The deputy press secretary for the US Department of Homeland Security was
arrested Tuesday for using the Internet to seduce what he thought was a teenage
girl, authorities said.
This
undated image made available April 4, 2006 by the Polk County, Fla.
Sherriff's office shows US Department of Homeland Security deputy press
secretary Brian Doyle. Doyle, 55, was arrested in Maryland for using the
Internet to seduce what he thought was a teenage girl, authorities
said. [AP Photo] |
Brian J. Doyle, 55, was
arrested at his residence in Maryland on charges of use of a computer to seduce
a child and transmission of harmful material to a minor. The charges were issued
out of Polk County, Fla.
Doyle, of Silver Spring, Md., had a sexually explicit conversation with what
he believed was a 14-year-old girl whose profile he saw on the Internet on March
14, the Polk County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.
The girl was an undercover Polk County Sheriff's Computer Crimes detective,
the sheriff's office said.
Doyle sent the girl pornographic movie clips and had sexually explicit
conversations via the Internet, the statement said.
During other online conversations, Doyle revealed his name, that he worked
for the Homeland Security Department and offered his office and government
issued cell phone numbers, the sheriff's office said.
Doyle also sent photos of himself to the girl, but authorities said they were
not sexually explicit.
On several occasions, Doyle instructed her to perform a sexual act while
thinking of him and described explicit activities he wanted to have with her,
investigators said.
Doyle later had a telephone conversation with an undercover deputy posing as
the teenager and encouraged her to purchase a web camera to send graphic images
of herself to him, the sheriff's office said.
He was booked into Maryland's Montgomery County jail where he was waiting to
be extradited to Florida, the sheriff's office said.
There was no immediate response to messages left on Doyle's government-issued
cell phone and his e-mail, and he could not be reached by phone at the jail for
comment.
Homeland Security press secretary Russ Knocke in Washington said he could not
comment on the details of the investigation. "We take these allegations very
seriously, and we will cooperate fully with the ongoing investigation," Knocke
said.
Doyle, who is the fourth-ranking official in the department's public affairs
office, was expected to be placed on administrative leave Wednesday
morning.