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January 31, 2007

Shreveport, Louisiana Police Honors Officers

From KSLA-TV-DT

Jan 30, 2007

Tuesday night the Shreveport Police Department recognized a number of its officers at its annual Awards and Appreciation Dinner. The banquet was sponsored by the Agurs Business Association and was held at the Riverview Hall in downtown Shreveport.


Two of those officers received the Medal of Valor after they were involved in a gun battle with a suspect who had just shot his ex-girlfriend. The woman survived the attack and was at the banquet to thank the officers.

Here's a list of the awards presented at Tuesday's banquet:

--Volunteer of the Year - Claire Mayseal
--Auxiliary Officer of the Year - Calvin Kimble
--Auxiliary Officers who volunteered more than 200 hours - Bryan Aycock, Waylon Branch, Joe Colmer, Don Dalton, Sidney Gras, Lucy James, Calvin Kimble, Jack Miller, Lisa Thomas, Howard Tyndall and Dennis Youngblood.
--Chief's Appreciation Awards - Sgt. Mike Kellum, Ron Chatelain and Jennifer Oakley
--Community Oriented Police Bureau personnel recognized - Capt. Wayne Smith, Lt. Riley Young, Sgt. Keith Grant, Sgt. Dwayne Malone, Sgt. Robin Snyder, Cpls. Mary Coburn, Meosha Deal, Robert Elliott, Bill Goodin, Jimmy Thomas, Van Wray, and Neighborhood Assistance Team members Marianne Beaty, Bobby Henderson, Mary Ellen Hoffman and Sandra Lister.
--Life Saving Awards - Cpl. John Delgado and El Dorado employees Diana Gooin and Jerry Willared, Cpl. Daniel Atkins, Cpl. Pete D'Arcy, Officer Srederick Matthews, Cpl. Van Wray, Cpl. Robert Grant, Lt. Jim Haacker, Sgt. Kevin Goodwin, Officers Freddie Clinton, Billy Ray Johnson and Jermaine Babers
--Medals of Valor - Cpl. Joshua Feliciano and Officer Freddie Clinton
Uniformed Services Awards
--Rookie of the Year - Officer Bryan Lauzon
--Training Officer of the Year - Officer Robert Gordon
--Officer of the Year - Cpl. Cody Cisco
--Special Achievement - Cpl. Jim Germain, Cpl. Norman March, Cpl. Lindsay Bonner, Officer Richard Turpen, Officer Christopher Hembree, and Officer DeAndre Belle
--Supervisor of the Year - Lt. Don Johnson
--Civilian of the Year - Sandra Lister
-- Unit Citations to the members of the K-9 Unit - Lt. Leroy Azlin, Sgt. Mike LaSuzzo, Cpl. William S. Arnold, Cpl. Clint Cain, Officer Jon Flores, Cpl. Jerry Curtis, Cpl. William E. Bates, Officer Tobey Morrison, Cpl. Daniel Sawyer, and Officer Chad Dailey
--Unit Citations to the members of the DWI Unit - Sgt. Brian Winn, Cpl. Daniel Atkins, Cpl. Robert Robinson, Cpl. Wiley Willis, Officer Michael Bennett, and Officer John Stratton
Investigations Awards
--Investigator of the Year - Det. Russell Ross
--Supervisor of the Year - Sgt. Anna Trammell
--Civilian of the Year - Lisa Layne
--Unit Citations to the members of the Caddo-Shreveport White collar Crime Task Force - SPD Sgt. Patrick Duncan, Det. Jeff Gilmour, Det. Kim Anderson, Det. Greg Rudell, Det. Jason Person, Caddo Sgt. Mickey McDaniel, Det. Alan Davidson, Det. James M. Lewis, Det. Robert Greer, Det. Bobby Herring
--Unit Citations to the members of the Homicide and Robbery Units - Capt. Cheryl Jeter, Lt. Kim Price, Sgt. Jimmy Muller, Sgt. Brian Strange, Lt. Mike Tong, Sgt. Jody Jones and Detectives Lane Smith, Shawn Hinderberger, Jeff Brown,  Rod Demery, Rod Johnson,  Pat McConnell, James Cromer, Eric Farquhar, Chip Rose, Lowell Bowen, Sgt. Kevin Crow and Detectives Russell Ross, Craig Ivy, Mike McConnell, Chris Yarborough, and Paul Robinson
--Special Achievement - Det. Brandon Oritz, Cpl. Manuel Rosado and Lt. Mike Laing
Support Division Awards
--Officer of the Year - PCOI Gwin Graham
--Supervisor of the Year - Lt. Jackie Willis
--Civilian of the Year - Brenda Sims
--Unit Citations to the members of the Shreveport Regional Police Academy - Lt. Vickie Fields,  Sgt. Doug Garsee, Sgt. Greg Alexander, Cpl. Diana Sanchez, Cpl. Anthony Adams, Cpl. Michael Crisp, Cpl. Jason Brook, Cpl. Rodney Horton, and Jean Pope
--Special Achievement - Lt. Rodney Price
Administration Awards
--Supervisor of the Year - Sgt. Todd Eatman
--Civilian of the Year - Bernard Reilly
--Unit Citations to the members of the Office of Operational Integrity - Capt. Mike Clary, Lt. Tom Amundson, Sgt. Mike Kellum and Sgt. Richard Carroll.

