
New book untangles web of Internet child porn
Watch
the interview at CTV's website
Updated Fri. Apr. 20 2007 11:51 AM ET
Angela Mulholland, CTV.ca News Staff
"What do you imagine child pornography to be?"
So asked Det. Sgt. Paul Gillespie of a group of Microsoft executives
back in 2003, as he sought their help in gaining a hold on the
crime on the Internet.
Julian Sher, author of 'One Child at a Time,' speaks with Canada
AM on Friday, April 20, 2007.
Most of us would not want to answer that question; most of us
have never wanted to picture child porn.
But if we had to answer, we would likely imagine creepy guys hunched
over computers in their basements, staring at pictures of undressed
girls.
As Julian Sher found while researching his new book "One
Child at a Time: The Global Fight to Rescue Children from Online
Predators," today's child porn is so much more than that.
Sher calls the trade in child porn the new face of crime in the
21st century.
"It's a crime that lives and breathes on the Internet, in
the wires in your computer," Sher told Canada AM.
"It's an illegal product that's actually sent through the
Internet. I mean, you can't send drugs through the Internet. You
can't send guns through the Internet but you can send these horrific
pictures of these children."
The author found child porn's most frightening and sometimes most
unremorseful perpetrators are often well-to-do, educated, sometimes
married men.
"What was so fascinating was that these criminals are us,"
Sher told CTV.ca in a phone interview from his Montreal home.
"I've done stories on bikers and other type of criminals,
but what makes these criminals so scary is that they are among
us."
And the pictures these criminals are trading are no longer just
of pre-pubescent girls. A disturbingly sizable portion now involves
toddlers, even babies.
"About 19 per cent of these victims are under three years
old. So think about that. These are infants being abused and tortured.
It has nothing to do with sex or eroticism, by any stretch. It's
not even pornography; it's child exploitation."
Many of those trading these images are highly tech-savvy, trading
thousands of picture files across encrypted connections, covering
their tracks as they go and staying one step ahead of authorities.
That was precisely the problem that Gillespie ran into as head
of the Toronto child exploitation unit. No matter how much he
learned about how those who trade in child porn use technology
to hide their crime, he couldn't keep up. He was, after all, a
cop, not a computer programmer and he was growing frustrated with
how little headway he was making.
So in a moment of frustration, he decided to write an angry letter
to the man in charge of the biggest computer company in the world.
"You created this mess," his email to Bill Gates essentially
read, "You find a way to clean it up."
Gillespie never expected a response, but in fact, Gates did read
that email, and did decide to take action. He asked to meet with
Gillespie and not long after, the pair helped create CETS, the
Child Exploitation Tracking System, a database system that would
allow multiple law enforcement agencies to streamline their efforts
by cross-referencing data about known child pornographers.
Sher was able to meet Gillespie just as he was getting CETS off
the ground. Gillespie agreed to let the award-winning investigative
journalist into his world and learn about what would soon became
an international collaborative effort to stamp out child exploitation.
"I had the real privilege of working with the Toronto squad
and the UK squad, CEOP (Child Exploitation and Online Protection
Centre). I followed undercover FBI agents as they tracked predators,"
Sher says.
The author shows how police are finally making headway at stamping
out these crimes by working together to follow the money trails
and seize the offshore bank accounts of porn merchants.
They are also turning the technology of the Internet against the
perpetrators to piece together clues within the disturbing images
they seize to identify and rescue the victims.
The book also includes a full list of resources for concerned
parents so they can learn how to prevent their own children from
being lured by predators.
Sher's book is fascinating as a guide to what law enforcement
agencies are doing to nab online predators. But it is also an
exploration of the crime of child pornography and of pedophiles
themselves.
The author examines what little real research exists in this still
uncharted area of psychology and seeks to understand the mind
of the child pornographer "to explore who they are and how
they got the way they are."
"One of the most fascinating discussions I had was with a
convicted pedophile," Sher says, referring to a relationship
he struck with a convicted sex abuser from Edmonton whom he calls
"Mark."
Mark agreed to talk to Sher about his pedophilia. He revealed
that he knew he was sexually attracted to children from a very
early age, from about puberty. Mark began exploring his interest
by hanging around swimming pools as a teenager before being arrested
at 18 for assaulting his four-year-old niece.
"Mark was very forthcoming," Sher remembers. "He
said, 'I knew what I felt was wrong and I tried to stay straight.'"
Mark did stay straight until the day he discovered the Internet.
That's when everything changed for him. While he concedes the
Internet didn't make him later commit the crimes he did, it exposed
him to an entire community of people who had fantasies just like
his.
Mark is currently serving a 14-year sentence for abusing two of
his step-children and two of their friends. While Mark feels shame,
Sher's book introduces us to several other child pornographers
who truly believe that they are doing nothing wrong, that they
have a right to explore this side of their sexuality and that
it is society that has it all wrong.
Sher describes the terrible crimes of a man he calls Burt Thomas
Stevenson, who not only repeatedly assaulted his own daughter
and sold pictures of that abuse on the Internet, he also abused
his four-month-old niece and instructed a fellow pedophile about
how to think of his victims as "pieces of meat."
It's harrowing stuff and stuff that Sher admits he knew little
about before writing this book.
In the book's acknowledgements, Sher notes that he has written
five books on topics such as organized crime, the Hells Angels
and the Ku Klux Klan.
"This was by far the most difficult subject I have ever had
to confront."
[Originally posted at: http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070419/Sher_book_070419/20070420?hub=CanadaAM]
Watch
the interview at CTV's website