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National Law Center for Children and Families
NLC Staff Returns From Successful Seminar in Louisville Print E-mail

The fourth NLC Protects seminar was a great success, drawing approximately 125 law enforcement officers and prosecutors from Indiana and Kentucky to Louisville on January 9th and 10th. 

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Introductory remarks were made by U.S. Attorneys David Huber (W.D. Ky.) and Amul Thapar (E.D. Ky.).  Both Huber and Thapar stressed that the protection of children from the harms of sexual exploitation is a top priority in their offices and encouraged cooperation among state and federal law enforcement. 

Additional speakers included Project Safe Childhood representatives from Kentucky and Indiana who provided an overview of their efforts to implement the program.  The representatives reinforced the message of the U.S. Attorneys to take advantage of federal resources and seek stiffer penalties for offenders.

At the conclusion of the seminar, attendees provided anonymous feedback concerning each presentation and the seminar as a whole.  Respondents commented that the speakers were “obviously passionate about their work and very knowledgeable” and that the seminar provided a “broad level of topics appropriate to a multi-disciplinary group of students.”  

The conference in Louisville was the fourth of fifteen seminars to be held across the U.S. in an effort to educate law enforcement officers and attorneys on child sexual exploitation and obscenity crimes. 

The next seminar is scheduled for February 20-22 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama at the University of Alabama School of Law.  Registration is open until February 5th.  However, interested law enforcement officers and prosecutors should register early, as full capacity is often reached before the final deadline.

 
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Newsflash

Former NLC Protects Speakers and Attendees in the News

 Kentucky  

David Huber, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky, announced that Shawn Cowley pled guilty to two counts of receiving and possessing child pornography.  Cowley used the Internet to knowingly acquire child pornography and download the images to his computer.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney and Project Safe Childhood Coordinator Jo E. Lawless

Huber welcomed attendees to the seminar in Louisville, Kentucky and Lawless discussed Project Safe Childhood efforts in the Western District. 

Alabama

The Middle District of Alabama announced that a former middle school teacher, Daniel Platt, pled guilty to possession of child pornography.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Tommie Brown Hardwick

Hardwick attended the three-day training in Alabama, while U.S. Attorney Leura Canary made a presentation on Project Safe Childhood in the Middle District. 

 


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