Tag Archive: Child sexual abuse


 

Alex Wong / Getty Images of North America

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton speaks as John Ryan, CEO of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, left, listens during a news conference in Washington on Thursday.

By Andrew Mach, NBC News

In just over a month, more than 120 sexually exploited children — one just 19 days old — were identified in an international operation that found them depicted in child pornography on the Internet, U.S. officials said Thursday.

In Operation Sunflower, led by agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigation unit from Nov. 1 to Dec. 7, 123 victims of child sexual exploitation were identified, ICE Director John Morton said at a press conference in Washington.

Of that group, 44 children had been living with their abusers, and 79 children were exploited by people outside of their home or were victimized as children and are now adults. Seventy female and 53 male victims rescued; 110 of the victims were identified in 19 U.S. states and the rest were identified in six foreign countries.

“Results [of the operation] were significant but grim, a sad reminder to us all that child online exploitation is a real part of our lives and absolutely demands our full attention,” Morton said. “The rescues highlight the depth and global nature of this problem.”

In the investigation, HSI and partner law enforcement agencies arrested 245 people. Among them were a first-grade teacher from Chula Vista, Calif., and an airline pilot, NBCSanDiego.com reported.

 

Read Full Article Here

About these ads

Signs Of The Times

Depravity  -  Rape  -  Child Sexual Abuse

Penn State’s Sandusky gets 30-60 years prison for child abuse

Jerry Sandusky Sentenced to 30-60 Years for Penn State child sex abuse

Ian Simpson and Dave Warner Reuters

BELLEFONTE, Pennsylvania (Reuters) – Former Pennsylvania State University football coach Jerry Sandusky was ordered to spend at least 30 years in prison on Tuesday for sexually abusing at-risk boys for more than a decade, a sentence likely to keep him behind bars until he dies.

Defiantly maintaining his innocence, the 68-year-old retired defensive coordinator listened as several victims recounted their pain to the packed courtroom. Then, he told the court: “I did not do these alleged disgusting acts.”

Sandusky stood motionless in a red prison jumpsuit, his back to the audience and his wife, Dottie, while Judge John Cleland handed down the 30- to 60-year sentence for crimes that stunned the public, a major university and the world of college sports.

The one-time coach, who has been in solitary confinement, will be at least 98 years old before he is eligible for parole. He will be transferred to the Camp Hill State Correctional Institution for evaluation to determine which of the 25 state prisons will house him.

Because his conviction as a child molester makes him a target, he will likely be placed in isolation or protective custody. He will hold a job that pays 19 to 52 cents an hour, probably as a clerical worker, and be allowed five visits a month. Pennsylvania does not offer conjugal prison visits.

The sentence of 30 to 60 years “has the unmitigated impact of saying ‘the rest of your life in prison,’” the judge said.

Sandusky was convicted in June on 45 counts of child sex abuse for molesting 10 boys over 15 years, some in the football team’s showers on campus.

His victims accused him of fondling and oral and anal abuse. One recalled screaming in vain for help in the basement of Sandusky’s home. Most experts said the sentence was fair.

“Your crime is not only what you did to their bodies, but your assault on their psyche and their souls,” Cleland told Sandusky at the hearing in Centre County Court. “The tragedy of this story is it is a story of betrayal. Some of your victims had a genuine affection for you.

“It is precisely that ability to conceal those vices from yourself and everyone else that in my view makes you dangerous,” he said.

The scandal shined a light on the devastating issue of child sexual abuse and raised pointed questions about the motivation of people who knew about Sandusky’s behavior but failed for years to report a top coach vital to building Penn State’s successful and lucrative football program.

Addressing the court, Sandusky said: “Others can take my life. They can make me out to be a monster.

“I tried to bring joy, I tried to make people laugh,” he said of his work at The Second Mile charity he founded to help at-risk youth and where he was accused of recruiting victims.

Breaking into sobs as he talked about his family, he said: “We will continue to fight. There is much to fight.”

CHILDHOOD LOST

Several men who testified at trial about their abuse returned to speak at the sentencing.

“I will never erase the images of his naked body on mine,” said one. “He took away my childhood the day he assaulted me.”

As they spoke, Sandusky sat back in his chair and stared at them, as he did at trial. His wife chewed gum as she watched.

Afterward, defense attorney Joseph Amendola said Dottie Sandusky was “devastated” by the sentence.

Mystery Sandusky shower victim revealedCredit: Getty Images

BELLEFONTE, PA – JUNE 11: Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky arrives to the Centre County Courthouse before the first day of his child sex abuse trial begins on June 11, 2012, in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. Sandusky is charged with 52 criminal counts of alleged sexual abuse of children. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

 

He was the victim whose horrific assault in the football team showers wound up costing Joe Paterno his job, severely tarnished Penn State’s image, and brought accusations of a cover-up by high-level university officials.

