Security News

Charter challenge for man accused of possessing child porn

Monday, October 31, 2011

With multiple video screens in place and a weighty desktop computer hard drive visible beneath the arm of one man, courtroom number one at provincial court in St. John’s was prepared for the start of a five-day trial this morning for a man facing a single charge of possession of child pornography.

The accused, Scott Curtis, was not present in court but represented by his lawyer Rosellen Sullivan.

Sullivan this morning asked the judge for a postponement saying that reviewing details of the case with technical experts had revealed the possibility for the challenge of a search warrant in the case, under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Apologizing for the lateness of the Charter challenge, Sullivan noted it is a “very technical file” and grounds for the challenge only became apparent in the last few days, through her consultations with experts on the evidence. 

She said she was preparing a Charter application for her client to challenge the search warrant, “which I think is necessary in his defence.”

The Crown, prepared to begin trial, did not consent to the postponement citing the lateness of Sullivan’s expression of intent to file the Charter application.

It was left to Judge Gregory Brown to decide whether or not to allow a last-minute challenge, thus pushing back the trial dates.

Brown noted, in cases such as Curtis’, a Charter application should be filed at least three days prior to the start of trial. However, he said, later applications can be allowed in the interest of justice.

The judge credited Sullivan as an experienced and capable attorney, noting he would not allow her application if he felt she was trying to deceive the court.

“Clearly Mr. Curtis has to be afforded full opportunity to make application and defence,” Brown said, ultimately allowing the application.

The judge did, however, push for expediency. Sullivan will have to file immediately and the Crown will speak to the application and potential response on Wednesday.

It is expected new trial dates will be set on Wednesday. The new dates will likely be in December.

Source: http://www.thetelegram.com/News/Local/2011-10-31/article-2791814/Charter-challenge-for-man-accused-of-possessing-child-porn/1

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Child porn collection will land man in jail

Saturday, October 29, 2011

The Crown prosecutor is seeking a five- to seven-year prison term for a Moncton man caught with the largest collection of child sex abuse images in Canadian history.

"The magnitude of this collection completely overwhelmed the RCMP's computer storage ability and servers," said prosecutor Karen Lee Lamrock.

Douglas Hugh Stewart, 51, was arrested in March along with several other people as part of the RCMP's J Treasures operation. He was charged with possessing child pornography and later pleaded guilty.

Stewart returned to court for sentencing yesterday and also pleaded guilty to new charges of accessing and distributing child pornography. Judge Anne Dugas-Horsman heard arguments from Lamrock and defence lawyer Maurice Blanchard and adjourned sentencing to Nov. 14.

Stewart has been in custody since his arrest after being denied bail.

Lamrock told the court the investigation began in July 2010 and involved several police agencies, including the RCMP's Internet Child Exploitation Unit. Police were trying to find those responsible for trading sex abuse images as part of a peer-to-peer file sharing network online.

An investigator from that unit found an IP address that had sex abuse images available for sharing and she was able to download images and videos of young people either naked or being sexually abused. When the officer tried to download some of the images, she had to wait because 18 other people were lined up ahead of her to do the same.

The user was going by the nickname Sam Spade, but police later learned it was Stewart. On March 23 they executed a search warrant on his residence and he admitted they would find child pornography.

Police found more than 4.7 million images and videos containing child sex abuse on computer hard drives, CDs, floppy disks and in magazines. He had another 1.1 million images depicting things like kids on the beach and in the bathtub. He told them he started collecting back in the 1980s.

Stewart was obsessed with collecting the images and constantly searching for new material. When police spent months categorizing his collection, they found that it mostly involved girls, ranging in age from four years old to the mid-teens. Lamrock showed a sample to the judge and defence counsel, though Stewart himself refused to view them.

A psychiatric assessment diagnosed Stewart as a pedophile and a moderate risk to commit the same type of offence in the future.

Lamrock said the goal of sentencing in this case should be to deter him specifically and other people in general.

"These children will have their abuse, their horror saved forever on the Internet," she said.

The previous largest collection seized in Canada was 1.3 million images and videos in Ontario and that person got three years in prison. Lamrock asked for five to seven years, while Blanchard requested four for his client, who has no record. Lamrock also asked for a lifetime on the sex offender registry and a lifetime banned from parks, beaches and other places where children are found.

