One young girl cut her skin with razors to distract from her mental anguish. Another turned to cocaine and meth because she couldn't afford therapy. A third girl never planned for life after high school, convinced she would kill herself by 18.
Together, theirs and other stories pieced together a mosaic of torment on Wednesday inside a St. Paul federal courtroom before a judge delivered a 43-year prison sentence in what he called the "largest known sextortion prosecution in United States history."
Prosecutors said that the government has so far identified some 750 victims — with more than 1,000 victims in total — linked to a yearslong scheme by 31-year-old Yue Vang of St. Paul to threaten the girls into sending him explicit photos on social media.
"His case is the worst in the country" in sheer magnitude, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Chelsea Walcker, who prosecuted Vang.
The young girls ranged in age from 12 to 17 and lived in all 50 states. An additional 42 victims have been identified abroad, Walcker said. One mother who spoke during Wednesday's two-hour hearing described how she had only learned of her daughter being a victim two days ago.
Vang pleaded guilty in May to a scheme that began as early as 2015 and continued through the end of September 2020. He created fake social media accounts posing as minor girls and threatened his many victims with sending explicit images and videos of the girls unless they sent him more lewd content.
In many cases, he followed through with sending sexually explicit images of the girls to friends, family, and classmates. On multiple occasions, Vang ordered multiple girls to record penetrating themselves with a hairbrush. He also extorted some girls to help him obtain child pornography from other victims.
In imposing Vang's sentence, U.S. District Judge Eric Tostrud cited the "unheard of number of victims" and the "staggering" amount of time and effort Vang made to identify the girls and piece together their social networks to aid in preying upon them.