Businessman and former Republican activist Anton Lazzaro was sentenced Wednesday to 21 years in prison on sex trafficking charges involving five 15- to 16-year-old girls he paid to have sex with him.
Lazzaro, 32, was labeled a sexual predator by prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Minneapolis, who had asked U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz to sentence Lazzaro to 30 years in prison. His attorneys sought a 10-year sentence, the mandatory minimum.
"Mr. Lazzaro has not shown a shred of remorse," Schiltz said at Wednesday's sentencing, noting that the only sympathy Lazzaro had shown was for himself and New York financier Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender who was charged with trafficking minors before he died by suicide in 2019.
Before the sentencing, Schiltz ordered the federal government to confiscate Lazzaro's Minneapolis condominium and a Blackberry phone he owned, but not his 2010 Ferrari convertible.
Dressed at the hearing in an orange jail jumpsuit, Lazzaro offered a rambling defense of his behavior and objected to the confiscation of his condominium. He acknowledged no guilt.
"I take offense to the government's motion that I perjured myself in the trial," he said, and denied conspiring with an 18-year-old woman to recruit teenagers for sex — one of the charges on which he was convicted.
"I think you're an honest man and extremely intelligent," Lazzaro told Schiltz. "I am disappointed by many of your rulings."
A young woman who Lazzaro paid for sex when she was underage tearfully described how their encounters caused her to retreat to her bedroom, drink to oblivion and nearly drop out of high school. She said Lazzaro made her feel "worthless."