SAN DIEGO
A Border Patrol supervisor is going to prison for putting a hidden camera in a floor drain of the women’s restroom at the Chula Vista Border Patrol station to video record females’ private parts, according to officials.
U.S. Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Armando Gonzalez, 47, was sentenced on Monday to 21 months in prison, officials said.
In handing down the sentence, U.S. District Judge Roger T. Benitez said the “facts of this case were shocking,” and he described the conduct as “egregious” and “a violation of trust.”
Gonzalez was permitted to remain free on bond until Jan. 22, when he is required to report to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons.
During today’s hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Alessandra Serano told the court that the defendant’s crimes warranted a significant sentence, noting that the camera was in place for about 18 months and the defendant spent a lot of time editing, naming and saving the videos.
“When Armando Gonzalez put a video camera down the drain of a women’s restroom, he also put his career, his honor and his freedom down that drain,” said U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy. “This is a fitting sentence for a man who sullied his badge with such despicable behavior.”
Gonzalez plead guilty in May to one count of making a false statement to a federal officer and seven counts of video voyeurism. He admitted that he placed a hidden camera in a floor drain of the women’s restroom at the Chula Vista Border Patrol station to capture images of female private parts.
Gonzalez, a supervisor, also admitted that when Border Patrol superiors confronted him about the camera, he lied to cover up his crimes, saying that he’d placed the camera in the bathroom to conduct a drug investigation of one of his female employees.
According to the plea agreement, Gonzalez, of El Cajon, California, acknowledged that he captured video images of the unclothed private parts of seven women – all federal employees – who used the bathroom between July 24, 2013 and April 11, 2014.
The videos were as short as 24 seconds and as long as nine minutes, 17 seconds.
The defendant saved the video images from those instances, and dozens of others, on an SD card he kept hidden at his workplace, the plea agreement said.
Gonzalez admitted that after the hidden camera was discovered, he destroyed or discarded the hard drive from the Apple MacBook used to edit the videos before law enforcement had a chance to execute a search warrant at his home, according to officials.