Junction City man gets 41 months for child abuse material possession
A Junction City man got 41 months in federal prison after investigators traced child sexual abuse material to a cloud account and interviewed him in Lane County.
A Junction City man will spend more than three years in federal prison after investigators linked a cloud storage account to child sexual abuse material and later got an admission from him during a Lane County interview. The sentence adds another chapter to a case that moved from digital evidence in 2023 to a federal conviction in Eugene.
Trevor Alan Slocum-Lammers, 31, was sentenced Wednesday, June 4, to 41 months in federal prison followed by five years of supervised release. The case began when investigators say a cloud storage account associated with him uploaded child sexual abuse material in August 2023. On July 30, 2024, investigators executed a search warrant and interviewed Slocum-Lammers, who admitted possessing the material.
A federal grand jury in Eugene returned an indictment against him on Sept. 19, 2024. He pleaded guilty on Oct. 9, 2025, before receiving his sentence this week. Assistant U.S. Attorney William M. McLaren prosecuted the case.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation led the investigation, with help from the Lane County Sheriff’s Office, Homeland Security Investigations and the Oregon State Police. Federal officials said the case was part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 to combat child sexual exploitation and abuse.
Prosecutors say child sexual abuse material does not simply record abuse, it re-victimizes and re-traumatizes children each time it is viewed or shared online. That warning gives the sentence significance beyond one defendant: cases like this often begin with digital traces, then unfold through warrants, interviews and coordination across agencies before a charge is ever filed.
For Lane County, the case also underscores how online exploitation investigations reach beyond Eugene and Springfield into smaller communities such as Junction City. The federal response reflects a long-running effort by local and federal agencies to identify offenders, protect children and treat possession cases as serious crimes with lasting consequences.
The U.S. Department of Justice has said the District of Oregon continues to pursue child-exploitation prosecutions and sentencings, a pattern that shows how aggressively these offenses are being investigated and charged across the state.
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