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Tennessee Appeals Court Upholds 124-Year Sentence in Child Exploitation Case

Sep 23, 2025 at 07:46 am by WGNS News

Above Left: Christopher Alan Ayotte, Right: Appeal Document

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals has upheld the conviction and 124-year prison sentence of Christopher Alan Ayotte, a Davidson County man who pled guilty to multiple child sex crimes, including rape of a child, aggravated sexual battery, and sexual exploitation of a minor.

The Crimes - Ayotte was originally indicted in 2023 on dozens of charges, including multiple counts of rape of a child, aggravated sexual battery, and possession of child sexual abuse material. Investigators discovered hundreds of images and videos of children being sexually abused in his online cloud storage, including materials Ayotte produced himself. Authorities described his actions as involving multiple victims across several years, and a detective with decades of experience called Ayotte one of the “top two or three offenders” he had ever encountered.

Ayotte ultimately entered a plea agreement in May 2024. He pled guilty to one count of sexual exploitation of a minor with more than 100 images, two counts of rape of a child, two counts of aggravated sexual battery, and one count of rape. The trial court sentenced him to an effective 124 years in prison at 100% service, meaning he will not be eligible for release.

The Appeal: On appeal, Ayotte argued that the trial court made several errors in sentencing:

  • That he was wrongly classified as a Range II offender without sufficient proof of prior convictions.

  • That the court did not properly weigh mitigating evidence related to his abusive childhood and personal history.

  • That the court improperly ordered several sentences to run consecutively, rather than concurrently.

The appellate court found that Ayotte had waived objections to his offender classification by not challenging the evidence at sentencing. The court also ruled that the trial court had considered mitigating factors but acted within its discretion to give them little weight. Finally, while the appeals court agreed that the trial court had erred in citing two specific legal grounds for consecutive sentencing, it concluded that other valid grounds fully supported the decision.

The judgment was affirmed, though the case was remanded only to correct a clerical error on one judgment form to properly reflect Ayotte’s multiple-offender status. According to the TN Dept. of Correction, the sentence will officially come to a close in year 2146.

 

 

 

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