
Revocation Hearing for Chantilly's Steve Garrison
Charged again with child-porn possession.
By Bonnie Hobbs
March 22, 2007
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Steve Franklin
Garrison got a gigantic break. Sentenced in October to five years in prison for
three counts of possession of child pornography, the Chantilly
man only had to actually serve five days in jail.
The rest of his sentence was suspended, and Garrison, 54, was placed on
supervised probation for three years. Before learning of his fate that day in
Fairfax County Circuit Court, he apologized for his actions.
GARRISON acknowledged that he'd put his marriage of 35 years in jeopardy and
vowed to the judge, "No matter what I have to do to get my life back on track,
I'll do it."
Now, though, it seems as if that train headed for the straight and narrow
somehow veered off path.
Fairfax
County
police have again arrested Garrison and charged him with two counts of
possession of child pornography. And this time, he's facing a revocation hearing
during which some or all of his previously suspended jail time could be
reinstated.
Garrison and his wife have three children and live at
4312 Poplar Branch Drive, in the vicinity of
three schools: Greenbriar West Elementary, Rocky Run Middle and Chantilly High.
Since January 1998, he was employed by Fairfax
County
as a master building inspector.
Then he learned to use the Internet. And as his attorney, John T. Graham,
explained at Garrison's sentencing, "From ages 50-54, he became conversant in
the use of the Internet [to view] both adult and child pornography."
Eventually, authorities shined a light on Garrison's newfound interest. And on
Oct. 6, 2005, he was arrested by the
Northern Virginia-Washington, D.C., Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task
Force. He resigned his job with the county four days later.
Garrison pleaded guilty May 9, 2006 in
Circuit Court, before Judge Marcus Williams, returning Oct. 13 to learn his
punishment. Graham told the court his client was receiving treatment for his
problem from two doctors and noted that he'd never engaged in physical contact
with minors.
"He's undergone a complete transformation and been honest and aboveboard with
everyone," said Graham. "He's not the type of person to do this kind of thing,
and he's never going to repeat it again."
But Assistant
Commonwealth's
Attorney Kyle Manikas was concerned about the seriousness of the charges and
troubled by Garrison's behavior. "This wasn't a one-time event," he said. "It
was done repeatedly, over a three- to four-year period."
HE THEN asked Williams to sentence Garrison to "some active jail time and a
substantial period of probation" so he'd have some time hanging over his head if
he ever gets into trouble again." Manikas also recommended that Garrison be
ordered into sex-offender treatment requiring periodic polygraph tests.
Williams sentenced Garrison to five years in prison on each of his three
charges, running the sentences concurrently. He then suspended all but five days
and placed Garrison on supervised probation for three years. The judge also
ordered him to receive sex-abuse evaluation and treatment and to continue with
the therapy programs he's already begun.
"I'm suspending [most of your sentence] because you have no prior record,"
Williams told Garrison. "But the court is concerned about the nature of this
crime, so that's why the court has ordered the evaluation and treatment to
continue."
Fast forward to March 5 of this year — less than five months after his
sentencing — and Garrison is back in hot water. Det. Craig R. Paul — with the
Child Investigations Unit of the police department's Criminal Investigations
Bureau — presented details in a March 7 affidavit for a warrant to search
Garrison's home for evidence of child-pornography possession.
Paul wrote that he received information March 5 from Garrison's probation
officer. According to the detective: "When Mr. Garrison learned that he was
going to have to submit to a court-ordered polygraph as part of his compliance
in his sentence, he [allegedly] admitted to his probation officer that he had
downloaded a video of child pornography."
The detective stated that Garrison reportedly told his probation officer he'd
downloaded it from a computer in his home, around Feb. 20, and that it showed "a
12- to 14-year-old female giving oral sex to an adult male."
Furthermore, wrote Paul, Garrison allegedly admitted searching online for child
pornography by using a particular term used by people who are stimulated by
seeing sexual activity between adults and children.
Police arrested Garrison Feb. 28, charging him with two counts of possession of
child pornography. His revocation hearing is scheduled for this Friday, March
23, in Circuit Court. Until then, he's being held without bond in the
Adult
Detention
Center.
Meanwhile, police searched his Chantilly
home March 7 for two hours and seized more than two dozen items, including two
computers and associated software and accessories, two cameras, a multitude of
VHS tapes, CDs, CD-Roms, an alleged pornographic book and 10 alleged
pornographic videotapes.