Toms River man pleads guilty in child sexual abuse material case tied to multi-agency probe
TOMS RIVER, NJ — A 23-year-old Toms River man has admitted to distributing and possessing child sexual abuse material after investigators traced online uploads to his home, culminating a months-long investigation involving state and federal agencies.
Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley D. Billhimer announced that Logan Oliveira pleaded guilty Tuesday before Superior Court Judge Dina M. Vicari to one count of distribution of child sexual abuse material and one count of possession of child sexual abuse material. At sentencing, scheduled for February 20, the state will seek five years in New Jersey State Prison with a five-year period of parole ineligibility on the distribution charge and an additional five-year term on the possession charge, to be served concurrently.
Prosecutors said Oliveira will also be placed under parole supervision for life and will be required to register as a Megan’s Law offender.
The case began after the New Jersey State Police Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force received a cyber tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children reporting the online distribution of illegal images across multiple platforms. Investigators from the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office High Tech Crime Squad traced the activity to a cellphone number linked to a Toms River residence and identified Oliveira as the user.
According to authorities, the investigation revealed Oliveira frequently communicated with a second phone number belonging to Julianna Goldstein, 20, of Berkeley Township. Messages reviewed by investigators showed Goldstein allegedly sent nude images of juveniles to Oliveira and was instructed by Oliveira to engage in inappropriate contact with a juvenile and send photographs of that conduct.
On April 29, detectives executed a court-authorized search warrant at Oliveira’s home with assistance from the Ocean County Regional SWAT Team, Homeland Security Investigations, and Toms River Township police. A forensic review of electronic devices recovered at the residence uncovered multiple items of child sexual abuse material. Oliveira was arrested without incident and initially released under New Jersey Bail Reform before being remanded to the Ocean County Jail on June 12 for violating release conditions.
Search warrants were also executed the same day at Goldstein’s Berkeley Township residence. Investigators reported finding child sexual abuse material on her electronic devices. Goldstein was charged with distribution, possession, and manufacturing of child sexual abuse material, conspiracy to manufacture child sexual abuse material, and criminal sexual contact. She was released under bail reform, and her case remains pending.
The prosecution is being handled by Assistant Prosecutor Lynn Juan. The prosecutor’s office credited multiple local, state, and federal agencies for their joint efforts in the investigation.
Key Points
- A Toms River man pleaded guilty to distributing and possessing child sexual abuse material
- Prosecutors will seek a concurrent five-year state prison sentence with parole ineligibility
- The case stemmed from a cyber tip and involved multiple law enforcement agencies