Blanchard said Stewart wants to receive treatment for his illness.

The defendant was given the opportunity to address the court but declined.

Source: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/news/article/1451904

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The chilling reality of sex tourism

Saturday, September 17, 2011

It seems Canada is exotic enough and safe enough that sex tourists are willing to risk travelling here on the promise that a child is ready and willing to serve their every need.

That was the premise behind using Canada as the destination for an unusual sting operation run for 19 months by American law enforcement agencies, according to Brian Moskowitz, the special agent in charge.

The chilling part for Canadians should be that the operation worked and that it worked so well.

From September 2009 to March 2011, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations, and Postal Service agents ran a fake website called Precious Treasure Holiday Co., which offered secure travel from Cleveland to Canada to engage in sex with children as young as eight.

During that time, the website had 140,000 hits, and it resulted in four men being caught and convicted.

"Canada made for a more plausible scenario," Moskowitz said in a telephone interview from Detroit.

"It was never our intent to take anyone to Canada and no children were involved. It was merely part of a scenario that we built."

He went on to say, "It's not that Canada has a perceived weakness or vulnerability."

It may not now, but it used to. Before the age of sexual consent was raised in 2008 to 16 from 14, Canada was a favourite destination for so-called sex tourists, according to Bangkokbased ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes).

It also didn't help that since Canada's sex tourism laws were passed in 1997, there have been only three convictions. The most recent was in July 2010, when a Burnaby art dealer, Kenneth Klassen, was sentenced to 11 years in jail. Sex tourist is the rather jaunty name given to predators who travel to gain access to children. These days, most use the Internet to arrange their travel so that finding them is difficult. And proactive investigations like the one Moskowitz led that are aimed at preventing predators from abusing children are rare, but effective.

Two Germans and two Americans were caught in the sting. Each paid up to $1,600 to have sex with fictional Canadian children either in Canada or after they were trafficked into the United States. Those men believed it was safe to not only have sex with children as young as eight, but to take pictures or video of the assaults.

All four have been convicted. One is already serving a 20-year prison term; the others are awaiting sentencing.

What they planned to do is not only criminal, it's horrifying. How they prepared for it is grotesque.

.

Peter Beichl, a 49-year-old doctor from Albstadt, Germany, paid $1,150 to spend eight hours with an 11-yearold girl in a hotel room. He paid extra to have the encounter videotaped.

When he arrived in Cleveland in March, Beichl had lingerie, sex toys, bondage ropes, straps, a mask, lubricant, condoms and a bottle of sedatives in his suitcase.

"If she should be scared, I could bring some short-acting, slight sedative, which is doing no harm," Beichl wrote in an email to an undercover agent before he left home.

Beichl also brought four stuffed unicorns and a unicorn paint-by-number set. He'd been told the little girl he planned to molest liked unicorns.

He pleaded guilty on Aug. 15 to two counts of attempted sex trafficking and travelling with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct. A sentencing date hasn't been set.

Otto Linzenbach, 63, of Leipzig, paid $1,600 cash to have sex with two children - a boy and a girl. In his first email to undercover officers, he requested photos of available girls aged 10 to 13. Later, Linzenbach mailed a $100 deposit for a boy and a girl after finding out what sex acts they would do with each other and with him, and confirming that he could videotape the encounter.

He will be sentenced Oct. 25 for attempted sex trafficking, attempted exploitation of children and travelling with the intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct.

Jonathan Waltman, 25, a registered sex offender, couldn't go to Canada because he was still on parole, having been convicted of molesting his girlfriend's 10-year-old sister in 2004.

So, instead of going to Canada, the Ohio man believed he had paid to have sex with an eight-year-old Canadian girl in Detroit. He paid extra to have photos taken.

As he was driving to Detroit with an undercover agent, Waltman bragged about downloading child pornography, removing his computer's hard drive and hiding it in the basement so his parole officer could not find it.

The hard drive was subsequently recovered. Waltman has not been charged with possession of child pornography, but he pleaded guilty to attempted sex trafficking of minors and will be sentenced Nov. 15.

