An Indiana woman, 32, mother to seven children, has been charged with attempted child sex trafficking. The authorities claim she attempted to sell her infant daughter to a man for $400. The woman, identified as Morgan Stapp, is alleged to have used the social media platform Snapchat to facilitate the horrifying sexual assault of her seven-month-old daughter.
The allegations stem from a message Stapp reportedly sent to a man on November 1, 2024. In the message, she allegedly offered the man the opportunity to sexually abuse her infant daughter for a fee of $400, with half the payment to be made upfront and the rest after the act. She also allegedly provided her address and informed the man that she lived alone and the child’s father was not involved in their lives.
Stapp is currently being held on a $100,000 bond. The incriminating message was flagged by Snapchat’s monitoring system and subsequently shared with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The FBI agents then arranged a meeting with Stapp at her residence in Indianapolis.
Upon her arrest, Stapp reportedly denied ever using Snapchat. However, investigators obtained a warrant to access her Snapchat account and discovered that only one phone had access to it. They also found thousands of messages sent between October 29 and November 1.
Among the messages, 81 of them contained offers from Stapp to sell explicit photos of herself in exchange for money to buy baby diapers. Stapp was arrested on July 8 and is now facing charges of attempted child sex trafficking. She is scheduled to return to court on September 15 for the next hearing in her case.