St. Louis Woman Sentenced on Federal Sex Trafficking Charges
ST. LOUIS, MO—Waquita Wallace was sentenced to 20 years in prison on a federal charge of sex
trafficking by force, fraud or coercion, Grace Loretta King, Acting Assistant Attorney General for
Civil Rights, and Michael W. Reap, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri
announced today.
In June 2008, April Chaney moved into the 5200 block of Genevieve in St. Louis to live with her
sister, Waquita Wallace. That same month, Chaney and Wallace talked a mentally disabled18 yearold
girl into moving in with them so they could care for her. Instead the girl was held captive,
forced to give up her monthly disability check, and to work as a prostitute to pay off a drug debt.
Wallace constantly threatened, beat, burned, tortured and humiliated the girl. On one occasion,
Wallace was afraid that the police had been called, so she and Chaney tied the girl up with a phone
cord and left her in the garage.
“Sex trafficking violates individuals’ basic human rights, stripping them of their dignity and
freedom,” Acting Assistant Attorney General King said. “The damage done to the victim in this
case cannot be reversed, but I applaud the investigators and attorneys who brought these defendants
to justice, and it should send a message that we will continue to vigorously enforce our nation’s civil
rights laws.”
“This case was a horrible violation against a human being who couldn't defend herself,” said John
V. Gillies, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in St. Louis. “The FBI will aggressively work with
our partners to identify, investigate and bring to justice those who exploit children and women and
traffic in human misery.”
Wallace, 34, St. Louis, pleaded guilty in April to forcing a young woman to engage in commercial
sex acts through a combination of threats, fraud, intimidation and physical coercion. She appeared
today for sentencing before United States District Judge Carol E. Jackson. At the conclusion of her
prison sentence, Wallace will be on supervised release for five years.
Co-defendant April Chaney previously pleaded guilty to related charges and was sentenced last
December to five years in prison.
Human trafficking prosecutions are a top priority of the Department of Justice. In the last seven
fiscal years, the Civil Rights Division, in conjunction with the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, has increased
by nearly seven-fold the number of human trafficking cases filed in court as compared to the
previous seven fiscal years. In FY 2007, the Department obtained a record number of convictions
in human trafficking prosecutions.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Intelligence Division of
the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorney Howard Marcus and Civil Rights Division Trial Attorney Jim Felte.
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