From WorldNow and KSLA, a Raycom Media station.
Retrieved January 31, 2007 from http://www.ksla.com/Global/story.asp?S=6013380&nav=menu50_1_1

Surf smart to avoid getting caught up in online dangers

Dr. Kardasz: Great article by Kevin Joy of the Columbus Dispatch

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01/31/07, by Kevin Joy, The Columbus Dispatch

Marissa never shared her password. But last month, she started getting suspicious messages over her AOL Instant Messenger account. "This one girl asked me, ‘How old are you?’ " said Marissa, 14. "She was giving me all of her information; she was in her 20s . . . asking me all these weird questions. Then I had other strange people IMing me, using cuss words. I was really scared."

Marissa’s not sure how it happened, but someone had accessed her IM account and used it to have an online chat with someone else, later posting the typed back-andforth dialogue on a popular public Web site. In turn, people who wouldn’t normally know Marissa’s screen name saw it, using the information to contact her. A quick change of her AOL screen name and password remedied the problem, but it didn’t make the incident any less uncomfortable. And it reflects a scary new reality for kids such as Marissa and their parents: When using a computer, safety must be a priority.

Digital dangers
As the digital world grows larger — and cell phones, e-mail, instant messaging and social-networking sites help people connect globally — dangers can lurk in the shadows, especially when communicating online.

"You don’t really know who’s behind that other keyboard," said Kent Smith, a project coordinator for the Ohio Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, or ICAC.
"The same thing you learned about strangers in the real world is how you should approach the Internet."
Nearly everyone has heard the same safety warnings since childhood — don’t talk to, accept gifts from, or go anywhere with a stranger.

When surfing the Web, however, many young people don’t always follow those rules. "I don’t know anyone my age who takes the warnings people give seriously," said Sarah, 14. "That’s not what you’re thinking about when you go online." The faceless nature of the Internet can make it tricky terrain. People aren’t always who they claim to be. An online contact could live in another state, be a different age or even the opposite gender than his or her profile indicates. "When you’re not speaking with someone face to face, it’s much easier to be somebody you’re not," said detective Evan Pridham, a task-force agent for the FBI’s cyber-crimes unit. "Not everybody out there is a good person." Maybe that sounds like common sense, and you would never talk to strangers online. It doesn’t mean you’re safe.

Take MySpace, for example, the hugely popular social-networking Web site that allows people to post their own profiles with photos, music, blog entries and, perhaps more dangerous, personal interests and information. The site maintains more than 100 million registered members of various ages. Unless you make your profile page private, all of its details are on display for anyone to see. Letting people know that you like soccer, Beyonce and Pirates of the Caribbean isn’t a problem. But sharing personal information is — a mistake that Internet-safety experts say is a common problem among tweens and teens. Think about it. You wouldn’t walk around advertising your phone number or home address on a T-shirt, would you?

The same goes for posting pictures. A basic headshot is probably OK, but photographs that give hints to where you live or attend school or show you in minimal or indecent clothing can be very dangerous. If you can resist posting a picture, that’s best. "Kids are putting themselves at risk by engaging in behavior that is peer-pressure friendly," said Smith of the ICAC task force. "That’s potentially setting themselves up for folks to take advantage of them."

And don’t think it’s only your classmates who are looking. Students who have posted pictures of themselves engaged in illegal activity, such as drinking alcohol, have been caught by parents and school administrators, according to news reports. "They’re just trying to be funny, but some people put photos online that are really bad," said Kelly, 14, who said she’s seen such pictures of several middle-school classmates that are inappropriate or, at worst, embarrassing.

In general, use caution and think carefully before you post anything in your profile. It takes only a simple right-click-and-save action for someone to copy your information and paste it into his hard drive, whether it is a photo, an instant message or something more private. So it’s important to understand that what you post — even if you delete it later — can resurface, whether in a few months or a few years when you’re applying for college or a job.

"When you put your information on the Internet, it’s there forever," said Lt. Jeff Gaylor of the Westerville Police Department’s Internetcrimes enforcement team. "Whoever grabs that, it belongs to them, and you can’t get it back."

