A youth soccer coach was hit with seven years in prison for molesting a 10-year-old girl who attended one of his Brooklyn sports camps — but it wasn’t the first time he faced accusations of preying on a young player.
Stanislav Rozovsky, 52, was sentenced Thursday after jurors last month found him guilty of first-degree sexual abuse.
Prosecutors said Rozovsky, a coach and owner of a Marine Park youth soccer camp, bought the victim ice cream and lured her into his van during August 2022.
As the girl tried to leave the van, he grabbed and pushed her back inside before fondling her chest and kissing her.
“I love you,” the creep told the girl, prosecutors said.
The disgusting molestation carried unfortunate echoes of a 2011 case, in which Rozovsky was accused of sexually molesting an 8-year-old girl on one of his youth teams.
The sex crime case, however, fell apart after the girl declined to testify, sources said.
Prosecutors instead pursued a suspended license case against him that ended with a 1- to 3-year prison sentence in July 2012 — though Rozovsky spent just five months behind bars before being released on Dec. 27, 2012.
A civil case that accused the perv coach of molestation, sexual assault and physical abuse of a young girl during the summer 2010 also fizzled out at roughly the same time, court records show.
Rozovsky ran the Dinamo NY soccer club before his latest stint with the Chelsea Premier Soccer Academy, which lists him as a director on its website, according to sources and records.
The Chelsea Premier Soccer Academy — which is named after Chelsea FC in London — was founded in 2014 and says it “aspires to be an outstanding educational-athletic organization that provides high quality experience for every athlete.”
Rozovsky’s club hosted a day camp and sleepaway camp in 2022, according to its website.
The day camp, where the alleged attack on the 10-year-old player occurred, held activities at various fields in south Brooklyn while charging parents $350 per week for their kids to attend, sources said.
The club’s website includes a photo of a “Steve Rososki,” who a source confirmed is Rozosky. The entry for Rososki states he had 30 years in youth coaching, in addition to PhDs in clinical and sports psychology.
A parent whose child was enrolled in Rozovsky’s soccer program for two years before leaving was stunned to learn about the coach’s other name and previous case.
“It’s disgusting,” the dad, who did not want to be named, told The Post on Friday.
He said Rozovsky would routinely travel around the US with kids for soccer matches.
“I had this business card that said he had all these licenses and he belonged to go to all these groups. I turn around and I don’t know what happened,” the parent said.
“It’s scary that someone who had a situation prior too that they had no background checks and they’re handling kids.”
— Additional reporting by Peter Senzamici