Disturbing moment federal agent is busted sniffing a three-year-old girl’s underwear on nanny cam in her bedroom – The Sun

A GROTESQUE former federal law enforcement officer was accused of having a sexual motive for smelling a three-year-old girl's dirty underwear in her bedroom.

In spite of a nauseating baby-cam film of him repeatedly digging through the tot's dirty laundry hamper and getting off on her knickers, David Timothy Moon could get clean away with it.


Deputy U.S. Marshal David Timothy Moon, 50, was touring a Phoenix home for sale in May 2019.

He holds the toddler's used knickers close to his face and appears to sniff them deeply multiple times, turning them over in his hands to inhale them again and returning for a second visit.

ABC15 reported a girlfriend told police that as the news broke that he was wanted "he threw out his computer" and that his Gmail account had a video of "girls doing gymnastics" in an email from "him to himself."

The girl's horrified father said in court that he is extremely scared that Moon is a potential predator who could hunt down his daughter.

Moon had been a federal agent for 24 years before being fired over the allegation.

He previously operated in multiple states, including Arizona, Alabama, and Florida, according to the US Marshals Service.

Marshals refused to comment on whether Moon has a history of similar allegations.



At the end of his second visit where he again inhaled the child's underwear he sees the camera

HE GOT AWAY WITH IT

Moon was indicted on two counts of felony trespassing with sexual motivation. He later made a plea deal for misdemeanor trespassing.

He will receive no sex offender testing or therapy. He is not be required to check in with a probation officer.

He is not supervised by Arizona's U.S. Marshals after his sentencing and could later apply for this trespassing case to be set aside.

If approved he would get completely away with it.

NO PUNISHMENT FOR SEX OFFENCES

"This is by far the stupidest thing I've ever done in my life," Moon said in court during his sentencing last week.

Arizona Judge Katherine Cooper said: "The court believes that he is sincere in his remorse."

In dismissing the family and prosecution's concerns that nothing would happen to protect communities from Moon, she told them: "It can seem unfair", "It can seem like it's not enough."

Judge Cooper acknowledged mitigating factors, such as Moon's lack of prior crimes, his military service, and his work as a deputy marshal.

Moon has since fled to Texas to serve his probation, where he reports to bosses in Washington D.C.

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