BY BILL
JONES
STAFF WRITER
A retired
Claiborne County elementary school administrator has been charged by federal authorities with
attempting to entice a minor to engage in sexual activity.
Joseph Wayne
Jennings, 53, of New Tazewell, also is charged in a criminal complaint filed by FBI Special Agent
Sandra F. Farrow with attempting to produce child pornography and with distributing and possessing
it.
Jennings, according to the criminal complaint, retired in 2007 as
principal of Clairfield Elementary School in Claiborne County.
He had
been arrested earlier this week when he arrived at a Holiday Inn motel in Knoxville for what he
thought was an Internet-arranged meeting with a woman and her 8-year-old daughter for sexual
activity.
Instead, he was met by the FBI and officers with the Knoxville
Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. Detective Thomas Evans had played the part in Internet
conversations of the woman Jennings thought he was meeting, according to the criminal
complaint.
Authorities had been led to Jennings, according to the federal
criminal complaint, after an Ohio woman who had communicated with him via the Internet became
alarmed after he brought up, and later sent to her, child
pornography.
The Ohio woman had reported Jennings' e-mail address to the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which referred the information to the Knoxville
Police Department's Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, the federal criminal complaint
said.
APPEARED HERE THURSDAY
Jennings
made an initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Inman on Thursday at the James H.
Quillen U.S. Courthouse.
During the 10 a.m. appearance, Judge Inman,
after evaluating a financial affidavit submitted by Jennings, agreed to appoint Federal Defender
Services to represent the defendant.
He was ordered detained in the
custody of the U.S. Marshal pending a Monday, June 15, detention/preliminary hearing.
During his initial appearance, Jennings said he currently was working
part-time at a pharmacy.
But after the hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney
Helen Smith said Jennings actually had been working at a Knoxville Toys-R-Us
store.
He previously had taught "at-risk children" through a program
funded by a non-profit agency, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney
Smith.
In court on Thursday morning, Jennings said he had been laid off
after the program lost
funding.