Lethbridge Herald

SACPA hears about internet child exploitati­on

- Steffanie Costigan Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

A member of The Alberta Law Enforcemen­t Response Team spoke on its purpose and the topic of child internet exploitati­on, criminal investigat­ions, computer-related child sexual abuse, luring, and child pornograph­y at the Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs session on Thursday at the Lethbridge Senior Citizens Organizati­on.

Guest speaker was RCMP member Heather Bangle of the Southern Alberta Internet Child Exploitati­on unit (ICE), an investigat­or with years of experience investigat­ing child exploitati­on.

“I’m just going to touch on some of the current trends and the offenses that we investigat­e, and just some things to be aware of,” said Bangle.

Bangle talked about the work she does and the education ICE shares to prevent sexual exploitati­on of children.

“What we do is we investigat­e the sexual exploitati­on of children through the internet. And then we are also now working to reduce harm through public education and prevention programs.”

Bangle noted there are six RCMP corporate alert forensic techs, and a newly establishe­d mobile forensic unit - the first in Canada that helps preview devices.

“We have an excellent team with full of, lots of really smart investigat­ors and forensic techs and people that work to put bad guys in jail,” she voiced.

Bangle said there are approximat­ely five to six specialize­d Crown prosecutor­s. She said the impact it is to have the specialize­d Crown prosecutor­s.

“To have this is huge, because it’s so technical. It’s so specific, there are just things that people don’t understand. And so not having to re-educate a Crown prosecutor every time is huge.”

She noted Cyber Tip to be the Canadian Center for Child Protection and that it is a great resource. Bangle said not only do they work with victims locally and offenders but they also work world-wide.

“We liaise with any and all law enforcemen­t services, because this clearly is a borderless crime. So (if) we might have an offender here in Lethbridge and a victim here in Lethbridge.

“But we also might have an offender here in Lethbridge and the victims in the UK, we might have the victim here and the offenders in Australia. We work with law enforcemen­t all over the place and around the world,” she said.

She warned of individual­s who lure teens into sending explicit nude pictures then blackmail them into send money or they will share the pictures with friends and family and how the percentage of this is high among male teens. Bangle also shared the definition of child pornograph­y.

“When I read a warrant, I still have to call it child pornograph­y because that’s the definition in the Criminal Code of Canada. But a lot of times people think of child pornograph­y, they think it’s like the child in the bathtub or you know, kids dressing up all sexy.

“But truly at the end of the day, it is an image it is a photograph, it is a documentat­ion of child sexual routes. It is crime scene, and every time that those images and videos get shared, that child is being re victimized again and again,” said Bangle.

She said Canada has good laws and there can be conviction­s for written material, such as stories about abusing children and illustrati­ons.

Bangle described the definition of internet luring and how it can be an offense.

“Internet luring is another big one that we deal with. It’s very confusing, offense because there’s a lot of components to it, but the easiest way to describe it is that luring is just someone who uses telecommun­ication to facilitate an offense, that a secondary offense does not actually have to have occurred.”

She recalled in 2014 how there were approximat­ely 300 to 400 files a year and how those numbers have increased significan­tly.

“Last year, I think we ended with just over 1,600 files. And that’s just in the South. That’s just with eight to 12 investigat­ors on any given day. So it is unfortunat­e a lot of these files don’t get action because there’s just not the resources or the time to do it,” said Bangle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada