Advertisement
Florida
WorldUnited States & Canada

Miami cross-dresser Bryan Deneumostier fooled 80 men, filmed secret sex videos, then posted them online. Now he’s going to jail

  • Bryan Deneumostier was being paid by a Spanish porn site that specialised in scenes of straight men being conned into accepting gay sex acts
  • One victim says he tried to commit suicide after finding out about the videos

3-MIN READ3-MIN
Bryan Deneumostier, in a mugshot provided by the Miami-Dade Police. Photo: Miami-Dade Police Department
Tribune News Service

Saying she had never seen a case quite like it, a US federal judge Monday sentenced a South Florida man to three years in prison for cross-dressing as a woman and taping himself having sex with at least 80 unsuspecting men to produce internet porn videos.

Bryan Deneumostier, 33, admitted engaging in sex with 150 men – with just over half unaware of his production of the secret videos, according to his plea agreement. The images were distributed on a Spain-based website, “StraightBoyz,” that promised gay men videos of real straight men being conned into accepting sex acts, all while blindfolded or wearing blacked-out goggles.

Bryan Deneumostier in an image from his Twitter account. Photo: Twitter / @susanlon33326
Bryan Deneumostier in an image from his Twitter account. Photo: Twitter / @susanlon33326
Advertisement

“It’s quite unusual and I can’t say I’ve ever had one like this before,” US District Judge Cecilia Altonaga said.

Altonaga increased Deneumostier’s punishment by more than one year above the federal sentencing guidelines because she believed they were too lenient for his actual crime. But the judge refused to impose an eight-year sentence sought by prosecutors. Assistant Federal Public Defender D’Arsey Houlihan asked for a sentence between one and two years, which fell within the guidelines.

South African minister in leaked sex video rejects calls to resign

Deneumostier, known by the screen name “susanleon33326”, and “@susanlon3326” on Twitter, pleaded guilty in September to two counts of unlawful interception of oral communications – which combined carried up to 10 years in prison.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x