Sugar Grove man jailed on $250K bail
Lengthy investigation by DA’s WRATH unit leads to possession of child sexual abuse material charges
A Sugar Grove man has been jailed on $250,000 bail after a lengthy investigation into the sharing of child sex abuse materials on the internet.
William K. Young, 53, of Sugar Grove was charged Thursday with three counts of second-degree felony disseminating photo/film of child sex acts/sexual abuse materials, three counts of second-degree felony child sexual abuse material, three counts of third-degree felony child sexual abuse material and three counts of third-degree felony disseminating photo/film of child sex acts/sexual abuse materials. He was arraigned Thursday morning by Magisterial District Court Judge Raymond Zydonik, who set bail at $250,000. Young was taken to the Warren County Prison until he can post bail. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for July 22 in Zydonik’s court.
According to the Affidavit of Probable Cause, the investigation involved the Web Response Against Traffickers and Harmers Unit of the Warren County District Attorney’s Office that was created in September 2025 by District Attorney Cody Brown.
A detective assigned to the unit said the investigation began in December 2025 when a video file was uploaded to servers operated by Meta, generating a National Center for Missing & Exploited Children report. The detective obtained subscriber information associated with the identified IP address that identified Young as the subscriber for the IP address. On Dec. 23 the detective received another cyber tip regarding a message uploaded on WhatsApp Inc, a messaging service owned by Meta. A preservation letter was submitted and a search warrant prepared to view the file. The material was not viewed by a person but through a database. The material was then identified as child sexual abuse material. On New Year’s Eve the detective made contact with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, whose representative described the video as an underage girl engaged in prohibited sexual activity. It was believed the video originated in Japan. Search warrants were served in January to WhatsApp and Verizon, neither of whom were able to provide any subscriber information, addresses or phone numbers. LItlte happened until April 16, when a review of additional CyberTips were received allegedly involving Young, who was using at least two aliases, and communications with a person believed to be located in the Philippines. That report identified the same phone number found earlier in the investigation belonging to Young, with location data for the phone placing it within 50 feet of Young’s home.
Search warrants were served on Facebook and Google on April 27 for Facebook profiles of Young’s aliases as well as the email accounts for one of Young’s aliases and the Philippines resident with whom Young had allegedly been communicating. The next day Google responded with an email address. It was determined that Young was using the same cell phone to receive child sexual abuse material using two aliases. Messages associated with one of Young’s aliases also included a 190-second video call with the Philippines resident who Young had been communicating with that were of a sexual nature, according to the affidavit, and referenced an underage child.
“Through subscriber records, CyberTipline reports, Meta records, device identifiers, location data, phone number attribution and communications recovered pursuant to search warrants, investigators identified William K. Young as the user of the Facebook accounts ‘Steve Young,’ ‘Mike Smith’ and ‘Bill Yg,'” the affidavit states. “The investigation further established that Young utilized those accounts and associated devices to possess and transmit multiple files previously identified by the NCEMC as child sexual abuse materials.”
“Your affiant further notes that the defendant has a prior criminal history, including convictions for burglary and persons not to possess firearms,” the affidavit states. “Given the defendant’s criminal history, his connections outside Warren County, mainly Ohio, Texas, Philippines and the seriousness of the offenses under investigation, your affiant respectfully requests that a high monetary bail be imposed to ensure the defendant’s appearance and to protect the community.”
The county District Attorney’s WRATH unit targets offenders who attempt to victimize children through online communication or by possessing and distributing child pornography. By utilizing advanced investigative technology, WRATH will identify predators and hold them accountable under the law. WRATH will also work in partnership with other law enforcement agencies across the Commonwealth and is formally associated with ICAC (Internet Crimes Against Children), a nationwide program of task forces dedicated to combating the sexual exploitation of children online.
“The launch of WRATH represents a strong and proactive step in defending our children from online predators,” Brown said when announcing the unit’s creation. “If you attempt to exploit children online, we will find you and we will stop you.”



