Cop Who Dodged Sentence for Killing Sex Worker Gets 11 Years for Abducting More Sex Workers
The victims received no restitution payment.

Former vice cop Andrew Mitchell has been sentenced to 11 years in prison after pleading guilty late last year to two counts of deprivation of rights under color of law and one count of tampering. Mitchell, who was employed for many years as a police officer in Columbus, Ohio, is accused of picking up sex workers and sexually assaulting them.
This week, a federal judge sentenced him to the maximum prison sentence recommended by prosecutors, plus a fine of $300 and five years of supervised release.
It's something, at least.
But his victims will receive no restitution payment. And last year, Mitchell walked on much more serious charges involving the killing of Donna Castleberry.
Castleberry's Death
Mitchell fatally shot the 23-year-old while she was trapped in his unmarked police car. He later claimed he killed Castleberry in self-defense after she stabbed him in the hand.
"Donna entered the front passenger door of Mitchell's vehicle and sat in the passenger seat next to Mitchell," according to a civil complaint against Mitchell filed by Castleberry's sister. "Mitchell than [sic] drove her to secluded location at or near South Yale Avenue, Columbus, Ohio in an alley and parked his vehicle in a manner which would prevent Donna from exiting the vehicle."
The Franklin County Coroner's Office called the death a homicide, and a grand jury indicted Mitchell on homicide and involuntary manslaughter charges. But a jury couldn't reach a verdict in the first trial, leading a Franklin County Common Pleas Court judge to declare a mistrial. And a jury returned a verdict of not guilty in the second trial, despite the multiple holes in Mitchell's story.
Mitchell also faced a civil lawsuit from a Jane Doe who alleged that in 2017, Mitchell told her he would arrest her for outstanding warrants but also said "give that pretty ass up and you won't go to jail." According to Doe's complaint, Mitchell handcuffed her to the backseat of the car and then raped her, then picked her up and did it again the following year. In 2022, the plaintiff in the Jane Doe case dismissed the case and it's not clear why. It's also unclear whether this Jane Doe is one of the women Mitchell is accused of detaining in the federal case.
The Federal Case
In 2019, federal prosecutors accused Mitchell of picking up sex workers on false pretenses and then trapping them in his car and sexually assaulting them. He was charged with nine criminal counts, including multiple counts of deprivation of rights under color of law and multiple counts of tampering with a witness, victim, or informant.
Mitchell told one victim "he was a police officer and acted as if he were doing a check for any outstanding warrants on the victim," then "used this ruse to handcuff the victim to the doorknob of his vehicle," according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office last December. "He drove the victim to a nearby parking lot with multiple dumpsters and forcible [sic] held and detained the victim against her will before dropping her off at her boyfriend's residence." Mitchell picked up another victim and "began discussing the victim's rates for sexual activity before announcing that he was an officer with the vice unit and said she was going to jail," according to prosecutors. "Mitchell kidnapped the victim and drove her to Lindbergh Park, holding her against her will."
That's the activity to which Mitchell pleaded guilty, along with removing and destroying potential evidence from a rental apartment he owned. (Specifically, he disposed of and bleached potential evidence "so the FBI could not gather evidence if they came to search it," per his pleas.)
But this isn't the whole story.
Prosecutors initially accused him of sexually assaulting the two women he picked up, and though this was not mentioned as part of the announcement of Mitchell's plea, prosecutors explain why in a sentencing report.
Mitchell's lawyers "objected to all references to sexual assault…within the presentence report as the negotiated plea agreement and accompanying Statement of Facts did not stipulate to the occurrence of any sexual activity," notes the government's sentencing memorandum. "The plea agreement was the result of significant negotiation in the face of a potentially very difficult trial for both sides. While both victims have been cooperative with law enforcement and indicated a willingness to testify, they both also indicated a strong preference for this case to be resolved short of trial. This dilemma led to this resolution and the need for a factual determination of this issue to be done at sentencing."
