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Farmington Woman Gets 13 Years for Child Porn Distribution

Tristalyn Valencia, 30, of Farmington, N.M., is going away for 13 years — no excuses, no reprieve — after being sentenced in federal court in Santa Fe for distributing child pornography. The grim sentence, handed down today, includes five years of supervised release and a lifetime scar: Valencia will register as a sex offender upon release. The crime? Pushing vile images of a child under 12 into the digital abyss, where predators feed and innocence dies.

Valencia’s descent into criminal depravity began between May and August 2012 in San Juan County, where she was later indicted on nine counts of producing visual depictions of a minor in sexually explicit conduct. She was arrested on Christmas Eve 2015, a holiday reminder that predators don’t take days off. The feds moved fast, and by April 13, 2016, she stood in court and pleaded guilty to distributing nine images of child pornography — each depicting the same young victim, some showing the child engaged in acts with an adult male.

The evidence was undeniable. Between June 1 and June 30, 2012, Valencia shared these files — not just hoarded them, but distributed them — fueling the online child exploitation economy. Each image was a crime. Each click, a betrayal. The victim, a child under the age of 12, remains unnamed, but the trauma is permanent. Valencia admitted it all. No denials. No tears reported. Just a cold admission to feeding the darkest corners of the web.

This case was ripped from the shadows by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), with boots-on-the-ground work from the Albuquerque and Phoenix field offices, alongside the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office. The 11th Judicial District Attorney’s Office in Farmington provided critical support. Special Agent in Charge Waldemar Rodriguez of HSI in El Paso, U.S. Attorney Damon P. Martinez, District Attorney Robert P. “Rick” Tedrow, and Sheriff Ken Christesen all stood behind the prosecution — a unified front against child exploitation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Mease led the charge in court as part of Project Safe Childhood, the DOJ’s national hammer against online child sexual abuse. Launched in 2006, the initiative targets predators who use the internet to exploit minors, combining federal, state, and local muscle to hunt them down, prosecute them, and — when possible — rescue their victims. Valencia is now a name on that growing list of convicted predators.

There’s no redemption arc here. Just a 13-year sentence, a shattered childhood, and a warning: the feds are watching. For every image shared, there’s a trail. And for every child victimized, there’s a price to pay. Tristalyn Valencia just learned what that price is.

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