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J.B. VAN HOLLEN
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Protecting Wisconsin's Children from Internet Predators
Our kids
are our most precious resource. Families work very hard to raise them,
pass along values and traditions, educate them, and give them every opportunity
to achieve their dreams. At the Department of Justice, we also work very hard to
protect them. Nowhere is this commitment greater than in our efforts to
fight Internet predators.
While the
Internet has opened many doors for our children, from education to communication
to entertainment, it has also become an active crime scene. Online sex
predators use technology to connect with kids, using all the tools they use:
instant messaging, picture and video trading, chat rooms, web cameras, web
microphones, social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, and even online
gaming networks like X-Box Live.
Child
pornographers have invaded the Internet in many forms. Commercial
websites, often located abroad, find an endless supply of customers in the U.S.,
including in Wisconsin. Others use chat rooms to obtain and trade images
and movies, while some simply use their own digital cameras, camcorders, or cell
phones to manufacture images. As for cell phones, have you heard the term
"sexting?" It refers to sexually explicit chat through text messaging that
used to take place only in Internet chat rooms. Often, predators use cell
phones after meeting children online.
Predators
also use file sharing programs like LimeWire, which many parents believe are
just used for music. We have identified approximately 15,000 separate
computers in our state that possess and offer to distribute this filth.
Nationally, the story is no different. Statistics kept by the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) illustrate the scope of the
problem:
Since 1992, for example, NCMEC's Child Recognition and Identification System
(CRIS) has reviewed more than 15 million child pornography images and movies
seized by law enforcement. Since 1998, NCMEC's Cyber Tipline has received
more than 600,000 reports of suspected online child exploitation taking place
around the country, including some one-thousand tips referred to our ICAC.
To make matters more disturbing, surveys have shown a correlation between
child pornographers and child molesters. In 2005, sobering results were
released from a study at the Federal Correctional Institution in Buttner, North
Carolina. Researchers indicated that of about 200 federal inmates
convicted of Internet child pornography crimes, some 89% admitted to molesting
children as well.
The
Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force of my office's Division of
Criminal Investigation (DCI) is dedicated to identifying and arresting those
predators. Since 1998, the ICAC Task Force has arrested more than 600
offenders and executed more than 800 search warrants. To help prevent kids
from becoming victims, and to help parents, teachers, and child welfare
advocates better protect kids, we have educated more than 160,000 citizens of
all ages across Wisconsin. Parents are the first line of defense in
protecting their children from online predators. We have included some tips for
parents to help protect their children.
At my
request, in its last budget, the state legislature funded two additional Special
Agent positions for our ICAC Task Force, as well as three new forensic computer
analyst positions. Those specialists perform the critical task of finding
and analyzing digital evidence, sometimes right after agents seize it.
This teamwork often allows us to take the predator into custody literally within
an hour from the time a search warrant is executed.
Our DCI
professionals partner with a growing list of local law enforcement agencies
throughout the state. We now have 55 ICAC affiliates throughout the state,
more than doubling our partnerships since 2006. Additionally, we work
hand-in-hand with our federal counterparts to investigate crimes against
children that result in a wide-range of federal charges.
Let
Internet predators take note. My commitment is unceasing. We will
identify you, arrest you, and take you off the street; we will follow you to
every area of the Internet, no matter where you try to hide; and we will work
together in law enforcement to stay one step ahead of you.
# # #
Attorney General Van Hollen's Internet Safety Tips for Parents
- Be an Active Parent. Keep open lines of communications with kids about
Internet use. This process should begin as soon as a child gets online.
- Prepare Your Children for the Online World as You Do the Real World.
Make no mistake, the online world is real, and so are its dangers. Talk to
your children about the benefits and dangers of the Internet. You tell
your kids not to jump into a stranger's car alone and why that's dangerous; tell
them why they shouldn't travel the Internet Highway alone and why that is
dangerous.
- Watch Internet Use. Internet predators are watching your kids online.
You need to be, too. One suggestion: keep computers in common areas.
- Use Software Resources. Use filters that block inappropriate websites
or online services that are harmful to kids. Consider installing
monitoring software, which records everything kids do online, from instant
messaging to videos to picture trading.
- It's Not Just the Computer. Find out how your kids are communicating
and understand the technology. If you can't appropriately supervise use,
don't allow it.
- Report Online Exploitation. Call local law enforcement or the Wisconsin
ICAC Task Force at (608) 266-1671.
Find Out More. Visit the National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children's "net smartz" websites.
www.netsmartz411.org is geared to help parents;
www.netsmartz.org includes information
for parents, kids, educators, and law enforcement. We use these materials.
You should too.
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