Source: US FBI
HONOLULU – Acting United States Attorney Ken Sorenson announced that Dwayne Yuen, a 52-year-old resident of Honolulu, was sentenced yesterday in federal court to 405 months’ imprisonment followed by a lifetime term of supervised release for eleven counts related to child exploitation and harassment offenses. Yuen is also required to register as a federal sex offender. Yuen was arrested in February 2023 for child exploitation offenses. He pleaded guilty in December 2024 to committing crimes against three minor victims, including sex trafficking Minor Victim 1 in 2005 and 2006; coercing and enticing Minor Victim 2 to engage in sexual activity in 2006; and producing, receiving, and possessing child pornography of Minor Victim 3 in and around 2020 to 2023. He also pleaded guilty to harassing victims identified in court documents as Victims 4 through 9 through anonymous communications and Victim 10 through obscene communications in and around 2021 to 2023.
According to information provided to the Court, Yuen’s criminal conduct spanned nearly two decades, from at least 2005 through February 2023, when he was arrested in this case. Yuen was a youth basketball coach of mostly middle school- and high school-aged girls. He coached both private club teams and teams at various private and public schools on Oahu. Minor victims 1 through 3 and Victims 4 through 10 were all basketball players coached by Yuen or associated with him in their basketball activities. They were minors or at or near eighteen years old when Yuen began sending a relentless barrage of harassing and sexually explicit communications.
Yuen targeted student-athletes he coached or mentored with particular vulnerabilities, such as family or financial stressors. He groomed these victims for years when they were minors, starting with some victims as young as twelve-years old. He bought them gifts and food and over time engaged in increasingly graphically sexualized and obscene communications and imagery. He boasted about sexual contact he claimed to have with other student-athletes. He repeatedly threatened Minor Victims 1 and 2 and subjected Minor Victim 2 to sexual violence to coerce them into repeated sexual contact when they were fifteen and sixteen years old. For Minor Victim 2, when she stopped responding to his communications and attempted to stop the sexual abuse, he threatened to ruin her life, rape and kill her, and told her he was untouchable. He also got Minor Victim 3 to engage in a sexually explicit video call with him in 2020, which he then took screenshots of and sent to another victim.
For almost twenty years, his relentless pressure tactics involved targeting victims by using dozens of anonymous numbers to call and message victims and sending thousands of messages, sometimes up to one hundred a day, often with graphic sexual content. To coerce and entice victims to engage in physical and virtual sexual activity with him, he paid them, told them they owed him for any gifts they had received from him, threatened to ruin their reputations, expose their sexual past, and destroy their basketball careers.
At sentencing, Senior District Judge J. Michael Seabright stated that Yuen was a “predator with a whistle” who “groomed” and “preyed” on the victims “over and over again.” He was “truly relentless” in the “number of victims that he targeted” and “how he treated each of them.” In sentencing Yuen, Senior District Judge Seabright reiterated that the “scars clearly run deep” and remain “for life.”
“Dwayne Yuen grossly and repeatedly violated the sacred trust placed in him by his employer and the parents and families of his young female victims. He used his power and position to groom and then serially exploit and victimize the young girls entrusted to his care” said Acting U.S. Attorney Ken Sorenson. “While nothing can ever undo the harm he has caused these children and their families, it is our sincere hope that today’s sentence will ensure that our community and children are protected from him, and serve to deter other predators like him in the future. The U.S. Attorney’s Office and our dedicated law enforcement partners at the FBI will always continue to hunt down and bring to justice all who seek to exploit Hawaii’s children.”
“Yuen held a position of trust that demanded he protect and inspire young athletes,” said FBI Criminal Investigative Division Assistant Director Jose A. Perez. “Instead, he abused his authority by preying upon and threatening his young victims. Today’s sentencing reinforces the message that the victimization of children will not be tolerated by law enforcement. The FBI will continue to meticulously investigate these crimes, which cause irreparable harm and trauma to our nation’s youth.”
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation Honolulu Field Office.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Rebecca A. Perlmutter and Trial Attorney Gwendelynn Bills of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section prosecuted the case.
This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and CEOS, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, visit www.justice.gov/psc.