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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Hawaii professor may face prison in child sex sting

Advertiser Staff

REPORT CRIMES

Check www.hicac.com for tips on protecting children, and information on the task force, or call 586-1240 to report Internet crimes involving children.

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A college professor accused of trying to lure a minor via the Internet for sex made his initial appearance yesterday in District Court.

Marc P.C. Fossorier, 43, of Hawai'i Kai, an associate professor of electrical engineering at the University of Hawai'i-Manoa, is the ninth man charged this year in Hawai'i for first-degree electronic enticement of a child as a result of sting operations conducted by the Hawai'i Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, said state Deputy Attorney General Albert Cook.

Fossorier's preliminary hearing was scheduled for tomorrow at 1 p.m. in District Court. The hearing process could be canceled should he be indicted by an O'ahu grand jury before then.

His bail is $50,000.

Fossorier was arrested Monday at the McDonald's Pearl Kai restaurant, 98-147 Kamehameha Highway, after he showed up for a pre-arranged meeting set up with a task force agent posing online as a 15-year-old girl.

If convicted, Fossorier could be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison. The minimum sentence is five years of probation with one year in jail. A conviction would require Fossorier to register as a sex offender.

Since its formation in 2004, the task force has captured 22 online predators in Hawai'i, Cook said.

Before the passage of a new law with tougher penalties in July 2006, those prosecuted were often granted deferred pleas and sentenced to either minimal jail time or probation with no requirement to register as sex offenders.

The new law ensures jail time and requires registration for convictions.

Thirteen cases, including Fossorier's, fall under the new law. Currently, two men who pleaded guilty and two others convicted by a jury are awaiting sentencing, while a fifth man already is serving jail time, said Cook.

The nine arrests this year are the most for the task force, eclipsing the previous high of five in 2004.

Task force personnel represent Honolulu Police, the FBI, U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement, Naval Criminal Investigative Services and the state attorney general.