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Israel Flores Ortiz, an 18-year-old undocumented immigrant, was sentenced to 360 days in jail on Tuesday for groping multiple female classmates in the hallways of Fairfax High School earlier this year.
With credit for time already served and adjustments typical for a misdemeanor, Ortiz has 135 days remaining in his sentence.
Judge Melinda Vanlowe described the case as “very difficult,” noting that the acts were “targeted” and indicative of a “pattern” of “deplorable” conduct.
Although charged as an adult, Ortiz was prosecuted in juvenile court since most of his victims were minors. He was found guilty in nine instances, acquitted in three, and one charge was dismissed. Initially, he faced accusations involving 13 female classmates, according to the Fairfax Police Department.
This case has sparked growing concerns among parents about student safety, particularly in light of the open borders policy from the previous administration of President Joe Biden.
Flores Ortiz, originally from El Salvador, is in the country illegally, having reportedly arrived in 2024.
Defense attorneys argued at sentencing that the case had been politicized, invoking President Donald Trump as they pushed back on the public attention surrounding Flores Ortiz.Â
“When people touch people [in an] unwanted way, sometimes we arrest them,” defense counsel said, gesturing toward Flores Ortiz, “and sometimes we elect them president of the United States.”
The defense asked the court to impose just nine days of incarceration, arguing Flores Ortiz’s age should weigh heavily in sentencing. Counsel said his “brain is physically not as developed” as that of a 25-year-old and argued his actions were not driven by sexual gratification.
Instead, the defense characterized the assaults as immature behavior, telling the court Flores Ortiz acted “for fun” and that “it was like a joke or prank.”Â
“Only a teenager would think like that,” counsel said.
After the hearing, an attorney representing one of the teenage victims rejected the political framing.Â
“This should not be politicized,” the attorney said.
The defense said the defendant “is sorry” for his actions and “he agrees it was deplorable he agrees it was a pattern.”
The case stems from a series of incidents in crowded school hallways that prosecutors said involved Flores Ortiz groping female students. The allegations sparked scrutiny in Fairfax County over school supervision and hallway safety.
“Virginia’s experiment with radical gender ideology, race-based admissions systems, far-Left indoctrination, and unlawful discrimination has inflicted immeasurable harm on our students,” the Education Department wrote in a post on X, announcing a Title IX investigation. “It must stop.”