Jerry Harris, former star of the Netflix docuseries “Cheer,” was sentenced Wednesday to 12 years in federal prison for soliciting sex from minors and pressuring young boys to send him nude photos and videos.
via USA Today:
The 22-year-old pleaded guilty in February to two charges for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old in the bathroom during a cheer competition and paying a 17-year-old to send him sexually explicit photos and videos via Snapchat, court records show. Harris also admitted to similar conduct involving other minors, though prosecutors agreed to dismiss those charges as part of the plea agreement.
Harris’ conviction marked a stunning fall for the former star who had captivated fans when he appeared in “Cheer.” His arrest in September 2020 sparked a reckoning in the world of competitive cheerleading, prompting others to share their own accounts of abuse and pressuring the sport’s governing body to institute reforms.
In court documents filed prior to sentencing, Harris’ attorneys had argued for a six-year sentence, citing Harris’ difficult childhood. The attorneys, who could not immediately reached for comment following Wednesday’s sentencing, said Harris had a “warped” view of relationships because he himself was sexually assaulted at age 13 by a 19-year-old from his cheer gym. Prosecutors, who had asked for a 15-year prison sentence, acknowledged Harris’ traumatic upbringing but said it was “not a blank check to commit sex offenses against minors.”
“Harris used his celebrity and wealth to continue his exploitation of children, expanding the tools available to him to manipulate them into gratifying his seemingly insatiable sexual desires,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Kelly Guzman wrote in her sentencing memorandum.
Judge Manish Shah also sentenced Harris to eight years of supervised release following his time in prison, said Sarah Klein, attorney for a Texas family that was the first to report allegations against Harris to authorities.
“Jerry Harris’ guilt has been firmly established,” Klein said. “The sentence he received reflects the severity of his crimes and the lifetime of pain his victims will suffer.”
That family, Kristen and her twin sons Charlie and Sam, described a pattern of harassment by Harris that started when the boys were 13 and Harris was 19. In interviews with USA TODAY, they said it continued for more than a year. USA TODAY agreed to withhold the family’s last name because the boys are minors and alleging abuse.
The twins, now 16, gave statements in federal court Wednesday detailing the lasting impact of Harris’ abuse, including the loss of friendships and their struggles with anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. Charlie said he became so afraid of public restrooms after Harris pressured him for sex in one that he stopped eating at school so he wouldn’t have to use the bathroom there.
“I knew in my heart and soul that what Jerry was doing to me and Sam was bad,” Charlie wrote in his statement, “but everyone was telling me that is just the way Jerry is and that if I were to ever to report him that EVERYONE would turn their back on me because I would have ruined the life of such an amazing person that everyone loved.”
Sam said he and his brother decided to speak up after realizing Harris was abusing others. “It made us realize that we couldn’t stay quiet — that we had to speak up, no matter how much it cost us,” he said in his statement. “And it cost us SO much.”
The FBI investigation into Harris was first reported by USA TODAY in September 2020, at a time when Harris’ celebrity was growing. He had picked up sponsorships with Starburst, Cheerios and Walmart. He had worked the red carpet for “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.” And he was still spending time in cheer gyms, despite the fact that the allegations against him had been reported to the sport’s governing body in May 2020.
USA TODAY found officials at that governing body, the U.S. All Star Federation, waited four months to suspend Harris, doing so only after the news organization published an article about the allegations. USA TODAY has since reported on pervasive child protection failures throughout the sport of competitive cheerleading, including how USASF delayed investigations and failed to prevent those accused or convicted of misconduct from working with young athletes.
When USA TODAY began its reporting, just 21 people had been suspended or banned from the sport. Today, more than 200 people’s names appear on the list.
USASF officials could not be reached Wednesday for comment on Harris’ sentence.
USASF, Harris and others are still facing a civil lawsuit filed by Kristen and her sons.
In a statement Wednesday, Kristen said the “entities that control all-star cheerleading were eager to ride on his coattails” as Harris’ celebrity status grew and brought positive attention to the sport.
“Now it is time for those same organizations to demonstrate an unequivocal commitment to the transparency, accountability, and substantive change necessary to prevent this from ever happening again,” she said.
This story is just sad all-around.
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