Another Ohio man - Zachary Casey, 38 - is already serving his 20-year sentence for attempting to travel to engage in illicit sexual conduct with an eightyear-old girl and attempted receipt and distribution of child pornography.

While Casey was travelling by car with an undercover agent, he bragged of twice having had sex with two other children.

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For the most part, the United States, like Canada, catches sex tourists more by accident than design.

In most cases, Moskowitz said, what normally happens is a border or postal officer finds pornographic images either on a laptop or in a package. Often those images include the predators abusing children in well-known destinations such as Thailand, Cambodia or Costa Rica.

(Sex tourists are almost always men, but Moskowitz said women also have been arrested and convicted. That's part of what makes these investigations so difficult. There is no profile for sexual predators, according to Moskowitz. They come from every income bracket, every profession and trade and span almost every age group.) Launching a proactive investigation was not without its obstacles.

An early one was "deconfliction" - as Moskowitz put it - so that other enforcement agencies wouldn't waste time chasing after Precious Treasure; Canadian officials (including local police in Windsor, Ont.) and other American agencies had to be notified.

"We know where pedophiles lurk in the cyber world," Moskowitz said. "So we went there and cast the net."

To attract pedophiles, the Precious Treasure's home page had symbols and coded language known to predators and undercover agents, then promoted the travel services on bulletin boards and other sites frequented by pedophiles.

To avoid people stumbling on its explicit content (photographs and the offer to provide children) and avoid accusations of entrapment, that content could only be accessed after repeated emails to the undercover agents.

Still, Moskowitz said: "We kept getting shut down because of complaints and we had to restart and rename it. But if anything, it gave us more credibility."

In March, yet another web-hosting company shut down the site. But this time, The Smoking Gun website "outed" Precious Treasure as a Homeland Security operation, noting that it had "fallen victim to its own sleazy, overt come-on."

Even though people continued emailing Precious Treasure, the two-year operation was shut down. The outing was a "significant part" of that decision, said Moskowitz, who added: "I can't fathom the logic of why someone would give the opportunity to pedophiles to continue to hunt their prey."

Only a global effort will stop child predators, especially with roughly 100,000 terabytes of information readily available on the Internet.

Because, as Moskowitz said, "We just can't put our arms around every kid and shield them as much as we'd like."



Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/news/chilling+reality+tourism/5418750/story.html#ixzz1dWI5pNAW
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Charges pending in giant porn bust

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Police are recommending charges against a 64-year-old Ladysmith man after a search of his business, home and car revealed as many as one million pornographic images, many involving children.

Police officials believe it is the biggest pornography bust of its kind in Nanaimo. In mid-December, officers with the serious crime unit arrested a man as they searched his business in Cedar.

Later that day, police searched his home in Ladysmith as well as his car. Officers seized 10 computers, digital cameras, web cameras, CDs, DVDs and more than two dozen each of external hard drives and other storage devices. Police estimate there may be as many as one million sexually explicit images of children on the seized materials.

Investigators do not believe there are any images of local children. The investigation is continuing.

Police say it will take several months before a forensic report on the materials is prepared as officers catalogue the material.

The man was released from custody and is scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday.

Nanaimo RCMP are recommending charges of possession, production and accessing child pornography.

His conditions include to not have or use computers, access the Internet or attend any public place where someone under 18 may be present.

Police say the man's name surfaced through various investigations and this case will likely spawn others. Often, investigations lead from one person to another and sometimes other countries, as people sell or swap images of abused children online.

Officers are co-ordinating with the specialized Integrated Child Exploitation Unit in Vancouver, which was created in 2004 in response to this growing type of Internet-fuelled crime.

Source: http://www.timescolonist.com/story_print.html?id=4114544&sponsor=

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Condemn FaceBook blackmail with jail, Crown urges judge

Saturday, January 15, 2011

A 32-year-old man who tried to blackmail a teenage girl by posting sexually explicit photos he took of her on Facebook should be sentenced to up to a year in jail, the Crown argued Friday.

Maher Ibrahim admitted he posted the pictures of the 17-year-old girl performing oral sex on him in August 2007 after she spurned his advances to renew a relationship and meet with him for sex.

