Law enforcement steps up efforts to fight online child exploitation
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[October 05, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – State Attorney General Kwame
Raoul joined local and federal prosecutors Monday to announce new
efforts to combat a rise in online child exploitation in Illinois.
The efforts include greater outreach and education for parents and
teachers, and a new mobile computer forensics unit that will be deployed
throughout the state, he said.
“The pandemic has wreaked havoc on all of our lives, shuttering schools
and businesses and isolating us and our children,” Raoul said at a news
conference outside his office in Springfield. “Children have been
affected in unprecedented ways. During this time in particular of
separation from their peers, they've turned to technology for schooling,
for connecting with old and new friends and alleviating the boredom and
the social isolation this crisis has forced upon them. And child
predators are there to try to take advantage of this.”
The efforts are being coordinated through the state’s Internet Crimes
Against Children Task Force, a federally funded project within the
attorney general’s office that includes state, federal and local law
enforcement agencies.
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It receives tips from the National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children, investigates child sexual exploitation crimes, trains law
enforcement agencies, and provides online safety education to children
and adults. The task force operates in all Illinois counties except Cook
County, which has its own task force.
In 2018, Raoul said, the attorney general’s office managed over 3,300
cyber tips. That increased to 4,300 in 2019 and to 5,100 in 2020. This
year, that number is expected to grow 23 percent, in part due to
increased reporting and awareness by social media and apps.
“The threat is out there, and with our children's increase in use of the
internet for education, entertainment and social interaction, it is
growing,” he said. “Police and prosecutors alone cannot stem the tide of
rising sexual images of children on the internet. We all have a role to
play.”
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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announces
stepped up efforts to combat online child exploitation Monday
outside his office in Springfield. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Peter Hancock)
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Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said the
ICAC Task Force has dramatically increased the state’s ability to
arrest and prosecute those who prey on children online.
In 2018, the year before the task force began, ISP investigated only
nine leads of internet crimes against children and made one arrest.
In the first year of the initiative, that increased to 71 leads and
19 arrests, and in 2020, the agency pursued 99 leads and made 24
arrests.
“These are brutally difficult images to investigate,” Kelly said.
“The psychological and mental toll on these special agents and
criminal investigators cannot be overestimated. It's an incredibly
challenging burden to have to review hundreds upon hundreds of these
deeply disturbing acts, and certainly weighs heavily on their soul.
But to stop these crimes, someone has to do it.”
To help educate adults about how to identify cyber threats to their
children, Raoul said the task force will teach about the apps
children and teens might be using, how to help youth navigate
aggressive online behavior, and how to identify signs that a child
or student might have been the victim of online child solicitation.
The series will begin Oct. 7, and webinars will take place at 6:30
p.m. on the first Thursday of each month. People interested in
participating can email karilyn.orr@ilag.gov to register.
To report suspected online child sexual exploitation, please contact
local law enforcement or the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children CyberTipline at 1-800-843-5678.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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