Assistant U.S. Attorney, Kyle Rossi, who handled the case,
stated that in May 2018, the Los Angeles office of the FBI executed a federal
search warrant at a residence in Solvang, California. Special agents seized a
number of electronic items containing child pornography. A resident at that
address admitted to using social networking sites such as Kik and Live.me to
trade child pornography with others via the Internet. Based on that
information, investigators identified several individuals, including the
defendant, who were actively involved in the child pornography trade.
The information was sent to the Corning Office of the FBI,
who, with the assistance of the Penn Yan Police Department, identified Maciejewski
as a substitute teacher for the Penn Yan Central School District. Special agents
acted quickly to obtain search warrants and locate Maciejewski, who was
ultimately interviewed at the school district’s offices. During the interview,
the defendant confessed that he in fact traded child pornography using social
networking sites, including a cloud storage service, “Mega,” which is located
in New Zealand.
With the help of the New Zealand Department of Internal
Affairs, investigators obtained the contents of Maciejewski’s Mega account, which
contained hundreds of images and videos of child pornography. The defendant’s
electronic devices were also forensically examined. In total, Maciejewski
possessed more than 600 images and videos of child pornography, some of which
depicted the sexual abuse of infants and toddlers.
The sentencing is the result of an investigation by the
Corning Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Buffalo Division, under
the direction of Special Agent-in-Charge Gary Loeffert; the Penn Yan Police
Department, under the direction of Chief Thomas Dunham; and the New Zealand
Department of Internal Affairs.