Safety measures
Last year, MySpace gave its users the option of making their profiles "private," meaning full access to someone’s personal page is restricted without the user’s permission. When the site dropped the minimum user age from 16 to 14, its youngest members’ pages were automatically made private from viewers who list their age as older than 18. Users older than 18 can’t list a 14- or 15-yearold as a friend unless they know the teen’s first and last names or e-mail address.

And this month, MySpace announced plans for parent-monitoring software, called Zephyr, that would allow parents to track what name, age and location their child is using in his MySpace profile. But it wouldn’t allow parents to access their child’s actual profile. The user, meanwhile, would be informed that he or she was being monitored.

Still, critics think the safety measures aren’t tough enough. Several lawsuits, including one this month in Dallas, have been filed against MySpace. The Dallas suit involves a 15-year-old girl who was allegedly drugged and raped by an adult she met on the Web site.

Representatives from News Corp., the parent company that purchased MySpace in 2005, declined multiple interview requests to discuss the site’s present and pending security measures. Young kids, meanwhile, continue to flock to the site. "I’m still not 14 years old, and I joined MySpace a couple years ago," said Jacob, 13. "All you have to do is push a button that says you’re 14 or older. You can have a 5-year-old using it."

The site claims to have deleted more than 250,000 profiles of kids who were thought to be younger than 14. Regardless of your age, it’s a good idea to keep your profile private (open to friends only). But that strategy isn’t foolproof, either. "If (a stranger) sweet-talks to you to get on your friends list, all that information is open again," Smith said. Likewise, it’s very easy for a stranger to pretend he is someone else. Don’t respond to messages or friend-request invitations from people you don’t know. "When someone IMs me, and I don’t know them, I ignore them," said Ariel, 15. "That’s happened a few times."

But if a stranger sends disturbing or inappropriate images, asks for your phone number or offers to meet in person, tell a parent or guardian immediately, said Pridham, of the FBI’s cybercrimes unit.

Don’t worry about getting in trouble; it’s more important to address the situation. Keep parents involved. Though it might seem uncool, you should have a discussion with your parents about Internet safety and establish ground rules before the computer is even used — to keep things safe (and avoid arguments later).

Those rules might include where the computer should be located (such as the family room), which way the screen should face (toward public viewing), how many hours a day the computer can be used for leisure and what types of sites are OK to visit.

"I’m allowed to be online for 45 minutes a day, at most, after I finish my homework," said Mia, 14. "My parents are pretty strict about it."

You can do your part, too, to avoid computer conflicts. Keep your parents involved in your online activities. Show them how MySpace, AOL Instant Messenger and online-journal sites such as Xanga and LiveJournal work.

Many experts advise that parents keep a MySpace profile of their own, to keep in contact with their kid’s online activity. It’s also a good idea to talk to your parents about installing filters for your Internet browser. Even if you’re not looking for trouble, it’s easy to stumble across inappropriate Web sites.  "I was doing a project and used Google images," said Gebby, 15, who said the search turned up several improper images that were unrelated to his assignment topic. "It can really be something with nothing bad implied, and a lot of bad stuff could come up. It’s awkward."

Be careful
Installing anti-virus programs also is an important step to protecting your computer. Some such programs are free; others can be purchased. But it’s also up to you to look out for suspicious things, such as those flashing pop-up advertisements and junk e-mails (also known as "spam") that might say you’re a prizewinner or ask for your bank account number. Don’t be fooled — forwarding an e-mail chain letter to 20 of your friends won’t bring you good luck. And clicking on the dancing monkey will not win you an iPod.

Jeremy, 12, wasn’t so careful. Last year, he clicked on a pop-up ad that claimed he had won a laptop computer. Jeremy entered his personal information, including a home address, on a site linked to the pop-up. Before Jeremy realized his error, 16 viruses had infected his computer. An expensive repair to the machine’s hard drive followed. But the worst part? "That came out of my allowance," Jeremy said.

It’s also possible to contract a computer virus when using file-sharing sites such as LimeWire and BearShare to download copyright music and videos. Even worse, downloading such content without paying for it is illegal. Government authorities have fined illegal downloaders — including kids — thousands of dollars. Unless a file is specifically marked as free, it’s no different than stealing an album from the store, even though it might not feel that way. It’s a lot to digest in today’s digital world — and dangers are definitely out there.

But using a computer also can be fun and educational. Connecting with friends online can be great, too, as long as you have the tools and skills to surf smart — and safely.