According to an agreed statement of facts, Ibrahim sent the victim an e-mail telling her that he had a video of her performing fellatio on him and that if she didn't meet with him for sex, he would post still photographs from the video on the popular social networking website.

The two had been in a relationship the previous year and the victim performed oral sex on him two or three times, the court heard. However, the video had been taken without her consent or knowledge.

The victim didn't believe Ibrahim had a video until he sent her a text message telling her to check her "friend request" page on Facebook.

When she did, she saw that Ibrahim had created a profile with a name similar to hers.

When she opened the account, she saw four photographs of herself performing the sexual act.

When the victim checked back later in the day, the photographs were not there, although the victim said she saw the photos posted a second time in August.

In a series of text messages before the photos were posted, the teen begged Ibrahim not to post the images.

Prior to posting the pictures, Ibrahim had begun calling and texting her regularly on her cellphone, which she ignored. He eventually began showing up at her workplace.

The victim never met up with Ibrahim, instead calling Ottawa police to report his threats.

Ibrahim pleaded guilty earlier this year to extortion and voyeurism. Charges of making child pornography and sexual assault, for making the video without the victim's consent, are expected to be withdrawn following his sentencing Monday.

Assistant Crown attorney Lisa Miles said Ibrahim's actions were "absolutely devastating" on the victim. She argued crimes involving the Internet, and social networking websites, are socially relevant and a jail sentence of between nine and 12 months was necessary to condemn Ibrahim's behaviour and deter others from committing similar crimes.

There was no way of knowing who else may have viewed the photos during the time they were online, she said, although there was no evidence anyone else saw them.

Ottawa police Det. Martin Dompierre, a computer forensic expert, said that once they were posted on the Internet they are accessible to everyone and anyone using the website at that time. The material can be copied, saved and archived by a viewer which allows them to view, post or share the images at any time, he said.

Ibrahim's lawyer, Gary Barnes, argued his client, who now works at a car dealership in Alberta, was a first-time offender who pleaded guilty, sparing the victim of having to testify at trial.

Barnes argued Ibrahim should serve a conditional sentence in the community of between 15 to 18 months.

aseymour@ottawacitizen.com



Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/Condemn+Facebook+blackmail+with+jail+Crown+urges+judge/4114371/story.html#ixzz1BDec53yy
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Sex slaves for sale on Craigslist

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Craigslist, the popular online advertising site, is being accused of knowingly helping violent B.C. criminals traffic in underage and foreign sex slaves.

And while the private U.S. company -- with estimated revenues from sex ads of about $45 million per year -- has removed "erotic" and "adult" ads south of the border, it is refusing demands by officials in B.C. and across Canada to do the same here.

That's the charge made by Benjamin Perrin, a University of B.C. law professor and author of the new book Invisible Chains: Canada's Underground World of Human Trafficking.

Perrin has been on a mission to improve human-trafficking enforcement in Canada ever since he worked to rehabilitate child sex trafficking victims in Cambodia 10 years ago. When he returned to Canada, he was shocked to realize the same crimes and "devastating" impacts are prevalent here.

Perrin argues there are more slaves now than at any point in human history, as sex traffickers leverage the Internet, reaping huge profits that now rival the drug trade.

And no single tool, Perrin says, is more useful than Craigslist for hooking up buyers and sellers.

"Craigslist is the most popular website in Canada for selling unwanted furniture and apartments," he says, "and unfortunately it is also the No. 1 website in Canada for selling people."

Craigslist clearly knows its role, so it could be guilty of "aiding and abetting" while flouting the law in Canada, Perrin says.

He points to "horrific crimes," such as the case of a violent pimp named Imani Nakpangi. In the first humantrafficking conviction in Canada in 2008, the Toronto man got five years in jail for luring a 14-year-old girl with fetal alcohol syndrome, and a 15-year-old homeless girl, and pocketing $400,000 in two years by selling them on Craigslist.

A current case in B.C. demonstrates the technological advantage alleged criminals are exploiting, Perrin says.

Jian Feng "Michael" Li, a 47-year-old Burnaby man, is accused of using Craigslist to sell women from Hong Kong at four "micro-brothels" in Surrey, Burnaby, Coquitlam and Richmond.

