Stillman Valley man sentenced to prison for possessing images of sexual abuse of children

court gavel

OREGON – A Stillman Valley man was sentenced to four years in prison Monday for two counts of possessing images of children being sexually abused.

Joshua Lake, 30, of Stillman Valley, received the sentences through a “joint recommended disposition” as he appeared in court with his attorney, Matthew Schuck, and Assistant State’s Attorney Matthew Leisten for a sentencing hearing.

He was found guilty Aug. 21 by an Ogle County jury following a two-day trial.

Under the agreement, Lake was sentenced to four years in the Illinois Department of Corrections for each Class 2 felony count of possessing the images. Lake must serve 50% of each sentence in prison.

Lake received 367 days credit for time served, which leaves approximately one year left to serve in prison for one count. After that sentence is fulfilled, he will begin serving another count′s four-year sentence.

Once that sentence is fulfilled at 50%, he will begin serving his probation sentence. The DOC will then determine if he will be released on mandatory supervised release.

His probation includes supplemental orders including any counseling required by the probation department.

When asked by Judge John Redington if he [Lake] understood the terms of the sentencing, Lake replied, “Yeah.”

Lake’s fines and fees totaled $44,100, and were considered paid in full due to his posted bond.

As a condition of sentence, Lake agreed not to file an appeal for any issues related to his jury trial.

“Mr. Lake, do you understand this agreement,” Redington asked. “Yeah,” Lake replied.

Lake’s mother asked Redington it she could make a brief statement, which Redington denied.

Last month, Schuck requested a 402 conference, which is an open, informal process where attorneys and a judge discuss relevant information regarding the case and a potential outcome. Defendants are not present during the conference, but must agree to waive their presence before it is held.

Lake was indicted in May 2021 on 10 counts of possessing and disseminating photos and videos of the alleged abuses in November 2018. Before the start of his trial, prosecutors dismissed seven of the counts, including two dissemination charges that alleged he shared the images.

That left three Class 2 felonies that charged Lake with possessing videos of children – all younger than 13 – engaged in sexual acts with adults and other children.

During the trial, Assistant State’s Attorney Allison Huntley told jurors that all of the videos were found through an investigation of Lake’s phone and a review of social media accounts.

She said the phone had “disgusting images on it” and she was sure it was Lake’s phone because “his name is all over it.”

Schuck disagreed, arguing that the phone with the videos on it did not belong to his client. He said anybody could set up a Facebook account and that criteria should not have been used to determine whose phone it was.

Schuck claimed the phone belonged to Lake’s older brother, whom he said left for Russia when charges were filed. He argued that prosecutors had no physical evidence linking Lake to the phone.

Huntley said Lake told Illinois State Police Sgt. Nathan Macklin that the phone belonged to him. She said the state had proven that Lake had downloaded the videos to his phone in three different places.

But Schuck said there was no recording of that conversation presented as evidence.

Huntley countered that social media and email accounts had Lake’s initials and birth year as identifiers. She said a lack of DNA evidence was irrelevant to the case because the state did not have to prove he viewed the videos.

Lake had been in and out of custody in the Ogle County Jail since his arrest and been represented by several different attorneys.

In March 2022, he was determined to be unfit and ordered to undergo treatment. He was declared fit in August 2022 after Redington reviewed a court-ordered evaluation. Lake then failed to appear for a court hearing in October 2022 and was arrested in July 2023. He was released on a cash bond but again failed to appear for a hearing. He was remanded to the Ogle County Jail in December 2023, where he was held until the trial began.

According to court records, he declined a plea agreement offered by the state on Aug. 14 on four counts, including one for dissemination of child pornography, a Class X felony.

The seven-man, five-woman jury reached the verdict after deliberating 2½ hours, finding Lake guilty on all three counts. Each of the counts was punishable by three to seven years in the Illinois Department of Corrections with two years mandatory supervised release and a fine of up to $100,000.

Earleen Hinton

Earleen Hinton

Earleen creates content and oversees production of 8 community weeklies. She has worked for Shaw Newspapers since 1985.