This guy is hosed.
PERVERTED CANDYMAN IN THE CAN
December 4, 2003 -- A former NYPD cop, who joined a kiddie porn Internet club called "The Candyman" and was busted for possessing 50 sick pictures, was reduced to a quivering mess yesterday when he was sent to prison for two years and three months.
John Hudak begged Manhattan Judge John Keenan to spare him from prison, saying he didn't know how he would survive in prison as a former cop convicted of possessing child pornography.
With his hands shaking uncontrollably and his voice breaking, Hudak, 41, said he had already lost his fiancée, "the career and job I dreamed of as a child," and his police pension.
"This has been the worst time of my life . . . my whole world is shattered," said the ex-cop, who worked a truancy detail for years at a Brooklyn public high school.
But Keenan said he saw no reason to give Hudak "special treatment" because he had violated laws he was sworn to uphold.
"This was not a single act," Keenan said, pointing out that Hudak watched images of children being sexually abused for five years before being arrested last year.
The judge also said he did not fear for Hudak's safety in prison, saying his case had not attracted the same attention as that of police officers involved in the Rodney King beating and the Abner Louima assault.
PERVERTED CANDYMAN IN THE CAN
December 4, 2003 -- A former NYPD cop, who joined a kiddie porn Internet club called "The Candyman" and was busted for possessing 50 sick pictures, was reduced to a quivering mess yesterday when he was sent to prison for two years and three months.
John Hudak begged Manhattan Judge John Keenan to spare him from prison, saying he didn't know how he would survive in prison as a former cop convicted of possessing child pornography.
With his hands shaking uncontrollably and his voice breaking, Hudak, 41, said he had already lost his fiancée, "the career and job I dreamed of as a child," and his police pension.
"This has been the worst time of my life . . . my whole world is shattered," said the ex-cop, who worked a truancy detail for years at a Brooklyn public high school.
But Keenan said he saw no reason to give Hudak "special treatment" because he had violated laws he was sworn to uphold.
"This was not a single act," Keenan said, pointing out that Hudak watched images of children being sexually abused for five years before being arrested last year.
The judge also said he did not fear for Hudak's safety in prison, saying his case had not attracted the same attention as that of police officers involved in the Rodney King beating and the Abner Louima assault.