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FBI follow-up to DOJ Report

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Post by TomTerrific0420 Tue Aug 03, 2010 3:00 am

Major
Executive Speeches





FBI follow-up to DOJ Report Blue-white



FBI follow-up to DOJ Report Executives_placeholder5 Thomas J. Harrington

Executive Assistant Director - Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch, Federal Bureau of Investigation

National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction

National Center for Missing and Exploited Children

Alexandria, Virginia

August 2, 2010


The FBI remains committed to fighting child exploitation. We use a
three-pronged approach to direct our efforts to have the greatest
impact on the child exploitation threat. I’d like to briefly highlight
for you the FBI’s specialized teams that investigate child abductions,
child pornography, and child prostitution.
First, in cases where children are abducted and murdered,
research shows that 74 percent are killed within the first three hours
of being abducted. The Child Abduction Rapid Deployment Team—or CARD
Team, as it’s known at the FBI—provides investigative, technical, and
resource assistance to our network of FBI field offices and their local
law enforcement community partners during the most critical time after
a child is abducted or reported missing.

CARD teams have deployed 59 times since in the past four years;
62 children have been taken during the same period. Of those 62
children, 25 have been recovered alive, and six remain missing. In the
balance of those cases, the CARD Team and our Evidence Response Team
have provided forensic evidence and support for our local law
enforcement partners and their prosecutors.
Second, the average age of a child targeted for prostitution is
between 12 to 14 for girls and 11 to 13 for boys. These kids are
dependent on their pimps for everything; everything they earn goes to
the pimps’ coffers. Should they try to escape, they are often subject
to brutal beatings or even killed. The FBI launched the Innocence Lost
National Initiative to address the growing problem of children
recruited for prostitution.
We have 38 Innocence Lost task forces and working groups in
cities throughout the United States. To date, the initiative has
located and recovered more than 1,100 children. And prosecutors have
earned nearly 600 convictions as a result.
Third, the Internet is the number one destination for pedophiles
because they believe that technology grants these criminals anonymity.
Children are sexually assaulted to produce photos and videos, and then
repeatedly re-victimized as images are traded via the Internet by
like-minded people. The Innocent Images National Initiative program
targets enterprises and networks of the most egregious offenders who
produce and distribute sexually explicit images.
Our Innocent Images National Initiative currently has over 6,000
open child pornography cases. And the past 20 months, we have made
more than 1,800 arrests and achieved over 2,100 convictions. In the
past 10 months, the FBI has identified and rescued 95 children featured
in child pornography.
Our Innocent Images International Task Force, with 90 officers
from 42 countries, allows for information to be exchanged and cases to
be jointly initiated and coordinated. This is the type of collaboration
that Deputy Assistant Attorney General Grindler talked about with
Operation Achilles, a three-year investigation which involved the
Queensland Police Department in Australia and authorities in Canada,
New Zealand, Belgium, Italy, and Britain. Suspects used technology,
such as encryption, to hide their identities. As mentioned, they traded
more than 400,000 images of children, from infants to adolescents,
many depicting acts of violence and torture.
Fourteen were prosecuted using new statutes provided by our
Congress. The courts provided strong sentences in this case and in
others. And in fact, of all the criminal programs that the FBI
investigates, on average, the longest sentences are granted in child
pornography and exploitation cases. In the past few years, we’ve
accumulated at least four life sentences, and others ranging from 30 to
40 years in prison.
It is important to recognize that we are not alone in our
efforts to identify the victims and their abusers. Our federal, state,
and local law enforcement partners stand shoulder to shoulder with us
to help locate children and build cases against their offenders. Any
success that we have achieved has been through those partnerships and
relationships we continue to develop with our law enforcement partners
and one of our greatest allies, the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children (NCMEC).
FBI personnel work here at NCMEC and have access to the Cyber
Tip Line, the “9-1-1 for the Internet.” The public and electronic
service providers use that line to report Internet child sexual
exploitation. In fiscal year 2010, the FBI personnel here at the center
have reviewed more than 75,500 tips—a 100 percent increase from 2009’s
activity.
At the FBI, we also seek to educate young people through a
program we refer to as the Safe Online Surfing Challenge, an
interactive online quiz that teaches middle school students about
Internet safety. Since 2006, nearly 60,000 students from almost 400
schools in 39 states have participated.
The FBI will remain vigilant and continue our active role in the
national strategy to ensure that children are protected. We reaffirm
our commitment to removing sexual predators from kids’ lives and doing
it through the justice system.


  • Department of Justice press release
TomTerrific0420
TomTerrific0420
Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice

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