When police arrested McIntyre and seized his phone, they found the naked picture of the 12-year-old boy still on it. The phone also revealed conversations with a number of other young boys, two of which resulted in convictions.

“Besides the three chats for which charges have been laid, there were a number of other chats found on his phone that involved the accused and young males who indicate they reside with their parents and are in high school. The specific age is not known. McIntyre is usually the initiator of these conversations,” said Jeanes.

One of the conversations that resulted in a conviction was with a 14-year-old boy when McIntyre was 24. The conversations between the two were described as explicit and often sexual.

When police located that boy, he said that there had been a physical sexual relationship.

“He advised that in January 2014, when he was 14-years-old, the accused drove him to Vaughan and a sexual interaction occurred while inside a parked car that had been driven by McIntyre. The pair engaged in oral sex on more than one occasion,” said Jeanes.

That boy was described as “not fully co-operative with police” and he said he didn’t think of himself as a victim. He indicated he held McIntyre in high regard.

The final conversation, which resulted in a conviction, was with another 14-year-old boy who described McIntyre as a role model to police. He called him “Jay Mac,” and the pair met through church and would attend Christian events together.

McIntyre went by Jay Mac in his position as an announcer for a Christian radio station and, as of publishing, his profile, including a picture, is still on that station’s website.

At one point, McIntyre told that 14-year-old boy that it’s difficult to be gay because ”religion hates you” and that’s why he no longer goes to church, the court heard.

The conviction around that boy involved a third party, an unidentified woman who police are still searching for.

McIntyre is scheduled to be sentenced on July 6 in the Huntsville courthouse.