"You can put up an ad and take it down in seconds. You can lower prices, you move victims around, as Michael Li is alleged to have done," Perrin says. "They are physically moved but they are always digitally present, on this one website."

'Witness Interference?'

Li made a court appearance in Vancouver last week, with a next appearance scheduled for January. Dressed shabbily in court, wearing a hoody with baggy cotton pants and old Nike runners, Li spoke through a Chinese interpreter.

Af ter a two-year humantrafficking invest igat ion, Li was charged with five lesser prostitution-related offences.

"Ultimately, most of [the women] ended up going home, which made it very hard to pursue the humantrafficking charge," RCMP Const. Michael McLaughlin said.

In Li's case, seven women were offered shelter and support through B.C.'s Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons (OCTIP) -- one was given a temporary residence permit, as authorities had reason to believe she was a victim of human trafficking, Perrin says.

But in interviews with the provincial office, Perrin says he learned that "the women would have spent an overnight in this shelter, and there was a concern that one of the suspected associates of the alleged traffickers discovered where they were and took them away, basically."

Robin Pike, executive director of OCTIP, says "there is always a deep concern," with witness interference, but she can't comment specifically on this case.

'The new kiddie stroll'

Another recent B.C. case that has outraged citizens involves a 14-year-old Chilliwack girl accused of selling herself on Craigslist and recruiting other young girls to do the same.

Perrin says throughout Canada, "kiddie strolls" -- the streets and alleys where johns seek sex from the youngest sex trade workers -- are disappearing.

"In my opinion the new kiddie stroll is online, and it's on Craigslist," Perrin says. "It's been called the Walmart of child sex trafficking, and that's no exaggeration."

Brian Sanders, a detective with the Vancouver police vice unit, agrees. "Vancouver's [kiddie stroll] used to be on Victoria Drive between Hastings and Powell. But they don't have to be there now because it's all online."

Sanders says the average age of entry into the sex trade is 14 -- the age at which his own niece was lured into prostitution.

These days, the switch from child to sex product can happen as fast as a computer can boot up.

Sanders says in one case, a man met two underage girls online and brought them from Victoria to Vancouver. Within 90 minutes he had taken them shopping for sexy clothes and posted the girls for sale on Craigslist. At the same time, he was surfing Facebook, looking for more vulnerable girls.

"It's so much easier online," Sanders says. "The old way of meeting the girl that got off the bus from Saskatchewan, you don't see that much anymore."

Sanders says police know there is a lot of international human trafficking in Vancouver. But like other officers interviewed, he is frustrated with barriers that keep serious charges from sticking.

He points to the case of B.C. resident Michael Ng, the first person charged with human-trafficking offences under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, in 2005.

Ng was accused of trafficking Chinese women into Canada on the promise of restaurant jobs, then forcing them to work as prostitutes in his massage parlour in Vancouver. The judge did not convict Ng on the human-trafficking charges, but on human-smuggling and prostitution-related offences.

The case took two years to bring to court, with officers flying to China to meet witnesses. After tremendous costs were poured into the investigation, Ng got a relatively light sentence. As Perrin notes, the B.C. Court of Appeals made the rare move of stepping in to increase "a lax" sentence by one year to 27 months.

"We've had cases where we've had to let them go," Sanders says. "There is so much stuff you have to prove." Sgt. Marie-Claude Arsenault of the RCMP's Human Trafficking Co-ordination Centre says that since 2002 there have been just seven convictions for human trafficking, and all are domestic.

'Boycott Craigslist'

In another case in 2008, Tyrel Kurt Henwood, 22, met a 14-year-old from the Interior named Sarah on Facebook and lured her to Victoria. When Sarah arrived, he took her belongings and started selling her. Henwood was charged with human trafficking, but in 2009 those charges were dropped when he pleaded guilty to assault, living on the avails of prostitution and making or publishing child pornography.

Perrin says Canada should improve human-trafficking laws because, currently, prosecutors must prove victims feared for their safety and the victims have to testify in court, "which is a higher burden than other countries."

