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Missouri school employee accused of making sexual advances toward 9-year-old girl

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KANSAS CITY, Mo -- After an 8-month investigation, a Hickman Mills School District mentor has been charged with two counts of enticement of a child.

Prosecutors say the man's victim was in fourth grade.

"She was 9 years old at the time," the victim’s mother Shanara Wilson said. “I am the voice for my daughter."

Wilson is a mama bear who has not stopped growling about the inappropriate sexual advances allegedly made toward her daughter by 61-year-old Gary Curry.

Last month, Wilson sat down with WDAF, frustrated Curry had seemingly gotten away with it.

"It has been over seven months. I really haven't heard anything. He has not been charged,” Wilson said. “Yeah, he can't go on Hickman Mills property, but who is to say he won't go anywhere else and get a job at another school district because that is what predators do."

Police said it started with Curry taking his victim out of class several times at Warford Elementary School, sitting with her during breakfast and in the library.

“I told my daughter, 'He has been grooming you from the beginning of the year, you know,'" Wilson said.

Curry served in the Hickman Mills School District as part of its All-In Mentoring program, a program Wilson's daughter wasn't part of.

"He wasn't actually even supposed to be working with my daughter,” Wilson said. “You have to sign a permission slip for your child to get extra help. I never signed a permission slip."

At work one day in October, Wilson received a frantic call from her little girl.

“She is crying and screaming, and the only thing I can really get out of her on FaceTime is 'Mr. Curry,'” Wilson said.

Not able to calm her down, Wilson rushed home to hear an almost unbelievable tale from  her daughter about Curry.

"'He always talked to me at school, but he has been calling and texting. I didn't think nothing of it, Mom,'” Wilson said of her daughter’s statement. “Until he physically said the extravagant, nasty stuff that scared a 9-year-old."

Court records state that in October, Curry exchanged phone numbers with his 9-year-old victim; the inappropriate sexual behavior started almost immediately.

Curry allegedly sent his young victim multiple pictures of a male sex organ and text messages telling the child to send him photos as well.

He also asked the girl who checks her phone, directing her several times to delete the messages.

In one of the most shocking interactions, court records state that during a FaceTime call, Curry said to the girl, “You remember how you sucked your thumb in music class? Well, I want you to suck my d*** and have sex with you."

"My daughter is 9 years old,” Wilson said. “That was never nothing for my daughter to experience at 9 years old, especially from a teacher, someone you are supposed to trust."

To get evidence from a case like this, electronic devices are sent to the Regional Computer Forensic Laboratory, a partnership with local law enforcement and the FBI.

"If they can't get the information off of it, they will send it to the FBI Headquarters in Quantico," Kansas City Police Department Capt. Christopher Sicoli said.

In the Curry case, because much of the evidence had been deleted, the phones have been sent to the FBI’s main lab in Quantico, Virginia; recovering evidence like that can take years.

"We are being sent with hundreds and thousands of other requests from around the country,” Sicoli said. “There is only one main lab for the FBI, and every agency feeds into that lab. So it depends where we are in their queue. It is out of our control once we send it. It is on their timeline."

It was a wait that seemed to last forever to Wilson. Now that Curry has been charged, she understands it could have been much longer.

"I am thankful, and as I look at other cases in other cities. It has taken three years to even put charges out for the predator," Wilson said. “I am just thankful. I appreciate you guys for doing your job. You did it and you did it well."

Wilson and her attorney have also applied with the Missouri Commission on Human Rights to file a civil case against the Hickman Mills School District, Gary Curry and Warford Elementary music teacher Kurtis Wheeler.