-8300

To view any of the publications owned and operated
by Wednesday Journal, Inc., click on the appropriate title.

Forest Park Review · Riverside Brookfield Landmark
Chicago Journal · Skyline · Austin Weekly News · Chicago Parent magazine


Copyright 2010, Wednesday Journal Inc.

Software © 1998-2010 1up! Software, All Rights Reserved