But right now, he's focused on Craigslist. If the company doesn't pull sex ads in Canada, he says a boycott supported by at least 20 groups will be mounted in the new year. If that doesn't work, the company could face criminal prosecution, he says.

"Craigslist has persisted in refusing to shut down its erotic services section here," he says, "and the only reason is they are showing complete disrespect to Canada."

Craigslist did not respond to repeated requests for an interview for this story.

scooper@theprovince.com

Read more: http://www.theprovince.com/news/slaves+sale+Craigslist/3930294/story.html#ixzz17OW8dnJw
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Undercover mom nabs man luring teens

Saturday, December 04, 2010

A B.C. mother went undercover to nab a man who was stalking her teen daughter online.

[name deleted], 33, is scheduled to be sentenced in January after pleading guilty this week to luring two 15-year-old girls and one 14-year-old on Facebook and the MSN messenger service.

[name deleted] was arrested after the computer-technician mother of the youngest girl read an explicit message he sent to her daughter in November 2008.

She said [name deleted] posed as a 22-year-old member of the girl's church group -- telling the teen it didn't bother him that she was so young.

"She was a trusting 14-year-old. She didn't realize there would be bad people after her. It terrified the hell out of her," her mother said. "She was definitely traumatized."

The woman took over her daughter's online identity to chat to [name deleted], who gave her his photo, age, where he worked and his phone number.

He urged her to sneak out of the house and meet him.

The mother later found out [name deleted] had the names of more than 20 girls attending her daughter's Kelowna school.

She gave the list to their principal, who contacted police.

[name deleted] confessed to the police officer who arrested him at his Kelowna workplace and handed over his two laptops.

The married father of two said he knew the girls were underage but still tried to lure them for sex and offered them oral sex.

Police found [name deleted] -- who had 146 female Facebook friends -- had communicated with numerous other teens and young women in chat rooms and social-networking sites.

[name deleted] apologized in a Kelowna court on Tuesday.

"Never once have I tried to minimize what I've done. I'm sorry I got to that point. I never wanted to hurt anyone or anything," said Morneau, who has gone for sex offender counselling.



Read more: http://www.leaderpost.com/technology/Undercover+nabs+luring+teens/3928006/story.html#ixzz17OXI4yXb
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Tories seek automatic jail for child sex offenders

Friday, November 05, 2010

The Harper government moved on Thursday to eliminate house arrest as punishment for sex crimes against children, proposing legislation that would automatically incarcerate offenders for at least 90 days for some offences and a minimum of five years for others.

With former child victim Sheldon Kennedy at his side, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson told a news conference that his legislation — which would remove discretion for judges to impose sentences as they see fit — will make penalties more consistent nationwide.

"They would ensure that conditional sentences such as house arrest will no longer be available for these offences," said Mr. Nicholson, whose bill calls for mandatory minimum sentences for seven crimes, including sex assault, exposure, Internet luring and incest.

The proposed legislation, called the Protecting Children from Sexual Predators Act, also rewords the existing Criminal Code ban on Internet luring, to make it clear that "grooming" young people online by sending them sexually explicit material fits the crime and that it will garner a jail term of at least 90 days.

Mandatory minimum jail terms are central to the Harper government's law-and-order agenda. The Conservatives have already proposed automatic jail time for marijuana grow-ops, drug pushing, human smuggling and white-collar crimes. Also, mandatory imprisonment for a variety of gun-related crimes became law two years ago.

Mandatory minimums for crimes against children are not new. The previous Liberal government imposed automatic incarceration for nine child-exploitation offences, and the Conservative government on Thursday proposed additions to the list.

The bill also seeks to hike the minimum sentences on crimes against children that already garner automatic jail time.

Mandatory minimum sentences are controversial in that they strip judges of their discretion to tailor sentences to fit a case, and critics contend they will lead to more plea bargaining to avoid stiffer sentences. Automatic jailing is also expensive — the Conservatives are expected to spend billions of dollars in the coming years to imprison more offenders and keep them there longer.

"Mandatory minimums are very contentious, but child-rights organizations do support them because the problem we're facing right now is the reality that the judiciary just doesn't get it," said Mark Hecht, of the advocacy group Beyond Borders. "A big issue is there is a lack of consistency across our country in a big way."