"Frankly, it’s like learning to cross the street for the first time," Smith of the Ohio ICAC said. "You’ve got to learn to do it safely — to watch with your eyes and ears. You look both ways, take a few steps and look again."

kjoy@dispatch.com

Retrieved January 31, 2007 from http://www.columbusdispatch.com/news/now/now.php?story=dispatch/2007/01/31/20070131-H1-00.html

It is sometimes a surreal world in which we live

Last Update: Wednesday, January 31, 2007. 8:35am (AEDT)

Gangsters happier with 'jobs' than police

South Korean gangsters get more satisfaction from their line of work than the police, a report says.

The survey was conducted among 109 jailed mobsters by the Korean Institute of Criminal Justice, where 79.3 per cent of gangsters said they were somewhat or very satisfied with their life in organised crime.

About 65 per cent of police said they enjoyed their profession, a separate survey says.

South Korean gangsters make on average about $US4,255 a month, which is typically higher than the pay for police.

The criminal justice survey says crime syndicates in South Korea get most of their money through traditional methods such as extortion, prostitution and gambling.

-Reuters

Retrieved  January 30, 2007 from http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200701/s1836739.htm

January 30, 2007

Senators McCain and Schumer Introduce Kids Act of 2007

Dr. Kardasz: The legislation proposed below is a good idea and will be helpful if offenders choose to comply with it.

---------------------------------------------


Senators McCain and Schumer Introduce Kids Act of 2007

Legislation would require sex offenders to register with law enforcement, enabling social-networking web sites to actively track and expel child predators

Washington, D.C. -- U.S. Senators Charles E. Schumer (D-NY) and John McCain (R-AZ) today introduced the “Keeping the Internet Devoid of Sexual-Predators Act of 2007,” to be known as the KIDS Act, that would require registered sex offenders to submit e-mail addresses, instant message addresses or other identifying Internet information to law enforcement to be placed on the National Sex Offender Registry.  This bi-partisan legislation would allow social networking websites to cross-check users’ information against the registry to protect users from sexual predators.

“Millions of teenagers log on to websites like MySpace and they, and their parents, shouldn’t have to worry about running in to these predators online. Sex offenders have no business joining social networking communities – especially those with teenage users – and our legislation will help keep them out. We know that many predators are using the Internet to find victims. This legislation will take a big step toward keeping sexual predators out of the online neighborhoods our kids frequent,” Schumer said.

Under the proposed legislation, any sex offender who submits a fraudulent email could face jail time. Any offender caught using an unregistered email address would be in violation of probation or parole terms and face a return to prison.

The senators said the registration and collection of sex offenders’ email addresses will provide an invaluable tool for law enforcement because, should a sex offender provide an email found to be fraudulent, they will know that the predator is trying to evade detection.

“The fight to protect our children from sexual predators has moved from the playground to the Internet.  Many children who access the Internet in a safe environment -- such as their home or school -- forget that they are sharing personal information with complete strangers. By adopting this legislation, Congress would be able to provide websites with the tools to develop innovative solutions to protect children,” McCain said.

“I am pleased that both MySpace and Facebook have endorsed the KIDS Act. I look forward to other commercial social networking websites endorsing the bill and using the registry information after the bill is signed into law.”

In addition to the social networking sites, the KIDS Act has been endorsed by the American Family Association. Schumer and McCain will introduce additional internet predator legislation next week.

Arizona - Maricopa County Attorney rebuts the distorted ABC 20/20 story of Matthew Bandy

From FoxNews.com on-line version -

Defense In Child Porn Case Distorts the Truth

Sunday, January 28, 2007

By Rachel Alexander, Deputy County Attorney, Maricopa County

Recent media reports, including a Jan. 23 column by FOXNews.com
columnist Wendy McElroy, and a Jan. 19 broadcast of the ABC news program
20/20, have portrayed the prosecution of an Phoenix, Ariz., teenager in an
Internet child pornography case as an overzealous prosecution by the
Maricopa County Attorney's Office.

The Maricopa County Attorney's office would like to make clear our
contention that these reports grossly misrepresented the facts involved,
and that the characterization of this case in the media is the result of
the juvenile defendant's parents denial of the evidence of their son's
guilt and unfortunate initiation of a media disinformation campaign.

The Bandy’s even hired Bernstein Crisis Management to design a web site
attacking County Attorney Andrew Thomas and further spread
disinformation. The “experts” quoted on the website were not given the specific
facts of Bandy’s situation; they were simply asked broad questions about
viruses hijacking a computer.

This case was not about adult pornography, nor was it about a computer
virus surreptitiously downloading child pornography to your computer--
as the media, family and defense counsel have portrayed it. The
prosecution of then 16-year old Matt Bandy was about an investigation that
yielded overwhelming evidence of the defendant viewing, downloading,
uploading and sharing pornographic images of children being sexually abused,
and burning them to a CD.