Nonetheless, "the evidence supports a finding that sexual assaults occurred," the government stated. "While Mitchell continues to deny any sexual involvement with these women, there is no explanation for [his] admitted behavior" of handcuffing one victim to a doorknob or taking one victim to a secluded park and detaining her there unless "more was going on than just Mitchell abusing the powers of his badge to only detain someone. "Further, significant evidence corroborated the testimony of the victims that Mitchell took advantage of the depravation of their liberty to further assault and sexually victimize them."
More Victims?
Castleberry and the two victims in the federal case are almost certainly not the only women that Mitchell preyed on. "Mitchell intimidated and hindered at least three other additional victims from communicating with law enforcement and the ongoing grand jury looking into his illegal conduct," the government alleges in its sentencing report.
Prosecutors also note the vulnerability sex workers face when a cop is their assailant.
"Mitchell purposely targeted [sex workers] in the belief that their complaints of assault and sexual compromise would not be believed by law enforcement suspected of being too aligned with one of their own," the government claims.
"Throughout the FBI investigation, female interviewees explained their doubts and hesitation in reporting Mitchell due to fears of retaliation and being disbelieved. Mitchell routinely used this dynamic to his advantage as both a police officer (and a landlord) in seeking sexual conquest and control while ignoring the law he was sworn to uphold."
Columbus Vice
"Andrew Mitchell betrayed his oath, the values of the Columbus Division of Police and the trust of our community. He used his position to target and exploit some of the most vulnerable in our community. We hope the close of this dark, painful chapter brings some measure of peace to everyone he wronged," the Columbus Division of Police said in a statement last December.
Mitchell isn't the only member of the Columbus Division of Police to have faced misconduct allegations in recent years, though the accusations against him were by far the most serious.
Members of the vice unit improperly arrested Stormy Daniels in 2018.
Two of the cops involved in Daniels' arrest—Steven G. Rosser and Whitney R. Lancaster—were arrested on federal criminal charges unrelated to the Daniels case but also involving strip clubs. Lancaster was acquitted at trial but Rosser was found guilty of conspiracy against rights. Rosser was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison.
Columbus police temporarily disbanded the vice squad in 2019 and had the FBI's public corruption task force look into it.
Police replaced the vice squad with something called the Police and Community Together (PACT) Unit, which was meant to be more transparent and accountable. The PACT page on the city of Columbus website now says "page not found."
These days, "prostitution arrests are made by uniformed PACT officers in marked cruisers," reported Columbus Monthly. "'PACT also has a policy to not trap or block women in their vehicles. If an individual wants out of the vehicle, they let them out,'" former Deputy Police Chief Jennifer Knight told the publication.
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Did he at least give them a big tip?
Just the tip.
Not a laughing matter.
At least they were professionals.
Coworkers of yours?
Related to sex work:
Recently went to this strip club. It was in a rough area of the city and the interior was somewhat rundown. The on-stage talent weren’t that attractive. Even worse was that none of them groomed. Found the place to be bush league.
"We've got bush!" -Booger
Voyeurism can get rather hairy.
Butt it sounds like a split decision.
Cop Who Dodged Sentence for Killing Sex Worker Gets 11 Years for Abducting More Sex Workers
So... not punishing a criminal harshly for the first offence could lead to later offenses due to lack of accountability?
*takes notes*
We can see his picture so that part at least tracks.
He looks eerily like a famous guy who died last month.
If the love glove don’t fit, you must acquit.
If he did it....
And no word on if he's a Jew. The Pro-Hamas crowd would have ran with that.
Somehow ENB missed the point of all of this, even though it was written in gigantic neon letters.
Well, maybe next time the "victims" will set up shop in Belgium where they can lodge a complaint with the pimp registry.
You put the word victim in scare quotes. Do you have ropes and pick-up trucks ready for sex-workers too, Torquemada?
I use the same scare quotes when talking about back-alley abortion "victims." They're NOT real victims. They paved the way, opened the gate, and unlocked the front door for bad things to happen to them.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
No, the fact that sex work is illegal makes sex workers at risk for robbery, assault, rape, and murder by asshole thug-with-a-badge police like Andrew Mitchell, as well as civilian criminals.
