Borderline legal???

Professur

Well-Known Member
Paedophile 'librarian' is jailed

The "librarian" of a global internet child abuse ring has been jailed.

Philip Anthony Thompson, 27, of Stockton-on-Tees, was handed an indefinite sentence for public protection at Teesside Crown Court.

He will serve at least three years and nine months - but the judge warned it could be much longer.

The website Thompson was involved with used "borderline-legal" images to bring together "like-minded" people. Police have so far pinpointed 360 suspects.


Handing down sentence, Judge Michael Taylor said Thompson posed a "very significant risk" to the public and therefore he would be imposing an indeterminate prison sentence for public protection.

He told him: "You have shown that you are a very dangerous individual indeed. I consider that you pose a very significant risk to the public and you are a dangerous offender."

Det Sgt Rebecca Driscoll and Det Constable Terry Waterfield of Cleveland Police

Thompson was told he would also be placed on the sex offenders register for life and banned from the internet and any contact with children.

Earlier, Thompson admitted 27 charges, including causing children under 13 to engage in sexual activity.

About 241,000 child abuse images - which were still and moving images of varying degrees of extremity - were discovered in his possession.

Police said more than 130 suspects had been uncovered in the UK and more than 50 arrests have been made.

As a result, 15 children in the UK have been removed from situations where they were being abused or were accessible to an offender.

Police revealed the network was first infiltrated by Metropolitan Police officers, working undercover, in May 2007.


He [Thompson] was... the librarian for a myriad of images that were distributed to like-minded individuals both in this country and elsewhere


It became the largest investigation of its kind in the UK, also involving Cleveland Police and the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP).

Users of the forum would post borderline-legal images of children and pass comments on them.

Police said "indicative images" rather than explicit child sex abuse images were posted online in an attempt to keep the site "below the radar" and prevent it being shut down.

According to CEOP, which co-ordinates covert investigations into internet child sexual abuse, users would make contact this way then meet other like-minded individuals and exchange images in "different online environments".

Its chief executive Jim Gamble said: "This website - whilst appearing to operate on the margins of legality - was clearly a front for the sinister, sexual abuse of children and an image trading ground for paedophiles."

Det Chief Supt Mark Braithwaite, from Cleveland Police, said Thompson had been "a critical piece of this network".

"He was, essentially, the librarian for a myriad of images that were distributed to like-minded individuals both in this country and elsewhere."


Wait a minute. Border line legal ... still means legal, doesn't it? I'm all for hunting down paedos, but illegal search and seizure isn't the way to go.

Source
 
"Rounding up the usual suspects" in this case meant going to places where pedos go and flagging them. Once flagged, you get a paper giving you access to Person X's house on probability alone. What you find in there is not illegal, as long as you can prove that the initial reason for going in was warranted.

Expect more of these arrests.
 
Earlier, Thompson admitted 27 charges, including causing children under 13 to engage in sexual activity.

About 241,000 child abuse images - which were still and moving images of varying degrees of extremity - were discovered in his possession.

enough for me.
 
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