Matt Bandy admitted to detectives that he visited pornographic websites
as well as an online group known for sharing pornographic images of
children. A burned CD was found in his home, which contained the same
pornographic images of children found on his computer. The images were
saved in a file named "Lolita," which is a term used by child pornographer
traffickers to refer to underage images.

Bandy’s defense attorney asserted that a “virus” or “trojan” must have
downloaded the child pornography to Bandy’s computer without his
knowledge. Even if this were true, it is the County Attorney's contention
that a virus could not have burned those images to a CD, titled them
“Lolita,” then physically removed the CD from the computer and place it
elsewhere within the family home. The fact that child pornography was found
on the CD at his home cannot be ignored.

The investigation was initiated by the Phoenix Police Department after
Yahoo! reported the transfer of child pornography to the Center for
Missing and Exploited Children, as required by law. Evidence subpoenaed
from Yahoo! revealed that pornographic images of children had been
uploaded from a username “mrbob1980hoopdu” to a Yahoo! online group called
“beth_lard9.”

Beth_lard9 was an online group created for exchanging child
pornography. Bandy admitted to the Phoenix police detectives assigned to the case
that he participated in this online group, and said his username was
“joebean1988hoopdu.” Yahoo! provided information showing that the
username that uploaded the child pornography, “mrbob1980hoopdu,” was
registered as “Ms. Joe Bean”-- a clear link to Bandy.

In addition, both the IP address assigned to the Bandy computer by the
Bandy’s Internet service provider Cox and the MAC address of the Bandy
computer were matched to the newsgroup postings by “mrbob1980hoopdu.”

Ms. McElroy's column reported the defense assertion that the
prosecution refused to perform a forensic analysis of the juvenile’s computer,
and that a forensic analysis found that “nine images were probably
downloaded without his knowledge onto his hard drive by a virus.”

This is not accurate. The prosecution’s forensic examiner, a detective
with over 400 hours of training in computer forensics who is certified
by the International Association of Computer Investigative Specialists,
the leading organization in this area, performed a lengthy analysis of
Bandy’s computer. The results of this examination were detailed in a
report over 100 pages long. This detective found 72 images of child
pornography on the computer, stored in folders created on his computer
entitled “…kidlolitagood ones.

The Bandy family hired their own forensic examiner, whose resume does
not indicate she is certified with IACIS and whose expertise and
training is seriously questioned by the prosecutors. This examiner is
responsible for the claim that a virus probably downloaded the images without
the juvenile’s knowledge.

(Fox News Editor's note: each side in this case disputes the expertise and
qualifications of the forensic examiner used by the other side. )

If this were the case, what would stop anyone accused of downloading
child porn from using that excuse? That excuse has been used with little
success in the past by defendants. Last summer, in U.S. v. O’Keefe, the
11th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the child pornography conviction
of a defendant who blamed a virus for placing child pornography on his
computer. In that case, the prosecution’s forensic analysis of his
computer indicated there were viruses on his computer, but they were not
capable of downloading child pornography.

If the analysis by the forensic analyst hired by Bandy provided
exculpatory evidence, it should have been presented during the prosecution of
the case. The only report that has been provided to our office was a
seven-page document consisting of some conclusions; there was no report
on scanning for viruses, no mention of the CD that was found or the work
the examiner performed – no mention of any viruses supposedly
responsible for the activities described or the CD.

In fact, our office’s forensic examiner who examined the computer
acknowledged after the case blew up in the media that there were child porn
images present on the computer nine months before the viruses infected
the computer, so the viruses could not have been solely responsible.

It is a prosecutor’s responsibility to try cases where there is a
reasonable likelihood of conviction. Bandy’s defense attorney has publicly
acknowledged that there was an “80 percent” chance of conviction if the
case went to trial.

The plea agreement reached in this case has been misrepresented as an
indication that we did not have a strong case. This too is not accurate.

Arizona has one of the toughest child pornography laws in the nation,
requiring a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison for each image of
child pornography, and multiple counts must be served consecutively. By
these laws, Bandy could have faced 90 years in prison.

Our office never intended to ask for a sentence of 90 years in prison,
as has been so greatly exaggerated, and the plea reflects our office
efforts to avoid giving the juvenile 90 years in prison. Our office has a
duty to examine each case on its own merits and reach a result which is
just. In light of the circumstances surrounding this case -- such as
the age of the juvenile and his lack of prior criminal conduct -- we felt
90 years was disproportionately harsh and offered a plea bargain
allowing Bandy to plead guilty to the lesser charge of distributing
pornography to minors. Bandy accepted this agreement.

