CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A jury convicted a man and woman of more than 100 criminal counts a child sex and pornography ring that victimized four boys as young as nine, a mentally disabled 14-year-old and 11 residents of a nursing home.

Andre Boynton and Anika George were each found guilty of human trafficking, conspiracy and dozens of counts of child rape and pornography charges for a scheme in which the imprisoned Boynton ordered George by phone to abduct young boys, have sex with them and make them have sex with the 14-year-old girl disabled girl, all while George recorded the encounters on cellphones.

The pair was also found guilty of misdemeanor voyeurism charges tied to George taking nude photographs of 11 elderly residents, all either physically or mentally disabled, in the Parma Heights nursing home where she worked.

Boynton faces life in prison without parole after jurors found him guilty of human trafficking, conspiracy, child rape and other charges, and found him to be a sexually violent predator who is likely to reoffend in the future.

He is already serving a life sentence for kidnapping and raping a 14-year-old girl in 2008.

George, who had no previous criminal history, also faces life in prison with her first chance of parole after at least 10 years.

The pair is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 25.

Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Kristin Karkutt said the case was one of the worst child sex cases the county has ever prosecuted.

The pair preyed on the girl, who is severely mentally disabled and had no control over what was happening to her, and the nursing home residents, all of whom were unable to speak, Karkutt said.

"This wasn't just a one-time incident. It spanned over an entire month on numerous occasions and they were repeatedly victimized," Karkutt said. "That's what makes this case so egregious."

The mother of two of the boys cried, rocked back and forth and nodded her head as Miday read the verdict.

The woman, who cleveland.com is not naming so as not to identify the victims, said she felt a burden lift off her shoulders when Miday first uttered the word "guilty."

Boynton, who had been booted from the courtroom on the first day of his trial after repeated outbursts and who previously tried to flip a table, smiled as Judge Sherrie Miday announced that George had been found guilty.

He showed little emotion when she read the jury's verdict convicting him.

Boynton, a self-proclaimed Sovereign Citizen who sought to represent himself before his trial began, carried in a stack of papers and a copy of the Ohio Revised Code into the courtroom, which he repeatedly pointed to as he quietly bickered with his attorney before the verdict was read.

The attorney, Rufus Sims, at one point snapped back to him. "I heard you say it 10 times now. I got it."

George refused to participate in her own defense, and never spoke to her defense attorney, Jaye Schlachet, during the trial. She repeatedly referred to herself as "the beneficiary of the trust" in pretrial hearings.

Boynton testified on Wednesday and sought to blame George for the abuse. He told jurors that his phone calls from prison amounted to "role play" and he couldn't force her to actually carry out his demands.

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