Child Exploitation
Most people have no idea how large the problem truly is.
$3 Billion in Annual Sales
The $3 billion global industry is concentrated in the U.S. and operates through
temporary Web sites and online credit card payments.
LOS ANGELES (WOMENSENEWS)--It can look like any other e-mail, with an
invitation to click on a Web site, often with a nonsensical name.
This week there's been one going around with the subject line: "eb1 LS- L 0 LITA
NOW is out !!! with 4 in1 RTF."
For a day or two, the link inside this e-mail, touting something like "little Lolitas"
or "young cuties," will direct your browser to a Web page with more than 15 ads
for sites that have shocking photos of naked young girls. But two days later the
link will probably go dead.
That's how child-porn sites work. They're up for a short period, but then move off
to new domain names and Web addresses to evade detection from authorities.
The unsuspecting recipient can click open explicit images depicting acts of oral
sex, anal sex, vaginal penetration, bondage, rape or torture.
"The ease and anonymity of using home computers has revolutionized
accessibility as well as the production and distribution of child pornography,"
says Ernie Allen. "The fact that child pornography can be purchased using a
credit card is causing a global problem and an immeasurable impact on the sexual
exploitation of children."
Allen is CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children,
Alexandria, Va., which operates a tip line to report child porn by telephone or
e-mail. In 2001 the group received 21,603 tips about child porn Web sites. Three
years later, that figure zoomed to 106,176.
While the number of child-porn Web sites operating at any one time is a moving
target, Allen figures there are at least 100,000 sites currently up and running,
based on the number of reports the tip line brings in.
"Almost half of the cases we have caught are children that are being victimized
by their parents, often for revenue," says Allen. "Parents sexually abuse their
children and put it up on the Web and sell the pictures." Allen also says that here
in the United States older children, young teens for example, have been
persuaded by relatives and adults they know to pose for porn for money.
$3 Billion in Annual Sales
Allen says that global sales of illegal pornography that exploits
children--including those under 4 years old--are about $3 billion a year.
He says many of those sales are inside the United States and the bulk is being
spent on pictures of pre-pubescent U.S. girls sold mainly to U.S. consumers.
Joan Irvine is executive director of the Los Angeles-based Association of Sites
Advocating Child Protection, the adult-porn industry's watch dog on child porn.
Since the discovery of a child-porn image on an adult porn site can shut down a
very lucrative business, adult pornographers--who operate legally on the
Web--are trying to help police it through Irvine's organization. "Protecting your
business by protecting children," is the motto of the group, which has received
150,000 reports of child porn over the past two years.
"The bulk of the porn that is reported to us involves young girls ranging in ages
from 8 to 12," says Irvine. "While there is a growing number of child porn sites
featuring boys, the preponderance of child porn is of prepubescent young girls.
Some of it is hard core and I've been horrified to see pictures of girls as young as
2 or 3."
Irvine says that most of the people who report to her organization have been
viewing adult pornography and come upon child porn on adult sites. "The general
public and adult-site Webmasters feel more comfortable reporting sites to the
Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection than to governmental agencies,"
she says. "They often don't want the government to know that they have been
viewing porn."
When Irvine's group receives a tip it reviews the questionable material and
investigates the sites, trying to find where it is hosted. It then reports the sites to
the local FBI or the Department of Justice as well as the hosting company.
Federal Crime in U.S.
Child pornography is defined as the visual image of infants, toddlers and children
under age 18 in sexual poses or in explicit sexual activity. The possession or
distribution of such material is a federal crime in the United States, punishable by
prison sentences.
Online child porn is nonetheless proliferating, with about 20 percent of all
Internet pornography involving children, according to the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children.
In 2001, arrests in the United States for possession of child porn showed a lot of
material involving very young children, according to Allen's organization.
Thirty-nine percent of arrests involved material that featured children between 3
and 5; 19 percent involved children under 3.
Allen says that "porn addiction" has been growing and that this has led to a
growing demand for "new or more out-there" material. "Lately we've seen a more
non-traditional pedophile," he says. "These are people looking at porn who are
always looking for something more extreme."
Allen says that in 1999 his organization, in conjunction with the Dallas police,
located a Web site hosted in Texas run by a husband and wife out of their home.
The couple had a roster of 70,000 customers each paying $29.95 a month for child
porn deducted directly through their credit cards. They were making more than $2
million a year.
Purchases Hard to Track Down
"The biggest challenges prosecuting child porn on the Internet is that there are
no distinct boundaries, unlike the physical world where crime happens and there
is a clear victim and offender," says Paul Bresson, a spokesperson for the U.S.
Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. "A lot of the porn bounces off
international servers and it's difficult to find where it is coming from."
Other countries that have large trades in child porn include Russia and the
Philippines, says Parry Aftab, a lawyer who runs WiredSafety, a Web-based safety
and education network with 9,000 volunteers who patrol the Internet looking for
child pornography, child molesters and cyberstalkers. The group also runs a tip
line for child porn that relays the information to the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children.
Bresson says that in the United States, the most successful investigations have
involved pedophiles who initiate contact with juveniles in chat rooms and
e-groups and then travel across state lines to meetings where they were caught.
Once authorities locate the pedophile they can seize their hard drives and obtain
the child porn as evidence.
Irvine says that more than 60 percent of the sites reported to her group are
hosted by three internet service providers including Yahoo, the Sunnyvale, Calif.,
company that had revenues of $4.83 billion last year. She says that investigations
commonly lead to bogus companies on sites set up under false names.
Yahoo is aware that people do host child porn on its servers and asks users to
report any sightings.
Mary Osako, a Yahoo spokesperson, says Yahoo investigates each report of child
porn made to them, and if they deem the content against the terms of service
they remove it and deactivate the user's account.
"We also work with law enforcement to apprehend the individuals if we can,"
Osako says.
Sandy Kobrin is a writer based in Los Angeles.