The victim in this case is not Matt Bandy. The victims are the children
who are exploited and made virtual sex slaves. Some of the children in
the images found on his computer and CD were recognized as past victims
of exploitation, and some were under 10 years old.

This case is not about pornography, it is about child pornography.
Child pornography sexualizes children for profit. If you can justify a
crime as horrible as child pornography, you can justify any heinous crime.

Our office did what it thought was right in this situation, and a media
disinformation campaign cannot change the overwhelming evidence of
Bandy’s guilt.

Unfortunately, the court removed the sex offender registration terms
from Bandy’s guilty plea, so he will not receive the treatment he needs
to avoid this happening again. Individuals who become involved in child
pornography have a hard time breaking free from it. We can only hope
that Bandy does.

Rachel Alexander is the deputy county attorney with the Maricopa County
Attorney’s Office, Maricopa County, Arizona.

Retrieved January 29, 2006 from
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,247903,00.html

January 29, 2007

MySpace and Sentinel Donate Technology to NCMEC to Assist in Online Safety

Dr. Kardasz - Good news from NCMEC and MYSpace. This will help identify those sex offenders who use their true names on-line. There is still a difficult issue regarding those sex offenders who use aliases.

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From the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children web site:

Press Release

MYSPACE AND SENTINEL DONATE NEW DATABASE TECHNOLOGY TO THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR MISSING & EXPLOITED CHILDREN TO ASSIST LAW ENFORCEMENT IN THEIR ONLINE SAFETY INVESTIGATIONS

WASHINGTON D.C.—January 29, 2007—MySpace.com, the leading social networking and lifestyle portal, and Sentinel Tech announced today at the National Press Club that they are donating their Sentinel Safe database technology to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children® (NCMEC). Sentinel Safe is a new database developed by MySpace and Sentinel Tech that enables Web sites and other third parties to effectively identify, remove, and block convicted sex offenders from online communities. NCMEC will leverage the Sentinel Safe database as an analytical tool to assist federal, state and local law enforcement agencies in their investigations.

“We’re pleased to join Sentinel in donating this important database technology to NCMEC,” said Hemanshu Nigam, Chief Security Officer, Fox Interactive Media, a parent company of MySpace. “We believe it’s an extremely useful law enforcement tool and want to see it used as broadly as possible.  It’s critical that we work together as we continue to innovate and develop creative solutions to reduce online safety risks.”  

“Providing assistance to law enforcement with their investigations is part of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s core mission,” said Ernie Allen, NCMEC President and CEO. “MySpace’s donation of its Sentinel Safe database will enable us to help keep the Internet safer by tracking down those who commit crimes against our children.”

Last month, MySpace joined forces with Sentinel Tech to build Sentinel Safe, a national, searchable, sex offender database to contain information on the estimated 600,000 registered sex offenders in the U.S. MySpace and Sentinel Tech are donating this technology to provide NCMEC with additional resources to assist federal, state and local law enforcement with their investigations ranging from missing child cases, Internet-facilitated crimes against children, locating registered sex offenders, and potentially identifying fugitives.

"Through this donation, NCMEC will have access to the most cutting edge technology available today to identify non-compliant and registered sex offenders so it can provide better assistance to  law enforcement agencies across the nation” said John Cardillo, CEO of Sentinel Tech, an industry expert on security and a former NYPD Detective. “Sentinel Safe will allow law enforcement, both big and small, the ability to enhance their searches and better track these criminals, making the Internet safer for all.”

The Sentinel Safe database is designed to receive the most current updates from localized state sex offender registries with new information and identifiers of registered sex offenders. NCMEC will directly interface with law enforcement to provide them access to the database information in order to assist in their investigations. As part of this donation, MySpace and Sentinel Tech will provide all research and development to tailor the Sentinel Safe technology to NCMEC’s unique needs in aiding law enforcement.

The Sentinel Safe database is currently being used by a dedicated MySpace safety team to proactively monitor 24/7 for convicted sex offenders in the community. Once a positive match is confirmed, the safety team immediately removes any matching profiles on its site.  Sentinel Safe is the most comprehensive database technology that exists to identify, remove, and block sex offenders from within an online community.

MySpace first partnered with NCMEC in April 2006 to promote online safety through the deployment of NCMEC’s national public service advertisements (PSAs) and has since worked with the organization to develop various safety best practices and programs including AMBER Alerts on MySpace. MySpace is pleased to continue its longstanding relationship with NCMEC by presenting the database to the organization.

Today’s NCMEC donation is part of a multi-pronged approach at MySpace to develop technologies and align with partners interested in finding feasible solutions to improve the safety of the Internet for everyone.

