<p>Prosecutors have said Dye tricked at least two teenage girls into dating her, although charges were filed in connection with only one, a 16-year-old. She was arrested in June after the girl ran away from home for a few days and stayed with Dye for at least part of that time, authorities said.<br /><br />Dye pleaded guilty yesterday to three misdemeanour charges: sexual imposition, attempted sexual imposition and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.<br />Warren County Juvenile Court Judge Mike Powell in Lebanon, about 40 kilometres north of Cincinnati, sentenced Dye to jail and put her on probation for two years.<br />He also ordered Dye not to have contact with the victim or the victim's family and classified her as a sexual offender, which requires her to register with authorities every six months for 15 years.<br /><br />"This woman victimised a young girl and needed to be punished for her actions," Chief Assistant Prosecutor Bruce McGary said in a statement. "Equally important is that we monitor and make sure that Ms Dye does not have any victims in the future."<br />A statement from the 16-year-old victim was read in court, the Dayton Daily News reported.<br />"I'm even scared to walk my dog," she said in the statement. "I used to trust people. Now I don't."</p>
<p>Prosecutors have said Dye tricked at least two teenage girls into dating her, although charges were filed in connection with only one, a 16-year-old. She was arrested in June after the girl ran away from home for a few days and stayed with Dye for at least part of that time, authorities said.<br /><br />Dye pleaded guilty yesterday to three misdemeanour charges: sexual imposition, attempted sexual imposition and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.<br />Warren County Juvenile Court Judge Mike Powell in Lebanon, about 40 kilometres north of Cincinnati, sentenced Dye to jail and put her on probation for two years.<br />He also ordered Dye not to have contact with the victim or the victim's family and classified her as a sexual offender, which requires her to register with authorities every six months for 15 years.<br /><br />"This woman victimised a young girl and needed to be punished for her actions," Chief Assistant Prosecutor Bruce McGary said in a statement. "Equally important is that we monitor and make sure that Ms Dye does not have any victims in the future."<br />A statement from the 16-year-old victim was read in court, the Dayton Daily News reported.<br />"I'm even scared to walk my dog," she said in the statement. "I used to trust people. Now I don't."</p>