Ex-California Teacher Andrea Michelle Cardosa Sentenced To 10 Years For Sex Abuse

Ex-Teacher Sentenced For Sex Abuse Revealed In YouTube Video
FILE - This Feb. 3, 2014 file law enforcement booking photo from the Riverside, Calif., Police Department shows Andrea Michelle Cardosa. Cardosa, 40, an educator who was confronted with allegations of abuse in a phone call by a former student who then posted the conversation on YouTube, has pleaded guilty to sexual assault charges involving two victims. The Riverside Press-Enterprise reports that Cardosa entered pleas Friday, Jan. 23, 2015 to three counts of lewd acts with a child under 14. (AP Photo/Riverside Police Department, File)
FILE - This Feb. 3, 2014 file law enforcement booking photo from the Riverside, Calif., Police Department shows Andrea Michelle Cardosa. Cardosa, 40, an educator who was confronted with allegations of abuse in a phone call by a former student who then posted the conversation on YouTube, has pleaded guilty to sexual assault charges involving two victims. The Riverside Press-Enterprise reports that Cardosa entered pleas Friday, Jan. 23, 2015 to three counts of lewd acts with a child under 14. (AP Photo/Riverside Police Department, File)

Feb 9 (Reuters) - A California educator who resigned after a woman accused her in a YouTube video of abusing her when she was a 12-year-old student was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Monday, prosecutors said.

The former teacher, Andrea Michelle Cardosa, pleaded guilty last month to three counts of lewd acts with a child in a deal that spared her from a possible life sentence, said Riverside County District Attorney's Office spokesman John Hall.

Cardosa was charged last year with abusing two girls over a 13-year-period while teaching at schools they attended in Riverside and Perris, both suburbs east of Los Angeles.

The case grew out of a video posted on YouTube last February in which a woman confronted Cardosa, accused her of abuse, and said she had ruined her childhood. In the video, Cardosa expresses regret and says the abuse was not anything she had intended.

The victim who uploaded the video addressed the court on Monday, according to the Riverside Press-Enterprise newspaper, saying, "I will stand up for my 12-year-old self who did not have anyone to fight for her."

"It is never OK for an adult to betray the trust of a child," she said.

(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Robert Birsel)

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