# # #

About the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)
NCMEC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that works in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. NCMEC’s congressionally mandated CyberTipline, a reporting mechanism for child sexual exploitation, has handled more than 419,400 leads. Since 1984, NCMEC has assisted law enforcement with more than 125,200 missing child cases, resulting in the recovery of more than 107,600 children. For more information about NCMEC, call its toll-free, 24-hour hotline at 1-800-THE-LOST or visit its web site at www.missingkids.com.

Retrieved January 29, 2007 from http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/NewsEventServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US&PageId=3045

January 28, 2007

Council Iowa - Bluffs man arrested for alleged date with young 'girl' by Nebraska Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force

Chad Nation , Staff Writer  01/27/2007
 
La Vista, Neb. - The Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force in Nebraska arrested a Council Bluffs man Thursday night for allegedly trying to meet an underage girl over the Internet.

The girl turned out to be an undercover police officer.

John A. Metteer, 23, was arrested by police officers from several Nebraska agencies after he pulled into an arranged meeting place, said La Vista Police Chief Bob Lausten.

Lausten said Metteer was charged with sexual assault-use of a computer, a felony in Nebraska.

Lausten said an officer with the ICAC Task Force went online Thursday, posing as a young female. Within minutes of entering a chat room, Lausten said the officer was barraged with questions asking for age, gender and location.

Metteer allegedly propositioned the officer and agreed to meet at an undisclosed location. When Metteer arrived in the parking lot of the meeting place, law enforcement officers were waiting.

Lausten said the Nebraska law states that charges can be levied against an offender if either the victim or the offender's computers are in the state.

He also said Metteer could face enticement charges in Iowa and federal charges because the crime crossed state lines.

"It's scary what is happening online," Lausten said. "If we could dedicate a full-time officer to just (pose as a minor), you would be amazed by the number of these predators we could knock off."

The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation served a warrant on Metteer's residence Friday, DCI Special Agent Nate Teigland said. Lausten said he believed a computer used for the online encounter was seized from the residence.

The ICAC Task Force agencies involved in the operation included the La Vista, Bellevue and Papillion (Neb.) Police departments, the Sarpy County (Neb.) Sheriff's Office, the Nebraska State Patrol and the United States Postal Inspector.
 
Retrieved January 27, 2007 from http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=17772647&BRD=2703&PAG=461&dept_id=555106&rfi=6

January 25, 2007

Harvey, Illinois - State, Cook County officials raid Harvey police department

Journal Gazette Times Courier (on-line)

Associated Press - 01/25/07

Harvey, Ill. - State and Cook County officials have raided the police department of south suburban Harvey, armed with a subpoena to confiscate certain records.

The Illinois State Police Public Integrity Unit, Cook County sheriff's police and Cook County state's attorney's office participated in Wednesday's raid, authorities said. Officials did not specify what they confiscated.

In a written statement, Mayor Eric Kellogg acknowledged that investigators had been to the police station, and he vowed they would receive "full cooperation."

"As I've always stated, if there is any findings of misconduct of any of our officers or employees, I will push for the immediate termination of the individual or individuals involved," Kellogg wrote.

The raid comes months after a Harvey police detective was charged with official misconduct for allegedly smuggling a gun involved in a murder investigation out of the police department. That detective has since been fired.

After the allegations against the detective surfaced, the Harvey City Council passed a resolution seeking an investigation of the police department.

U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., who also called for an investigation, applauded the raid.

"It's a sad day when police departments have to police other police departments, but in this case, I embrace and welcome it," Jackson in a statement. "The law-abiding citizens and officers who honor the badge need to be protected, while the officers who fail to honor it need to be exposed and prosecuted."

Retrieved January 25, 2007 from http://www.jg-tc.com/articles/2007/01/25/ap-state-il/d8msckt84.prt

January 23, 2007

Houston, Texas - Officer Accused Of Bribery Released On Bond

From click2houston.com

01/22/07

A veteran Houston police officer charged with taking a bribe during a traffic stop was released on bond after a court appearance on Monday, KPRC Local 2 reported.

Alfred Alaniz, 53, was arrested Friday and charged with felony bribery After, police said, he accepted a cash bribe during a traffic stop from an undercover officer. A complaint against Alaniz led the department to organize the internal sting, Assistant Chief Michael Dirden said.

"We do this to test the integrity of officers," Houston police spokesman John Cannon said. "It's just a matter of whether they take the bait."

According to affidavits the prosecutor read in court, the undercover officer told Alaniz that he did not want to go to jail. "How are we going to deal with this?" Alaniz said, according to the affidavit. The affidavit said the undercover officer asked if $200 would be enough. Alaniz told him to leave the money in the back seat, according to the affidavit. Prosecutors said Alaniz kept the money and turned the undercover officer free without writing him a ticket. Houston police arrested Alaniz about an hour later. They did not recover the bribery money, officials said.

