LOS ANGELES
A retired Marine Corps captain who traveled to Cambodia in 2005 for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct with minors was sentenced Monday to 210 years in federal prison, officials stated.
Michael Joseph Pepe, 68, a former Oxnard resident who has been in federal custody since 2007.
U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer sentenced Pepe whose actions the judge described as “monstrous” and “horrific.”
“What he did to those pre-teen girls…was torture,” Judge Fischer said, noting that there was “no justification for a sentence that would ever allow [Pepe] to be released from prison.”
Judge Fischer has scheduled a restitution hearing in this case for Feb. 28.
During a seven-day trial in August 2021, jurors heard testimony from eight victims who were as young as 9 years old when they were sexually abused. Each of the victims testified that Pepe sexually abused them, and several explained that Pepe drugged, bound, beat, and raped them.
Prosecutors also presented evidence corroborating the victims’ testimony, including homemade child pornography.
Pepe initially was arrested in Cambodia 2006. After being brought to the United States and charged in early 2007, he subsequently was tried, convicted and sentenced to prison.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit overturned the conviction in 2018, and prosecutors retried the defendant on new charges.