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National Law Center for Children and Families
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Executive Director Richard Whidden was recently quoted in a Family News in Focus article concerning new legislation to protect our children from Sexual Predators.

The article is reprinted below courtesy of Focus on the Family.

July 28, 2005

Changes to the Children’s Safety Act Debated

By Josh Montez

The Children’s Safety Act has been around for 10 years and is showing its age. Representative Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) has introduced legislation with reforms that would make the national registry that’s part of the law consistent between the states. It is hoped that the changes will make it harder for sex offenders to slip out of state and change their identity. Yesterday the House Judiciary Committee weighed in. Congressman Mark Green of Wisconsin is on the panel.

“If we are in fact going to take steps to prevent future crimes against kids, we have to have tools like this registry that they have to be complete, people have to be able to count upon them.”

Patty Wetterling knows all too well why changes are needed. Her son Jacob was abducted in 1989 and is still missing. She supports the bill.

“It strikes at the heart of child victimization issues. It goes after the most violent of offenders, it will give some money to law enforcement, we are going to have to work on getting better funding for this because we’re asking law enforcement to do more.”

The Act requires all offenders to verify their registry information in person every six months and increases penalties on offenders who don’t. Richard Widdon with National Law Center for the Protection of Children and Families thinks the provision will correct a huge hole in the current law.

“It’s estimated that 23 states have lost track of between ten and fifty percent of their sex offenders.”

A sobering statistic considering that there are more than 550,000 registered sex offenders in the US according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The Children’s Safety Act easily passed the committee with bi-partisan support. It now moves to the House Floor.

From www.family.org, a website of Focus on the Family. Copyright © 2005, Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright secured. Used by permission.

 
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Newsflash

Eleven indictments issued in Operation Harvest Moon

A federal grand jury in eastern Kentucky issued eleven sealed indictments Monday, October 23, 2006 as a result of Operation Harvest Moon. The indictments were a result of collaboration between federal, state and local law enforcement to investigate and prosecute sexual exploitation crimes against children. Federal agencies including the Department of Justice, the FBI, the Postal Inspection Service, the U.S. Marshal Service and the Secret Service worked hand in hand with the Kentucky State Police and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children to investigate crimes against children, including child pornography. Several other state arrest warrants aside from the federal indictments have been obtained by the Kentucky State Police.  To read the press release, click here.

The National Law Center thanks the law enforcement and prosecutorial professionals involved with Operation Harvest Moon for their hard work in protecting children in Kentucky. 

 

 


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