Georgia man sentenced to 1,000 years for child porn gets parole

Authored by ajc.com and submitted by IThinkTheClockIsSlow
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A former Troup County commissioner once called a prolific collector of child pornography will have a chance to spend the rest of his 1,000-year prison sentence on parole.

The State Board of Pardons and Paroles released Peter Mallory on parole May 27, three weeks after an appeals court found the sentence for Mallory’s 2012 conviction was appropriate. District Attorney Herb Cranford said he opposed the decision “but was powerless to stop it.”

Cranford on Tuesday released a statement explaining his opposition after he said several members of the Troup County community expressed concern over Mallory’s release.

Mallory, 72, a former owner of LaGrange television station WCAG-TV, was convicted of 60 counts of sexual exploitation of children, three counts of invasion of privacy and one count of tampering with evidence in December 2012 after a three-week trial.

He was charged as a result of a LaGrange Police Department investigation initiated in February 2011. According to prosecutors, police were alerted to more than 600 suspected child porn files linked to a computer in LaGrange, which led them to the television station Mallory operated.

More than 26,000 files of child pornography were seized.

“The evidence demonstrated that Mallory knowingly and intentionally sought out, gathered, downloaded and saved these images and videos of children being raped, tortured and sexually exploited,” Cranford said in a prior news release.

The invasion of privacy counts stemmed from a hidden camera Mallory installed in his office that he used to secretly record young women, Cranford said.

At sentencing a few months after the trial, Coweta Judicial Circuit Superior Court Judge Dennis Blackmon called Mallory “probably the most prolific collector of child pornography in the entire world.”

His conviction and sentence was affirmed by the Court of Appeals on May 7.

Cranford advocated against Mallory’s release in a December letter to the parole board. Mallory was first eligible for parole in December 2019, seven years after his conviction. According to a parole board spokesman, Mallory’s eligibility was determined by Georgia’s sentencing laws for consecutive sentences, despite the length of his sentence.

The board reconsidered the case and set a new parole month of December 2022.

Cranford said he opposed parole “now or any time in the future” and said the Troup County community would be offended if Mallory was released after serving just seven years of his 1,000-year sentence.

“The evidence shows that Mallory is sexually deviant and commits these crimes by compulsion as much as by choice,” he said in the letter. “In the current digital age, no amount of supervision can stop a compulsive sexual deviant like Mallory from seeking out the most heinous images and videos of small children being sexually abused.”

Two victims involved in the case also opposed parole, Cranford said. At a minimum, they asked that Mallory be banned from Troup County and from contacting them if he was released.

“Mallory’s crimes did not allow for the state to seek or the trial court to impose a sentence without parole eligibility, and parole is a power exercised exclusively by the State Board of Pardons and Paroles,” Cranford said Tuesday in the statement.

In an April response to Cranford, the parole board said earlier release was possible due to “performance incentive credits.” Board spokesman Steve Hayes said Mallory actually served five months in prison beyond the date he was eligible for release by law and the board followed its guidelines system to determine his parole.

“The clemency recommendation was for a parole release at eligibility,” Hayes said in an email to AJC.com. “Mallory was released five months later. His parole release is not COVID-19 related.”

For the remainder of his sentence, Mallory will be required to register as a sex offender and will be subject to having his parole revoked if he violates the law or the conditions of his release. He is banished from Troup County, is on electronic monitoring and cannot contact any victims.

“The board is confident he will be closely monitored by the Georgia Department of Community Supervision,” he said.

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Lapys on July 1st, 2020 at 19:03 UTC »

I have family in that area and believe me, everyone is confused and mad as hell. He's already getting death threats online. It's interesting too to note that the parole board at the state level passed this down. The District Attorney for the circuit in which he was convicted wrote a letter saying he and everyone involved vehemently opposed this and wrote letters to the Parole Board, which somehow still saw fit to allow parole.

NotYourSnowBunny on July 1st, 2020 at 16:58 UTC »

What in the goddamn fuck. The justice system is a joke, and full of 3 strike felons with non-violent offenses serving life. Yet they let this man out after what, 8 years?

another_sunnyday on July 1st, 2020 at 16:48 UTC »

At sentencing a few months after the trial, Coweta Judicial Circuit Superior Court Judge Dennis Blackmon called Mallory “probably the most prolific collector of child pornography in the entire world.”

That is quite a designation.

“The evidence demonstrated that Mallory knowingly and intentionally sought out, gathered, downloaded, and saved these images and videos of children being raped, tortured, and sexually exploited,” Cranford said in a prior news release.

The invasion of privacy counts stemmed from a hidden camera Mallory installed in his office that he used to secretly record young women, Cranford said.

Hopefully his parole requirements involve no access to computers or digital recording equipment.

Edit: if anyone believes they have come across child abuse material, or evidence that a child is being exploited online, you can contact the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children cyber tip line.

Or if you are interested in donating to NCMEC, you can do so here.

thanks, u/UT_Teapot for the suggestion