Mr. Kennedy, a former NHL player who was assaulted as a teenager by his former coach, Graham James, lauded the bill as a sign that society is finally recognizing "the damage that sex abuse has on young people."

The proposed legislation, which would impose a minimum one-year term for sex assault, would not have made a difference for Mr. James, who was sentenced to 3.5 years for assaulting Mr. Kennedy and another unnamed player about 350 times over 10 years. Mr. James turned himself in late last month to face other sex-assault charges.



Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/Tories+seek+automatic+jail+child+offenders/3780374/story.html#ixzz14f6iIyMf
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Why only Craigslist? Battle against exploitation needs to go further

Friday, November 05, 2010

Craigslist erotic services ads are disgusting. Just a click away from ads for bikes and baby clothes, there are ads with images similar to those found in magazines that stores are forced to keep behind the counter or under wraps.

Other than a warning that anyone under 18 should hit the "back" button on their browser, there's no barrier to children.

Craigslist is used by human traffickers, pedophiles and predators to exploit children, all of which is abhorrent. We know that because police have used Craigslist as a tool to find them.

With that out of the way, let me try to explain why Justice Minister Rob Nicholson's request that Craigslist withdraw the ads in Canada is well-intentioned, but widely misses the goal.

It does send a signal that the government, backed by five provinces and a broad coalition of non-governmental groups, is serious about wanting to end human trafficking and the exploitation of children.

But it's a weak signal at best.

Google "erotic services" and 859,000 sites come up. Those 859,000 may not include the Google ads that come up alongside selling "booty calls" and "naughty women."

Craigslist is certainly a high-profile target, but why is it the only one? Even if Craigslist accedes, as it did recently in the United States, buyers and sellers will simply migrate to other sites or they'll use different applications that are less public and less traceable.

As for the 859,000 other sites, this isn't so much a warning to stop as it is a new business opportunity.

And why only target Internet advertising?

Asked about those other media, Nicholson said, "There are editors, I am sure, who take precautions to make sure they're not getting into the business of child exploitation or human trafficking and so on. ... It seems to me with Craigslist there's no regulation at all as to what goes on."

But if Canadians want to protect children from pimps, human traffickers and pedophiles (which I believe they do), why depend on goodwill and voluntary "precautions" rather than laws, regulations and enforcement?

By framing the problem as human trafficking and child exploitation, Nicholson and the Conservative government are also sidestepping the real problem.

That problem is the sex trade itself -- prostitution, pornography, "exotic dancing," escort services and specialty massage parlours.

Without a thriving and lucrative sex trade here, there is little point in traffickers moving children, women and men into Canada or within Canada.

Again, I want to emphasize that shutting down Craigslist isn't a bad thing. But it should not be the only thing.

Even Nicholson's linking of his request for an end to Craigslist's erotic services ads with his introduction Thursday of the Protecting Children from Sexual Predators Act doesn't go far enough.

The proposed legislation is good. It would make it illegal to provide sexually explicit material to a child as part of a grooming process before demanding sex and it would make it illegal to use telecommunications, including the Internet, to solicit sex with a child.

The mandatory penalties for pedophiles are also good.

But none of that addresses the demand for prostituted children or the demand for prostituted women and men.

The government shying away from dealing with prostitution is both surprising and disappointing, especially considering that Nicholson has already announced that it would appeal an Ontario lower court's ruling that would have the effect of legalizing prostitution.

Virtually every one of the individuals and groups in the anti-trafficking coalition, which encompasses religious communities, first nations groups, former prostitutes, transition house users and operators, has condemned that ruling and begged the government to consider what's known as the Nordic model.

The Nordic model refers to what began in Sweden and spread to other Scandinavian countries. There, they have outlawed the sex trade.

They have criminalized johns, pimps and those living off the avails of prostitution and done massive public education campaigns aimed at making them socially outcasts.

Sex trade workers are not penalized. Instead, they are given help to exit the trade, including ready access to detox facilities, food, housing, education and child care if needed.

So, yes, it's great that there will be one less place for buyers and sellers of sex to ply their awful trade if Craigslist bows to pressure.

