Haitian Cops Capture U.S. Child Molester
Haitian Police Capture Convicted Child Molester Missing From Virginia Since July

The Associated Press

 
AP Photo

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti—
Haitian police captured an American convicted of child molestation who violated parole and entered the Caribbean nation with fraudulent documents, the U.S. Embassy said Sunday.

Mario "Tony" Leyva, 57, was captured Saturday afternoon outside St. Marc and was incarcerated in the national penitentiary in thecapital, U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Judith Trunzo said.


A group of Haitians recognized Leyva from a photograph the U.S. Embassy published in the local papers and showed on television. Residents tied him up and then called the Haitian police.

He was expected to be flown back to the United States on Tuesday.

Leyva, a self-ordained evangelist minister, traveled the eastern United States and Haiti in the l980s, conducting tent revivals.

He convinced parents to allow their young sons to travel with him on tours, during which he sexually

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assaulted the boys and sold some of them off as prostitutes, according to court documents. It is not known whether Leyva is suspected of abusing children in Haiti.

Leyva, a Cuban-American, was arrested in 1988 in Roanoke, Va., and pleaded guilty to molesting more than 100 boys in North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Ohio and Indiana.

He also pleaded guilty to conspiracy and interstate transportation of minors for prostitution.

After serving 11 years of a 20-year prison term, he was released from Virginia state prison on parole in April 2002, but last month he fled the Roanoke area, where he was required to live under supervision until 2008.


photo credit and caption: A leaflet handed out by the U.S. embassy in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on August 12, 2003, with a photo of fugitive Mario Ivan Leyva, a U.S. citizen convicted of child molestation after he violated parole and entered the Caribbean nation with fraudulent documents. Haitian police captured Leyva, the U.S. Embassy said Sunday Aug 31, 2003. (AP Photo)

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