Law enforcement officials dubbed him Victim 2.

Until Thursday, the boy was a phantom, absent from last month’s trial of retired defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky and thought to be unknown to prosecutors. His identity was one of the biggest mysteries of the child sex abuse scandal.

Now, for the first time, a man has stepped forward to claim he was the boy in the shower, and his attorneys have promised to sue the university.

“Our client has to live the rest of his life not only dealing with the effects of Sandusky’s childhood sexual abuse, but also with the knowledge that many powerful adults, including those at the highest levels of Penn State, put their own interests and the interests of a child predator above their legal obligations to protect him,” the lawyers said in a news release.

Along with the statement, the lawyers released voicemails that Sandusky purportedly left for the man last fall — less than two months before his arrest on child-molestation charges — in which he expressed his love, said he wanted to share his feelings “up front,” and asked whether Victim 2 would like to attend Penn State’s next game.

The man’s lawyers said Thursday they have done an extensive investigation and gathered “overwhelming evidence” on details of the abuse by Sandusky, who was convicted of using his position at Penn State and as head of a youth charity to molest 10 boys over a period of 15 years.

They did not name their client, and The Associated Press generally does not identify victims of sex crimes without their consent.

Jurors convicted Sandusky last month of offenses related to Victim 2 largely on the testimony of Mike McQueary, who was a team graduate assistant at the time and described seeing the 2001 assault.

McQueary testified at Sandusky’s trial that he heard a “skin-on-skin smacking sound” in a campus locker room and saw something that was “more than my brain could handle” — a naked Sandusky standing behind the boy and slowly moving his hips. McQueary, one of the prosecution’s star witnesses, said he had no doubt he was witnessing anal sex.

McQueary reported the abuse to school officials, including Paterno, but none of them told police. An investigative report commissioned by the school’s board of trustees found that Paterno and other administrators concealed the attack because they were afraid of bad publicity.

 The Judge Did Not Explain exceeding light sentence for Jewish Pedophile

Jewish Pedophile Tells Victim “I Love You” In Open Court, Shows No Remorse, Gets Slap On Wrist From Judge for 48 felony counts of child sexual abuse

Justice Martin Murphy issues a baffling sentence that calls his competency as a member of the judiciary into question.

Shmarya Rosenberg

Admitted child rapist Andrew Goodman reportedly declared his love for one of his child victims, a now-17-year-old boy he molested and raped beginning when the boy was 13-years-old.
Just feet from his victim in open court, Goodman called the boy his “best friend in the whole world.”
“Every second of every day, all that I think about is [the boy’s name],” Goodman said. Then, turning to look directly at the boy, Goodman said, “I love you,” reportedly drawing gasps in the courtroom, the New York Post reported.
Despite this complete lack of remorse and Goodman’s clear belief that he did nothing wrong, Justice Martin Murphy held to Goodman’s sweetheart plea deal and sentenced him to only two years in prison – which with time already served could see Goodman released in September.
The boy pleaded with the Murphy to revoke the deal and send Goodman to prison for a long time, calling Goodman “the devil disguised as a human.”
Goodman took a two-year deal from Murphy last month after pleading guilty to 48 felony counts of child sexual abuse. “Even more than Jerry Sandusky,” the victim said, referring to the Penn State assistant football coach who could spend the rest of his life in prison after being convicted of 45 counts of felony child sexual abuse there.
“I have no doubt he will try to do the same thing to other other children once he gets out,” the victim reportedly said of Goodman.
Goodman’s victim dropped out of school after suffering through “a torturous four years” of sexual abuse. Goodman allegedly sexually abused the boy’s brother, as well.
“The best thing for you and society is if you’re locked in a cage away from society – especially children,” the victim reportedly said.
“Please, use your position to protect our children,” the victim’s mother asked the judge.
But Murphy did not use his power to do that. Instead, he stuck with the two-year deal he offered Goodman – meaning Goodman could be out of prison in time for Sukkot.
“Mr. Goodman, you caused a lot of pain to all the complainants. Your statement that you made today was ill-advised, to say the least,” Murphy said as he sentenced Goodman.
Prosecutors wanted Goodman sentenced to 7 years for each of the 48 felony counts – 336 years in all.
Goodman began grooming the victim when he was ten, giving him Rollerblades, a Playstation and taking him out to eat in restaurants.
“He began telling me he loved me. He slowly built up my trust and then began to alienate me from my family. Eventually, I began to trust him more than my own parents,” the victim said.
“Andrew Goodman, you are the devil disguised as a human,” the victim said. “I trusted you with my life and you betrayed that trust. You are the worst thing that ever happened to me. A person that really loves me wouldn’t take advantage of an innocent young child.”
Justice Martin Murphy did not explain his exceeding light sentence or his refusal to listen to the pleas of the victim and his mother.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 829 other followers