It's great that the penalties will be tougher once pedophiles, child predators and child exploiters are caught and convicted.

But still, the total effect is a tiny bromide that does nothing to attack the real source of anguish, despair and exploitation.

dbramham@vancouversun.com



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Mom traps alleged predator: Daughter target of online luring

Saturday, October 30, 2010

The online chatting had already escalated to phone calls. He had asked the young girl for her address.

When a Windsor mom made the terrifying realization that a man was stalking her 12-year-old daughter over the Internet, she got scared. Then she got mad.

She said she went online posing as her daughter, lured in the alleged sex predator and gave police evidence to help take him down.

"He said he wanted her to sit on his shoulders naked, that he was going to kiss up and down her tummy, how it was going to hurt after they had sex," said the woman, who didn't want her name revealed to protect her daughter.

The man was among 11 people arrested in a southern Ontario child porn sweep this week headed by provincial police. Those charged include Daryl Argent, 25, and Shelly Shipling, 49, of Hamilton; Chris Ryan, 24, Bruce Kyle, 40, Thomas Lane, 39, and Gordon Knowles, 22, of St. Catharines; Peter Friedrich, 50, of Vittoria; Gary Bruce Demenint, 51, and Rui Brando, 44, of Brampton; Matthew Appelt, 21, of Mississauga, and a person under 18 from St. Catharines.

Some of the accused are charged with distributing child pornography. Others are charged with luring children to sexually exploit them.

Sgt. Brett Corey with Windsor police said the case should reinforce the importance of knowing what your kids are doing online.

Put the computer in a common area of your house, he said, so you can keep an eye on them.

"There are thousands of predators out there," said Corey.

"They're anonymous. The Internet is so widely used and it's not a face to face encounter. You don't know who is sitting behind the computer at the other end. It's just extremely important to monitor your kids activity on the Internet, especially when they're involved in chat rooms and talking to other people. Don't assume that these kids are mature enough to engage in chat rooms or websites where they could be subject to being lured."

The Windsor mother said she learned that lesson the hard way.

"I've always been aware of these issues," said the woman.

"People think it's not going to happen to them. When it did, I don't even have words for it."

She came home one night to find her daughter on the computer.

"She tried to exit out of whatever she was in really quick," the mother said. "It threw up red flags right away."

She started doing some digging and learned her daughter had been on a site called vampirefreaks.com.

"I was up until four o'clock in the morning going over this site, going through her in-boxes, her comments, the people that are on her friends list," she said. "I was going through their profiles to see who they were and what they were about."

She was friends with four girls and five guys.

"The one that really stuck out was the guy that said 'it's OK that you're 12.'"

She said she was terrified to learn the man asked for her daughter's address.

"To me that says he was willing to make the drive to come and see her."

He also had hundreds of other friends.

"All little girls in their training bras and underwear."

She said she learned later that just minutes before she walked through the door that night, her daughter had been talking on the phone with the man. She called police.

"The officer told me it was basically a shot in the dark to try and find the guy," she said. "It was very hard to find people with these crimes and the Internet."

Police started investigating. So did the angry mother.

She went online and chatted with him, posing as her own daughter.

"It was basically a lot of small talk," she said. "He also asked 'would you like to know what me and this boy did?'"

She pressed the man for information about the boy, but he never actually told her anything.

"Which drives me nuts," she said. "I wonder if the police found anything out about that."

They continued chatting for a while.

"Then I said my mom is going out at 10, so call me then. That's when he said that he was going to go on to webcam for it."

Later that night, the phone rang. The woman let her daughter answer the phone. She could see the man on the web camera.

"Within seconds of hearing her voice on the phone, he dropped his pants and started masturbating."

She recorded him and gave the video to police along with the man's phone number.

The thought of what her daughter was exposed to, and what could have happened, still keeps her up at night.

"It was just very overwhelming," said the woman, who also has a two-year-old daughter.

"I was concerned for both my children and myself. This guy could have come and done something to any of us."

twilhelm@windsorstar.com or 519-255-6850



Read more: http://www.windsorstar.com/news/traps+alleged+predator/3752048/story.html?id=3752048#ixzz14ez1kMLT
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