You are reading

Pervert shows porn video to 11-year-old girl and follows her to Jackson Heights school, police say

Suspect

March 10, 2017 Staff Report

Police are searching for a man who allegedly showed an 11-year-old girl a pornographic video as she walked to school in Jackson Heights this week.

The man approached the girl around 8:15 a.m. on Wednesday as she was walking to school near the corner of Northern Boulevard and 82 Street and showed her a pornographic video on his phone, according to police.

The suspect then followed the girl to her school. Once she was inside, she reported the incident to school officials and the suspect fled in an unknown direction. The police did not disclose the name of the school.

The suspect is described as a Hispanic man about 40 years old and around 5 feet 11 inches tall. He was last seen wearing a gray sweatshirt, black jacket, blue jeans, and dark sneakers with a white sole bottom and laces, and with his cellphone in his hand.

Police have released a photo and video of the suspect and anyone with information in regards to this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 800-577-TIPS.

email the author: [email protected]om

7 Comments

Click for Comments 
Have fun at rikers

Thats one ugly person. Man, i wonder what his parents looked like if they made him. Hes a future Halloween mask

Reply
Anonymous

Who cares abouy looks, so if he was good looking it would be ok to commit the crime…smh!

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Met Council leader warns of ‘catastrophe’ for low-income families in Queens due to lack of pandemic-era federal food aid

Mar. 28, 2023 By Bill Parry

As an accomplished legislator, law professor and media personality with broad experience in government and not-for-profit organizations, Met Council CEO and executive director David Greenfield is well aware of the power of words. With Passover arriving on Wednesday, April 5, and with federal pandemic food assistance no longer available to low-income families in Queens, the leader of the nation’s largest Jewish charity organization warned of a coming “catastrophe” and called for the city to step up to provide $13 million in emergency funding for pantries to help New Yorkers facing food insecurity and elevated costs of living in the borough.

Pair of Queens community organizations will activate public spaces to celebrate local cultures

Two Queens community organizations are among an inaugural cohort of five groups citywide that will lead new projects to celebrate local cultures and histories in public spaces under a new initiative called The Local Center in a partnership between Urban Design Forum and the Association for Neighborhood & Housing Development (ANHD).

At a time when New York is grappling with an uneven pandemic recovery and as displacement looms large for communities and neighborhoods across the five boroughs, this new endeavor will convene interdisciplinary teams to transform and activate the shared spaces where cultural traditions flourish — and importantly, center the community visions and leadership that is too often left out of the process.