Alejandro Young-Hernandez won’t be seeing the inside of a prison cell after all.
Today, U.S. District Court Judge J. Garvan Murtha sentenced Young-Hernandez to two years’ probation for connecting migrant workers on Vermont dairy farms with Hispanic prostitutes from New York City. Murtha said Young-Hernandez’s help in convicting two other co-conspirators justified the leniency.
Young-Hernandez — who nicknamed himself “Don Chingon,” Spanish slang for “The Man” or “The Main Man” — faced up to five years in federal prison for violating the law known as the Mann Act. Thursday’s sentencing took place in Brattleboro but was broadcast via video conference at the federal courthouse in Burlington.
“I have been living a nightmare these last couple of years,” Young-Hernandez told the judge. “I never in my life did anything like that and will never do anything again.”
As reported in this week’s issue of Seven Days, Young-Hernandez was the fourth person sentenced in a farmworker prostitution ring that federal authorities began unraveling in 2011. Young-Hernandez, who often went by the more American-sounding “Alex Young,” was a middle man who forwarded farmworker requests for prostitutes to a pimp in Queens, N.Y. who brought young Hispanic women to service as many as 10 men a day in Vermont dairy farms for $50 apiece.
A native of Mexico who became a naturalized American citizen, Young-Hernandez was a state employee for 15 years — six as a correctional officer in St. Johnsbury and nine as a human services case worker at the Department for Children and Families. Assistant U.S. Attorney Heather Ross asked the judge to impose some sort of imprisonment — at the least home confinement — in part because he engaged in the cirmes as a “trusted state employee.”


If only the judge knew why he lost his Corrections job…
Young-Hernandez told the judge. “I never in my life did anything like that and will never do anything again.”
If you never did anything, how could you never do it again?