Former Edmonson Co. High School teacher to be sentenced Tuesday on child porn charges

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The former Edmonson County High School teacher arrested in January 2021 on child pornography charges will be sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Bowling Green.

William Oneal “Will” Lindsey, 30, of Brownsville, pled guilty in February to attempted production of child pornography and attempted online enticement.

According to the criminal complaint, on January 7, 2021, Lindsey began an online conversation that was sexual in nature with what he believed to be a 15-year-old girl, officials said. But in fact, Lindsey was talking with an undercover officer with the Kentucky Office of the Attorney General’s Department of Criminal Investigations.

After several days of conversations, Lindsey was taken into custody at Edmonson County High School on January 13, 2021. According to the complaint, Lindsey waived his Miranda rights and agreed to be interviewed.

“During the interview, he admitted the person he met online he knew to be a minor and that the conversation was sexual in nature and he asked for images,” prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Kentucky said. “He offered that he should not have engaged in the behavior because of the age of the person he was talking to and went on to say that he had communicated with numerous other girls on various platforms concerning sexually explicit topics and that he believed many of them were minors.”

Lindsey’s attorney, Allen Simpson, is asking for a 10 year sentence, according to the Bowling Green Daily News. The maximum penalty for attempted enticement of a minor is no less than 10 years and no more than life, while attempted production of child pornography carries a sentence of no less than 15 years, and no more than life.

Both counts carry a $250,000 fine.

Lindsey was the JAG coordinator at Edmonson County High School, according to the school’s website. JAG is a “school to work transition program designed to keep students in school through graduation and help them transition into the workplace in quality jobs,” according to the national JAG website.

By Ken Howlett, News Director

Contact Ken at ken@k105.com