Marina Volz, a transgender woman from New Jersey, was sentenced to 25 years in state prison after forcing a young girl into child pornography.
Volz, 31, went to Oregon in December 2018 to get custody of the girl, Volz's now 7-year-old biological daughter, with the intention of bringing her to New Jersey to be sexually assaulted and filmed, the acting Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office said.
In bringing her to New Jersey, Volz acted "with the purpose of engaging in sexual activity with the child," authorities said.
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Another trans woman, 28-year-old Ashley Romero, is alleged to have assisted Volz, along with 54-year-old Sean Allen, according to a report.
The trio operated a self-described "family-owned transgender pornography production studio specializing in amateur, BDSM, and taboo fetish content," prosecutors said.
Superior Court Judge Peter Tober refused to release all the details of the group's "heinous, cruel and depraved" actions at Friday's sentencing hearing, but it was stated that Volz and the group performed sex acts with the child involving collars, a cage in the basement, sex toys, and other devices, the report noted.
Romero and Allen sexually assaulted Volz's daughter together and filmed their actions, police said after seizing electronics found in the group's Franklin Township, New Jersey, home.

Volz also admitted to delivering the child to New Jersey for the express purpose of engaging in sexual activity with her, prosecutors said, referring to the plea deal.
The trans woman, and biological father of the girl, also admitted to sexually assaulting the child individually and on camera with Romero.
Volz, Romero, Allen, and 21-year-old Dulcinea Gnecco, the group's cook, were sentenced to a combined total of 67 years Friday, having been convicted of human trafficking and the repeated sexual assault of the child.
Each pleaded guilty to myriad charges in November 2021, the report noted.
The actions of the group were a "vortex of darkness" that "snuffed out" the girl's childhood, according to Brian Stack, an assistant prosecutor with the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office.
"They are incapable of redemption," Stack said. "They're bad people."
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Volz and Romero were sentenced to 25 years without the possibility of sooner parole, Allen was sentenced to 12 years with a 10-year ineligibility for parole, and Gnecco was sentenced to five years, the report noted.