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Police lack resources for paedophile hunts

By Wendy McAuliffe
Thu, 15 Feb 2001 10:02:43 GMT  
URL: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/2001/6/ns-20981.html


Operation Cathedral has successfully trapped paedophiles across the globe
but it may not happen again

British paedophile units admit they do not have the resources and
expertise to pull off further investigations like Operation Cathedral.

Operation Cathedral was the largest ever international porn raid and
followed months of surveillance of the notorious Wonderland Club. On 2
September 1998 an international police operation involving 12 countries
successfully seized nearly a million child porn images as well as 1,800
"computerised videos" depicting children suffering sexual abuse.

Seven British men were jailed
(http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/2001/6/ns-20942.html) Tuesday for their
participation in the Wonderland Club, but child protection units around
the country admit the task of policing the Internet far exceeds the
resources available to them.

"Britain has been slow to react to Internet paedophilia, and we need the
government to approve resources so that we can deal with the problem and
make the Internet a safer place for children," said inspector Terry Jones
from the Obscene Publications Unit at Greater Manchester Police.

Judge Kenneth Macrae -- who sentenced the Wonderland defendants --
praised the police operation. "In my view, detective superintendent
Stewardson and detective chief inspector Wood are to be commended for the
diligence and care with which they've performed their duties," he said.

Proactive investigations such as Operation Cathedral however are a rarity
in Britain. "There is no unit in the country capable of doing what the
National Crime Squad (NCS) did two years ago," said an NCS spokesperson.
She explained that NCS took responsibility for the operation because of
its ability to pull together international teams. "Resources were not an
issue," she added.

Peter Sommer, research fellow at the London School of Economics acted as
an expert defence witness at the Operation Cathedral trial in January,
but argues limited police resources force child protection units to focus
on finding abused children rather than Internet paedophiles. "The people
who collect images [and entice] online are part of the picture but less
important -- that's secondary abuse," said Sommer.

In Manchester, 70 percent of the Obscene Publications Unit's work is
based on reactive investigations surfacing through child abuse cases.
"The problem with proactively policing the Internet is a resource issue
-- child protection units don't have time to surf the Internet for
paedophiles," argues Jim Reynolds, former head of the paedophile unit at
New Scotland Yard. "Everyone's keen for more to be done until [it comes
to the] money be[ing] spent, as it all comes out of the tax-payers
money," asserted Sommer.

The Patrick Green enquiry last October dramatically revealed the lack of
Internet expertise amongst the British police force. Green was released
six hours after his arrest on grounds of insufficient evidence, despite
63 emails from Green to the 12-year-old girl being found on the victim's
computer. Officers confiscated Green's hard drive from his home, but the
girl's father was told that it would take six weeks for the seized
equipment to be analysed. "I have been staggered at how ill-equipped the
law and police are to deal with these crimes. Technology has outpaced the
law," the father told The Mirror.




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