File:Day 293 - West Midlands Police - Child Online Safeguarding Team (8102352763).jpg

原始文件 (1,024 × 619像素,文件大小:230 KB,MIME类型:image/jpeg


摘要

描述

This image shows Detective Inspector Kay Wallace surrounded by computers, mobile phones and digital storage devices seized from the homes of suspected paedophiles.

Kay heads up West Midlands Police’s COST (Child Online Safeguarding Team) – a specialist division dedicated to protecting children from online predators.

Last year the unit – which uses advanced IT techniques to track internet activity and gather ‘e-forensics’ evidence against suspects – made around 60 arrests in the West Midlands.

Targets are monitored online to build up a picture of their offending; many are found to be exchanging indecent images of youngsters on file-sharing sites or sinister forums hidden in the web’s murky depths.

And such is the painstaking research and expertise of this proactive unit, 95 per cent of all the people arrested in the last 12 months – often during dawn raids – were ultimately charged with child abuse offences.

Det Insp Kay Wallace said: “Offenders are getting more and more sophisticated in the way they exchange paedophilic images and develop child abuse websites.

“They will hijack existing, innocent websites and secrete images and chat facilities in hidden areas that people are highly unlikely to stumble across – then they’ll share the complex URL link with other paedophiles. We uncovered a recent example of this where a West Midlands sports club website was hacked into.

“And when sending email links to indecent images offenders will route them via servers dotted around the world in an attempt to blur the identity of both sender and recipient.

“Offenders are sometimes very tech savvy – but we have IT experts within the team who are capable of following their online tracks and exposing their activity. We’re making notable arrests on a daily basis and as a result helping prevent youngsters from becoming victims.”

The team features both investigators and intelligence officers…the latter being ‘e-forensics’ experts who proactively interrogate suspicious internet activity and hunt down paedophiles.

DI Wallace, added: “In traditional policing, forensics is all about fingerprints and DNA which help us pin-point offenders – e-forensics is the online equivalent. Offenders leave traces of their presence as they surf the net; our intelligence experts can pick up these electronic clues and lead us to the perpetrators.

“These trails see our investigations go around the world and just recently we’ve been in touch with counterparts in Canada and Iceland because emails linking to indecent images have gone via servers based there.

“The web has broken down barriers for paedophiles as they can now associate with likeminded individuals anywhere in the world at the click of a mouse. But it’s also helped us as their web footprints usually point us in the direction of other offenders and even to dismantling paedophile rings.”

West Midlands Police’s COST team is acknowledged as being one of the UK’s foremost specialist teams: many of the techniques developed to track offenders have been adopted by other forces and they recently picked up an FBI award!

And the investigative arm of the unit has also scored some impressive results in recent years.

DI Wallace added: “Part of our work involves analysing indecent images to see if they contain clues about the offender. In one case we managed to link part of a road-sign visible on a photo to a Welsh village, where a suspect was discovered, and in another an image was enhanced to reveal a code on a bottle of beer.

“That was linked to a brewery in the US, locations where it was distributed and the subsequent tracking of a child abuse suspect.”

Online grooming of youngsters via chat rooms and webcams is an area COST team officers are encountering more and more.

And DI Wallace urged parents to play an intrusive role in their children’s online activity to make sure they don’t come to any harm whilst surfing the net.

She added: “You need to be absolutely certain who you’re talking to online – your son or daughter may believe they’re chatting with another teenager but, in reality, it could be someone much older with sinister intentions.

“Parents shouldn’t feel awkward asking their children what they’re up to online and who they’re conversing with on social media. Perhaps have an agreement that they only use the internet in an overt manner, in the living room, rather than squirreled away in their bedrooms.

“And ask whether your child really needs a webcam in their bedroom? If a child is persuaded to expose themselves in front of a camera then they’ve lost control of that image or video and it could be floating around online forever.”

The national Child Exploitation & Online Protection (CEOP) team has developed a website – Think You Know – which provides useful web safety advice and a guide on how to report worries or concerns about people you’re chatting to online.
日期
来源

Day 293 - West Midlands Police - Child Online Safeguarding Team

作者 West Midlands Police from West Midlands, United Kingdom

许可协议

w:zh:知识共享
署名 相同方式共享
本文件采用知识共享署名-相同方式共享 2.0 通用许可协议授权。
您可以自由地:
  • 共享 – 复制、发行并传播本作品
  • 修改 – 改编作品
惟须遵守下列条件:
  • 署名 – 您必须对作品进行署名,提供授权条款的链接,并说明是否对原始内容进行了更改。您可以用任何合理的方式来署名,但不得以任何方式表明许可人认可您或您的使用。
  • 相同方式共享 – 如果您再混合、转换或者基于本作品进行创作,您必须以与原先许可协议相同或相兼容的许可协议分发您贡献的作品。
This image, originally posted to Flickr, was reviewed on 26 August 2013 by the administrator or reviewer File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske), who confirmed that it was available on Flickr under the stated license on that date.

说明

添加一行文字以描述该文件所表现的内容

此文件中描述的项目

描绘内容

image/jpeg

校验和 简体中文(已转写)

55a10ee62b3768302603912eaa6885ad396c2ee8

断定方法:​SHA-1 简体中文(已转写)

数据大小 简体中文(已转写)

235,467 字节

619 像素

1,024 像素

文件历史

点击某个日期/时间查看对应时刻的文件。

日期/时间缩⁠略⁠图大小用户备注
当前2013年8月26日 (一) 12:262013年8月26日 (一) 12:26版本的缩略图1,024 × 619(230 KB)File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske)Transferred from Flickr by User:palnatoke

以下页面使用本文件:

全域文件用途

以下其他wiki使用此文件: