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Friday, Feb. 10, 2012

Internet sex suspect granted continuance

Thursday, January 21, 2010
Another delay was granted for a Murfreesboro man accused of several sexually-related charges via the Internet involving a minor.

Feb. 17 is the next court date for Brian Allen Bell, 27, who faces four counts of solicitation of a minor, sexual exploitation of a minor by electronic means and distributing obscene material to a minor.

A continuance had been granted in December for Bell so that defense attorney John Norton could have access to electronic records, but Norton did not appear in General Sessions Court on Wednesday.

Norton told the T-G in December that he had requested phone and computer records as part of the discovery process and that a preliminary hearing should be set for the last week in February.

Bell has been accused of using the popular social networking Internet site MySpace to try to make contact with a Bedford County teen.

According to Sgt. Nikia Elliott of the Bedford County Sheriff's Department, a concerned parent contacted authorities last August over messages his 15-year-old daughter was allegedly receiving from Bell via the Web site.

The girl "tried to get rid of the 27-year-old, but he wouldn't leave her alone and wanted her phone number," Elliott said

With the permission of the father, Bell was given the phone numbers he asked for and Elliott explained that "over the next four days, he was sending some pretty vulgar invitations to her and also some pictures of himself."

Warrants filed by Elliott stated that the Murfreesboro man allegedly used a cell phone to send images of himself of a sexual nature.

Bell also "did intentionally invite or attempt to induce through the use of a cell phone who he believed to be a fifteen year old girl to engage in conduct that if completed would have constituted statutory rape," the warrant reads.

"The defendant sent several text messages to the juvenile of a sexual nature describing sexual acts that he wished her to fulfill," Elliott wrote in the warrants.

But Elliott then said investigators turned the tables and "used MySpace, Facebook and everything else to figure out who he was and where he was at and finally tracked him down."

Bell is free on $25,000 bond.