Crime & Safety

Former Penn State Abington Professor Facing Sex Charges Waives Prelim Hearing

An Upper Dublin resident and former Penn State Abington professor allegedly used his office to take nude photos of himself, and sent them to a 16-year-old girl in Spain.

The former Penn State Abington music professor charged last month with possession of child pornography, unlawful contact with a minor and related charges waived his preliminary hearing late Thursday morning.

Stephen Stace, 65, of Upper Dublin, was arraigned Oct. 10 in before District Justice Patricia Zaffarano. According to the criminal complaint, Stace’s daughter contacted the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in late August and provided a copy of an email she found on her father’s computer in which he communicated with a 16-year-old girl from Spain. The email is “sexual in nature” and references pictures the two had shared, the complaint continues. 

All charges were waived and none of the charges was modified, according to District Justice criminal clerk Jill Goldwater. Stace has been out on bail since he was arraigned in October; he will be formally arraigned Dec. 18.

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If convicted, some of the charges would require Stace to register as a Megan's Law sex offender for a period of 10 years. 

Calls to Stace’s attorney were not immediately returned.

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According to the criminal complaint, investigators met with Stace at his home in late August, where he admitted to communicating with the girl from Spain. 

The Montgomery County Detective Bureau forensically searched Stace’s MacBook Pro and found several images of a young girl with whom Stace was communicating, according to the complaint, including images of the girl in her underwear and an image of the girl lying on a bed with her breasts exposed. There were at least five images of children under the age of 18 exposing their genitals and in sexually explicit poses, as well as several images of young men, nude and exposing their genitals and several images of nude images of Stace, according to the complaint.

Stace provided a voluntary statement Sept. 16 at the Montgomery County Detective Bureau in Norristown where he admitted to exchanging nude images with the girl from Spain, according to the criminal complaint. He also said that he had flash drives at his home that he didn’t turn over to police that contained additional images of child pornography.

In addition, Stace said he took nude photos of himself while inside his PSU Abington office and sent them to the 16-year-old girl in Spain by using his Penn State email account.

Penn State Abington Spokesman Charles Marsh said that Stace was employed by the university from September 1976 through his retirement in June 2013; his online profile on the school’s website was taken down Friday afternoon. Stace hasn’t taught at the school since the end of the spring semester, Marsh added. 

"Penn State has cooperated fully with law enforcement officials," Marsh said in an email, "and due to the ongoing investigation [the university] can't provide much more comment than that.

"Employees who retire from the university have the option to keep their e-mail account after retirement," Marsh continued. "Dr. Stace opted to keep his. That account has been deactivated."

The emails between Stace and the girl in Spain took place between January and Sept. 14, according to the criminal complaint. Late last month, investigators executed a search warrant on Stace’s Penn State email account and discovered the emails were deleted by Stace, but stored on the PSU servers, according to the complaint. 

All the emails were sexual in nature and contained sexually graphic information, including Stace repeatedly expressing his desire to meet the girl for sex, according to the criminal complaint.


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