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Press Release

Jury Convicts Nebraska Man of Cyberstalking

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Nebraska

Acting United States Attorney Jan Sharp announced that Dennis Sryniawski, age 48, of Bellevue, Nebraska, was convicted on June 21, 2021 of Cyberstalking after a three-day jury trial.  United States District Judge Brian C. Buescher accepted the jury’s verdict, ordered a presentence investigation, and set sentencing for September 22, 2021. Sryniawski faces up to five years in prison.

This was the first Cyberstalking trial in the District of Nebraska.  The federal Cyberstalking statute prohibits using an electronic communication service to engage in a course of conduct with the intent to harass, intimidate or cause substantial emotional distress to a person or immediate family members, where the conduct did cause, attempt to cause or reasonably would be expected to cause such persons to experience substantial emotional distress. 

The evidence presented at trial showed that Sryniawski sent six emails on two different days in 2018 to a candidate for the Nebraska Legislature.  The emails were sent from two different accounts.  One email was sent under Sryniawski’s name, but the others were sent under phony names.  Sryniawski had previously been married to the candidate’s wife.  The initial email contained personal details about the candidate’s wife and accusations concerning the candidate’s stepdaughter, and a later email included explicit photos purportedly of each.  The emails asked the candidate to withdraw from the race and conveyed the message that, if he did not, the personal details and explicit photos of his wife and stepdaughter would be released.   

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the La Vista Police Department.

Updated June 24, 2021

Topic
Cybercrime