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Court jails child porn man's girlfriend, says he's innocent

By JAMES RICE and JAMES RICE

Associated Press

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — A Burlington man who police say abused his wife said Thursday that he was innocent, but he acknowledged that he had been using child pornography since at least December.

"I'm 100 percent sure that my wife has done nothing wrong," Eric D. Wilson Jr. said at a news conference, hours after he was freed from jail on a $10,000 bond. "She said she'd never hurt my kids."

The 24-year-old former military reserve from Maine testified in court that a year and a half ago, he found child porn on his wife's computer, according to a statement read aloud. But it was the use of the child pornography that led police to arrest her in early August and ultimately charges him. She had no idea what his porn was and told detectives that she didn't have to deal with it because she never shared it with him.

Prosecutors said Wilson downloaded and viewed child porn that showed his wife abusing and molesting a 2-year-old boy. He also showed pictures of his wife and three young children to another woman, who sent them to her boyfriend, who later discovered the child pornography, prosecutors said.

The indictment did not name the girlfriend. Wilson said Thursday he will remain in jail at a facility for those with mental health issues because of post-traumatic stress and his wife's psychiatric history.

Dawn Deiters, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in New York, said a trial date is still pending, but a statement said Wilson, "who is a known drug addict," does not have a criminal record and will be on supervised release until January of next year.

Wilson is accused of illegally possessing child porn on his wife's computer and of uploading it to a service called "Viral Video" on his Facebook page.

Wilson, of Millersville, Md., is being held on $10,000 bail. He is also being held on a charge of making false claims regarding child porn. That's a felony count that carries a possible prison sentence up to five years.

"The public deserves to know that the government is not simply investigating this crime to punish innocent people," Deiters said.

Wilson told the judge that he and his wife used their daughter and a 5-year-old son as "playthings" in sexual relationships from 2012 to 2015. He acknowledged he knew he was putting his children at risk, but he said that he acted out of a desire to protect them, not a desire to offend them or to take credit for having sex
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Irrigators vote for high court water fight against EPA EPA said to be reviewing controversial drilling technique MORE's decision to allow the controversial drilling operation known as Deepwater Horizon.

Lawmakers on the House Appropriations Committee will hear testimony from five organizations representing the cleanup on Monday. They are:

American Crossroads Action Fund, which claims to represent more than 90,000 businesses.

Citizens for Responsible Oil and Gas, which is financed by the billionaire Koch Brothers.

Environmental Defense Fund, whose mission statement says it is "to promote the health and welfare of our environment and safeguard the water we drink from contaminated oil and gas."

Puerto Rico's Democratic Party and Democratic Governors Association will also testify, in addition to several other members of Congress.

Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) said he is concerned that the $1.1 billion in repairs would go to private companies rather than Puerto Rico, though he said the agency's efforts "may also go to Wall Street."

"It's an example of Congress spending taxpayer money on a project that won't result in any positive benefit," Lewis said, noting that the federal government should focus on ensuring clean energy employment and investing in the environment.

Lewis was the co-sponsor of House Resolution 2108, which would have allowed the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to go ahead with any future plans for drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. The resolution faced stiff opposition from the environmental groups of Congress, which argued that drilling would harm marine life and other species living off the coast.

A total of three bills were introduced with amendments before the deadline for lawmakers to consider funding. The biggest of them sought to limit the federal budget's spending for clean energy or energy-efficiency programs while blocking Congress from approving any energy legislation.

The Energy and Commerce Committee's ranking Democrat, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), is scheduled to testify in support of a bill passed by the House on Sept. 24.

A fourth bill, H.R. 3499, would bar Congress from using federal funds to impose a cap on carbon emissions from electric vehicles. Waxman has said the bill would require automakers to meet the stricter emissions standards set by the government by 2021.

A fourth bill sought to prohibit the EPA from approving a proposed oil spill mitigation plan for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, saying the agency has failed to make progress in improving environmental regulations there.

Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) will speak in the coming days in a defense of a bill introduced by Reps. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.).

On Monday, Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) will speak at a campaign event for a campaign tha