MUSKEGON COUNTY, MI - A woman who admitted sexually exploiting a little boy by making a video of herself sexually assaulting him has been sentenced to 20 years in federal prison.

Kailee Marie Perez, 25, pleaded guilty in September 2017 in U.S. District Court to creating the video and sending it over the Internet to Nathan Osborne.

Osborne, a 32-year-old Muskegon area man earlier was sentenced in U.S. District Court to 37 years for distributing Perez's video on the Internet and for persuading a Muskegon woman, Jazmine Pacyga, to videotape herself sexually assaulting her infant. Pacyga has been charged in Muskegon County court with criminal sexual conduct and creating child sexually abusive material.

The video was made on Nov. 23, 2016, according to court documents.

U.S. District Judge Janet T. Neff sentenced Perez on Jan. 11 to 240 months in prison and five years of probation. Terms of her probation include:

Participation in sex offender, substance abuse and mental health counseling "as directed by the probation officer."

No contact with sex offenders, unless in a therapeutic situation.

No employment or volunteering in a position that involves contact with children unless approved by the probation officer.

No contact with minors or visiting places they frequent, unless approved by her probation officer, including but not limited to theme parks, theaters, playgrounds and parks.

Providing monthly cell phone records to her probation officer.

Paying a $5,000 assessment under the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act.

A risk assessment of Perez was conducted by a social worker prior to her sentencing. The social worker's report alleges that Osborne was Perez's "drug dealer," and that he asked her to make the video. Perez has a history of drug abuse, including heroin, marijuana, crack cocaine and prescription stimulants and pain killers, and has been in inpatient and outpatient drug treatment, the report states.

The social worker concluded that Perez does not have a sexual interest in children, but rather engaged in sexual exploitation of the child "due to being coerced by a codefendant upon whom she had developed an unhealthy dependency" for drugs and sex, his report states.

Her risk of repeating her criminal action is low unless she continues her substance abuse and "co-dependence on abusive and controlling adult males," in which case her risk is "significant," the report states.