http://www.commonvoice.com/article.asp?colid=4750

Man Nabbed by Cambodian and US Cops for Engaging in Sex with Minors

Jim Kouri
April 28, 2006

Accompanied by agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a
49-year-old Bay Area man returned from Cambodia to San Francisco today where
he faces charges that he engaged in illicit sexual conduct with underage
girls in that Southeast Asian nation. 

Michael John Koklich, a.k.a. Michael Light, is accused in a two-count
indictment handed down March 28 by a grand jury in San Francisco of engaging
in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places, a charge that carries a maximum
sentence of up to 30 years in prison.

Koklich was arrested February 17 by the Cambodian National Police in Phnom
Penh on suspicion of sexually exploiting two girls, ages 11 and 13. When
police sought to arrest Koklich, he attempted to flee, crashing his
motorcycle into a police barricade and injuring a local police officer.

The indictment against Koklich stems from a three-month, multi-agency
investigation involving ICE special agents in San Francisco and Bangkok, the
US Department of State's Bureau of Diplomatic Security, and the Cambodian
National Police. The case is being prosecuted by the United States
Attorney's Office for the Northern District of California. The Department of
Justice Office of International Affairs also assisted in the investigation.

The probe began after a non-governmental organization, Action Pour Les
Enfants, contacted ICE's attache office in Bangkok to report that Koklich
had been spotted with several young Cambodian girls.

"Individuals cannot escape criminal prosecution by committing sex crimes
overseas. As made evident by this indictment, our partners in law
enforcement are committed to protecting children from sexual exploitation
both here and abroad," said United States Attorney Kevin V. Ryan. "I thank
the Cambodian National Police, ICE, and the Diplomatic Security Service for
their outstanding collaboration on this case."

According to an affidavit in the case, Koklich traveled to Cambodia and
allegedly engaged in sexual relations with the two minors, beginning in
January 2006. He allegedly paid the girls $10 to $20 for each encounter.

Following Koklich's arrest, US and Cambodian investigators executed search
warrants at his two Phnom Penh residences. There, in addition to an array of
sexual paraphernalia, agents found a diary where Koklich detailed his sexual
exploits, as well as copies of newspaper articles about Americans arrested
for having sex with Cambodian minors.

Earlier this week, the Cambodian government expelled Koklich, paving the way
for his return to the United States. He is expected to make his initial
appearance in federal court tomorrow morning at 9:30 a.m. before Magistrate
Judge James Larson.

"This indictment is a direct result of the extraordinary cooperation we
received from Cambodian law enforcement and our counterparts at the
Department of State," said Charles DeMore, special agent in charge of the
ICE office of investigations in San Francisco. "Some pedophiles mistakenly
believe they can escape detection and prosecution by committing child sex
crimes overseas. We are putting pedophiles on notice that ICE and its law
enforcement partners here and abroad stand ready to pursue and prosecute
those who sexually exploit children."

"Protecting others is the primary mission of the Diplomatic Security
Service, and there is no greater or more noble cause than the protection of
our children," said Joe Morton, director for the State Department's
Diplomatic Security Service. "As public servants and law enforcement
officers we have a duty to strike at the atrocity of child sexual predators
as forcefully as possible."

Koklich lives part of the year in the Bay Area in a recreational vehicle,
which he parks in various locations, often in Santa Rosa. According to the
case affidavit, Koklich told ICE agents that he spends eight to nine months
of the year in Cambodia, and travels back to California in the summer to
earn money to finance his lifestyle in Southeast Asia. ICE agents say
Koklich sells jewelry and other items he purchases in Southeast Asia at flea
markets in the area.

Koklich is one of the first northern California residents prosecuted on
child sex tourism charges under the provisions of the PROTECT Act. The
PROTECT Act substantially strengthened federal laws against predatory crimes
involving children outside the United States by adding new crimes,
increasing sentences, and modifying the burden of proof requirements for
federal prosecutors to bring charges. President Bush signed the PROTECT Act
into law three years ago this week.

 

 



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