For what good it will do you, pray to your Moloch that something like this never happens to you, Torquemada.
They're only at risk for robbery, assault, rape, and murder because they're out on the street turning tricks. Do you seriously believe that legalizing it will make it any different?
You don't HAVE this problem, certainly not to this degree, with ANY other career. They could do LITERALLY ANY other job. They could spoon out congealed slop onto plastic trays in a grade school cafeteria. They could sit in a cubicle farm and listen to people complain about problems they have no power to solve. They could mop up puke and clean the toilets in a dive bar. AND, any decent parent would prefer any one of this miserable jobs for their daughter over what these whores do. NONE of those would run the same risk of robbery, assault, rape, and murder that whoring - legal or illegal - does.
Play. Stupid. Games.
WIN. STUPID. PRIZES.
When they admit they're nothing more than an object for another's pleasure, that's exactly what they become. And the worst of humanity will absolutely take advantage of them having done so.
All work is using the body and mind to provide goods and services to another. And all work puts a person at risk for predation because predators rely on victims distracted and exhausted by work-a-day living! Ask any cashier, bank teller, cab driver, or any worker leaving a workplace in a parking lot at night.
If sex work were legal, sex workers would have the legal recourse everyone else has, both the right to keep and bear arms for self-defense and the option of calling law enforcement without fear of being prosecuted themselves! Sex workers operating underground have neither option.
By the way, thank you for revealing your innermost thoughts about manual labor and the hired help everywhere. Small wonder people regard sex work as a welcome change!
Now speaking of work, when are you and KAR gonna work it for all of us on the Wesson Oil™ mats in your tights and thongs? Ya'll two have been hot to trot for each other for a bit...
What the heck are you talking about? They DO have those rights! Being a whore by trade in America doesn’t mean the Constitution doesn’t apply to you. If someone deprives your life, liberty, or property they can ABSOLUTELY file criminal or civil complaints against the perpetrator. They also have 2A rights. And 4A rights. And 5A right. ALL of them, Tre. They have ALL THE RIGHTS any other American has.
They even have the option of calling law enforcement if they’re in need! So can a drug dealer. Or a kidnapper. Or a rapist. Or an inside trader. Or a blackmailer. Or a LGBT pedo. Or a guy who runs an underground casino or dogfighting ring. 911 works on their phones just as much as it does on anyone else’s. And help WOULD respond (well, maybe not in blue cities anymore). If they’re disinclined to call them for help, that’s their problem.
Again, play stupid games – win stupid prizes. I don’t know why this is so difficult for you.
(Actually, I do: it’s because you don’t believe whoring falls under the category of “play stupid games.” But you can’t make the argument for it, so you just try to sidestep it.)
If sex workers get acriminal record, many jurisdictions deny them the rught to keep and bear arms. A certain bitch judge in acourt in New York says the 2nd Amendment doesn't exist.
Also, if sex workers call the police, they risk getting this very criminal record.
Dummy!
*GASP!* LANGUAGE!
1) Don’t post when you’re drunk/stoned. Good Lord man, can you even see the keyboard?
2) If sex workers get acriminal record, many jurisdictions deny them the rught to keep and bear arms.
There’s a real easy way to avoid that. Don’t turn tricks, don’t get a criminal record. Most normal people figure it out real easy.
3) Also, if sex workers call the police, they risk getting this very criminal record.
So do the drug dealers, kidnappers, dogfight runners, LGBT pedos, etc. I already went over this. Maybe don’t DO those things if you want to rely on police assistance. Which you’ll still get either way.
Consenting adult acts should not be a crime in a free society and are not the same as real crimes with real victims!
Fuck Off, Torquemada! And fuck your Goddamn shitty language hang-ups too!
Speaking of stupid games and stupid prizes, when are you and KAR going to oil-wrestle? My bet books, dice, and deloused garment bags are ready!
🙂
😉
I watched this dude bounce from the jury trial on Accused: Guilty or Innocent it was mind-boggling how fucking retarded the jury was to set him free
Who paid for his defense? Bet the police union protected the POS from justice, just because…