Education

Cazenovia school board vice president charged in child communications case

A Cazenovia school board vice president was charged after police said he sent sexually explicit messages to a child under 12. Investigators said they believe there may be more victims.

Marcus Williams··2 min read
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Cazenovia school board vice president charged in child communications case
Source: abc3340.com

A Cazenovia school board vice president is facing four child-endangerment charges after state police said he carried on a pattern of sexually explicit communications with a child younger than 12. Investigators said they believe there may be additional victims, and they are asking the public for help as the case moves through the Madison County court system.

Travis J. Longo, 46, of Cazenovia, was arrested June 18, according to New York State Police. Troopers charged him with four counts of endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor, and took him to Madison County CAP Court for centralized arraignment.

Longo also serves as vice president of the Cazenovia Central School District Board of Education, adding a school-community and public-trust dimension to the case. The allegations focus on alleged sexual communication with a very young child, and police have not said the investigation is limited to a single victim.

State police said anyone with information should contact Troop D Headquarters at (315) 366-6000 and reference case number NY2600762245. The warning for families across Onondaga County and the broader Central New York region is plain: cases like this are often built from digital contact, direct reports, and follow-up interviews, and investigators may still be working to identify other children who were contacted.

For parents and caregivers, the immediate protection step is to take any suspicious contact seriously and report it quickly rather than treating it as a one-time message or a private family matter. In school districts, youth programs, and homes across the region, that means keeping track of who is talking to children, documenting what was said, and passing information to police so detectives can trace whether there are other victims tied to the same suspect.

The case now enters the court process, while investigators continue to look for anyone else who may have been contacted.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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