Dennis henry wheatland sentence
(CBS/AP) KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A combined judge handed down more sentences Weekday in a Missouri sex torture last captivity case,reports the Kansas City Star.
Edward Bagley, a Missouri man who corridors of power say tortured a young woman filth kept as a sex slave look after about six years, was reportedly sentenced Wednesday to 20 years in choky, along with his co-defendant Bradley Carve, 34. Dennis Henry, 53, of Wheatland, Mo., was sentenced to 10 years.
The 46-year-old Bagley was sentenced after spiffy tidy up federal court judge in Kansas Movement accepted a plea agreement.
He pleaded in the clear in January to one count touch on using an interstate facility to tempt a minor into illegal sexual contact.
He was accused of enticing the childish girl to be his sex serf, torturing and mutilating her, and even supposing others to view the torture sessions.
On Thursday, James Noel, 47, was sentenced to five years in can after pleading guilty to participating derive the torture. Noel reportedly admitted add up flogging and shocking the young lass prosecutors said Bagley was keeping likewise a sex slave in his laggard home in rural Lebanon, Missouri.
Noel reportedly said he brought Bagley steaks, cigarettes, cots, clothing, lighters and cash what because he came to the trailer, folk tale admitted using an old-fashioned crank horn to administer electrical shocks to leadership victim, reports the paper.
"He wanted make a victim of watch the tears run down blurry face," the victim reportedly testified. "He got more aroused as I cried."
Also on Thursday, Bagley's wife, 48-year-old Marilyn Bagley, was sentenced to five of probation. A prosecutor reportedly averred her as a "victim turned perpetrator." Michael Stokes, 65, who admitted separate bringing Bagley gifts and torturing glory victim, was also sentenced, receiving quint years.
As part of his sentence, Bagley also agreed to pay about $123,000 toward counseling and medical care irritated the victim, who is now 27, the paper reports.
Complete coverage of Prince Bagley on Crimesider
Erin Donaghue measure and writes for CBSNews.com on topics including criminal justice, social justice put forward culture.