MUSKEGON COUNTY, MI - A woman who admitted video recording herself sexually assaulting her infant has been found not guilty of criminal sexual conduct.

A Muskegon County Circuit Court jury on Thursday found Jazmine Pacyga, 20, not guilty of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, a potential life felony, following a two-day trial.

However, Pacyga was found guilty of producing child sexually abusive material. That charge normally has a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, but Pacyga's habitual offender status bumps that up to 30 years.

Pacyga took the witness stand and admitted that she performed "oral sex" on her baby, with the failed intention of giving him an erection. She said she also fondled the 5-month-old child.

But she said her actions did not involve penetration, which is required to be first-degree CSC.

She said she live-streamed a video of herself doing these things to her baby to Nathan Osborne, 32, who is serving a 37-year federal sentence for coercing Pacyga to sexually assault her baby and distributing the images she sent him as well as those of another woman sexually assaulting her child.

Pacyga testified she didn't know that Osborne would take still pictures - or "screen shots" -- from the live-streaming video. The screen shots, which do not show penetration, were admitted into evidence, but the video no longer exists.

Pacyga was 19 at the time of the incident that occurred on Feb. 5, 2017. The investigation into Pacyga began after Osborne sent the screen shots to a friend of Pacyga's who contacted police, that friend testified.

The police went to Pacyga's home in the Arbor Crossings apartment complex and brought her to the police department for questioning, according to testimony from former Muskegon Township Police Officer Mikki Narowitz.

Narowitz testified that Pacyga admitted to the assault on her son and that it included penetration. Her testimony was the prosecution's only evidence supporting a first-degree charge.

The video lasted five minutes, Narowitz said Pacyga told her. Narowitz currently is an officer with the Ludington Police Department.

Pacyga signed a written statement that Narowitz read in court. The statement said that Osborne "told me I had to do things with my son" and that Pacyga performed oral sex on her son. Pacyga testified that in her mind, oral sex does not necessarily involve penetration.

Pacyga also wrote in her statement that Osborne sent her a video of another woman fondling her son, and that Osborne told her he had sexually assaulted children.

Kailee Perez, the woman in the video Osborne sent Pacyga, pleaded guilty in September 2017 in U.S. District Court to creating the video and sending it over the Internet to Osborne, who a social worker wrote was Perez's drug dealer. Perez is serving a 20-year sentence in federal prison.

Pacyga's child was removed from her home the day after the video was made and child protection officials are moving toward possible adoption of the boy.

Several of Pacyga's claims were never presented to the jury. Muskegon County Circuit Judge Timothy Hicks granted a prosecution motion to deny testimony that Osborne had raped Pacyga and had threatened harm to her and her family if she didn't send him the video of the sexual assault.

Pacyga took the stand during a hearing on the motion and told the judge that she had earlier sent Osborne nude photos of herself and a video of her having sex with a boyfriend.

"I sent him a video of me having sex with somebody else because I needed money," she said.

When Osborne came to her home to pay her for those images, they went into some nearby woods to use marijuana - she was feeling ill because she was a heroin user at the time -- and he pulled out a knife and raped her, Pacyga testified. He told her not to tell anyone, threatening her and her family if she did, she testified during the hearing.

A few hours later, she said Osborne contacted her via Facebook saying "he wanted a video of me sexually assaulting my son," Pacyga said. She said he again threatened her and her family if she didn't, and a few hours after that, she streamed the video.

Senior Assistant Prosecuting Attorney James Corbett protested that the rape claim didn't surface until more than a year after the video was made, and a few weeks before trial. He argued that the alleged rape was not related to the assault on the child.

Defense attorney Thomas Oatmen argued that because of the rape, Pacyga was afraid of Osborne and produced the video of her assaulting her son because she was under "duress."

Hicks disallowed the rape testimony as well as the "duress" argument. He said he was not convinced that Pacyga was under "imminent" threat that is required for duress.

Sentencing for the child sexually abusive material conviction is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. May 23 in Hicks' court.

Pacyga still faces an assault charge stemming from an incident that occurred Feb. 25, 2018, while she was in jail awaiting trial. It's alleged that Pacyga punched another inmate at the Muskegon County Jail as the result of a dispute over commissary items, said Muskegon County Chief Assistant Prosecutor Timothy Maat.

The assault and battery charge, a misdemeanor, is set for trial before Muskegon County District Judge Geoffrey Nolan on July 3.

Pacyga has a prior felony conviction for second-degree home invasion.