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What verified sources list convictions of U.S. politicians for sex crimes against minors from 2014 to 2024?

Checked on November 21, 2025
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Executive summary

There is no single, authoritative public database in the provided reporting that lists only U.S. politicians convicted of sex crimes against minors for 2014–2024; available sources include misconduct trackers, news tallies, and category pages that mix allegations, convictions, and other misconduct (e.g., GovTrack’s misconduct page and compiled lists) [1] [2] [3]. Major outlets and databases in the search results focus on alleged misconduct, arrests, or broader sexual-misconduct tallies rather than a verified, date-limited list of convictions for sex crimes against minors between 2014 and 2024 [4] [5] [6].

1. What the available databases cover — and their limits

GovTrack’s “Legislator Misconduct Database” compiles misconduct items about legislators but mixes allegations, investigations, and convictions and does not present a simple, filtered list labeled “convictions for sex crimes against minors, 2014–2024” in the material shown [1]. Wikipedia’s category pages and “list of federal political sex scandals” aggregate many incidents across eras and include earlier convictions (e.g., a 1987 conviction cited) rather than providing a clean decade-specific, conviction-only roster [2] [3]. Ballotpedia’s “Noteworthy criminal misconduct” pages assemble notable allegations from 2023–2024 but separate sexual-assault/harassment items and are not framed as a verified convictions-only dataset [6].

2. News tallies focus on accusations and workplace misconduct, not just convictions

AP and PBS reporting in the search results primarily tally accusations, investigations, resignations and criminal charges among state and federal lawmakers rather than compiling only court convictions for sexual offenses against minors. For example, AP documented 90 state lawmakers accused of sexual misconduct since 2017, and PBS tallied dozens of lawmakers accused or charged in 2024, including charges such as “soliciting a minor for prostitution,” but these reports emphasize accusations and charges and do not equate to a comprehensive list of convictions between 2014 and 2024 [5] [4].

3. Distinctions journalists and databases make — allegation vs. charge vs. conviction

The reporting distinguishes allegations, criminal charges, and convictions. PBS’s recent coverage notes a lawmaker “charged with soliciting a minor for prostitution” and resigning, which is a charge and resignation rather than a conviction in the items cited [4]. GovTrack’s misconduct snippets show entries ranging from false-statement convictions to unresolved allegations, illustrating how mixed-status entries complicate building a verified convictions-only list [1]. Users seeking convictions must therefore check primary court records or prosecution announcements for each named case referenced in combined databases.

4. Where to look next, based on these sources’ practices

To assemble a verified list limited to convictions from 2014–2024, start with databases that collect legislative misconduct items (GovTrack) and cross-check each name against contemporaneous news reports and court records cited by mainstream outlets (GovTrack entries can be a starting index but require follow-up) [1]. Use investigative reporting and major-news tallies (AP, PBS) to identify charged cases, then verify conviction status through local court dockets or prosecutor statements — a step the AP and PBS pieces imply but do not complete in their published tallies [5] [4].

5. Caveats, competing perspectives and likely gaps

Compilations like Wikipedia categories include historical convictions and rely on editors; they may omit recent developments or conflate different types of sexual misconduct [2] [3]. Fact-checking organizations (example in the set: PolitiFact) demonstrate the risk of inaccurate lists circulating online — e.g., debunking an asserted list of settlements related to child sex crimes where no evidence was found — underscoring the need for source-by-source verification for convictions [7]. The sources in the search results do not provide a ready-made, authoritative convictions-only roster for 2014–2024.

6. Practical next steps you can take right now

Use GovTrack’s misconduct index (as a searchable starting point) and the AP/PBS compilations to identify names, then request or search court records and prosecutor press releases for confirmation of convictions and sentencing dates for 2014–2024 [1] [5] [4]. If you want, I can extract names from these databases and news tallies in the provided results and indicate which entries in that list the current reporting shows as charged, convicted, or merely alleged — noting where the sources do not confirm conviction status [1] [4] [5].

Limitations: available sources in your search set mix allegations, charges and convictions and do not themselves offer a verified, date-limited list of U.S. politicians convicted specifically of sex crimes against minors from 2014–2024; any definitive list requires cross-checking against court records and prosecution announcements not contained in these search snippets [1] [2] [4] [5] [3] [7].

Want to dive deeper?
Which federal databases list convictions of U.S. politicians for sex crimes against minors from 2014–2024?
Are there nonprofit or watchdog organizations that track elected officials convicted of sexual offenses against minors?
How can I verify state-level convictions of politicians for sex crimes against minors between 2014 and 2024?
What public records, court dockets, or press archives best confirm convictions (not just allegations) of politicians for child sex crimes?
What ethical and legal privacy considerations apply when compiling a list of convicted politicians for sex crimes against minors?