"Certainly, we would have preferred for the money to have been recovered. But, I don't know that it's going to be a problem. He was with an undercover officer. He accepted money from him in exchange for not giving him a ticket or not taking him to jail. And that's the case regardless of whether the money was recovered," Assistant District Attorney Traci Bennett said.

Alaniz, a 20-year veteran of the department, also has a discipline record that is among the longest of all officers in the city, according to records obtained by the Houston Chronicle.

Alaniz was released on $10,000 bail and could not be reached for comment. He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. His next court date is Feb. 6.

Alaniz made $116,000 in overtime last year and another $88,000 in 2005, according to records the Houston Chronicle obtained under the Texas Information Act. He likely made much of the extra pay working nights and perhaps appearing in court during the day.

By comparison, Houston Mayor Bill White's salary in 2005 was $177,000. There were no allegations that Alaniz's overtime was related to Friday's arrest.

The department's internal affairs division has sustained 21 complaints against Alaniz since he started his career in 1986. Among the complaints are criminal activity, misconduct and loss of city property. Punishments Alaniz might have faced because of the investigations weren't immediately available.

An analysis by the newspaper found that Alaniz was among at least four Houston police officers who were paid more than $100,000 in overtime last year.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Retrieved January 22, 2007 from http://www.click2houston.com/news/10811746/detail.html

January 22, 2007

Colorado - Wisconsin man indicted for plan to meet a child for sex

Man Indicted for Plan to Meet 8 Year Old for Sex

01/19/07, By by Jim Kouri

A Kenosha, WI man was indicted yesterday following his arrest last month at Mitchell International Airport as he awaited the arrival of a Colorado woman and her fictitious 8-year-old daughter whom he allegedly planned to have sex with.

The indictment resulted from an investigation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Wisconsin Department of Justice - Division of Criminal Investigation (WDOJ-DCI), the Colorado Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC), and the Milwaukee Police Department.

Dennis Lee Metallo, 46, of Kenosha, was indicted by a federal grand jury Jan. 17 on 20 counts of: attempting to entice a child, attempting to transport a child to engage in sexual activity, and distributing and possessing child pornography. Metallo was arrested by ICE and WDOJ-DCI agents Dec. 27 at the Milwaukee airport as he awaited the arrival of a woman and her daughter from Colorado allegedly with the intent of having sex with the child. Metallo has been detained in federal custody since his arrest.

Retrieved January 21, 2007 from http://www.theconservativevoice.com/article/22138.html#

January 19, 2007

Two NCMEC CyberTipline Success Stories - January 2007

Online Postings Provide Clues that Lead to Arrest

On November 20, 2006, the CyberTipline received a report from a registered Internet Service Provider (ISP) regarding a collection of sexually abusive images of children that had been uploaded to an online photo album. Many of the images depicted a prepubescent female being sexually abused by an adult male, while others were of older female children and had been altered to make them appear nude.

Upon reviewing these images, an Exploited Child Unit (ECU) analyst was struck by the resemblance between the children in the photos. She suspected that the reported suspect had not only uploaded the images, but had also manufactured them and may still be victimizing the children. The analyst worked closely with the Child Victim Identification Program to aggressively research the information provided by the ISP in hope of identifying young victims.

The first clue that led the analysts to the children?s location was a personal home page created by the reported suspect. It contained numerous non-pornographic images of several children, who strongly resembled the children in the abusive images. Further analysis of the website revealed a possible name for the reported suspect, several references to a town in Kentucky, and additional identifying information regarding the children. The analysts confirmed the possible location of the children in Kentucky via public database searches. ECU analysts also found online postings indicating that the reported suspect had ties to ? or possibly resided in ? Canada. The Internet Protocol (IP) address provided by the ISP was consistent with this information.

A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Senior Special Agent and NCMEC liaison contacted a Special Agent in the Northern Kentucky Field Office. The Special Agent worked to ensure immediate transfer of the report and images. Recognizing the severity of the situation, the agent also enlisted the help of the Boone County Sheriff?s Department and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Integrated Child Exploitation Unit. The RCMP were able to confirm the suspect?s identity and verify that he was no longer in Canada. They also had the suspect?s home page taken down, thereby protecting the children?s identities.

Meanwhile, authorities with ICE and Boone County located the 46-year-old suspect and took him into custody. Boone County investigators secured a confession from the suspect, in which he reportedly admitted to sexually assaulting the youngest child on several occasions.

The suspect is currently being held in lieu of a $1,000,000 bond. He has been charged with seven counts of Sodomy in the First Degree and one count of Sexual Abuse in the First Degree. Additional charges are pending. The charges carry a potential penalty of life in prison if he is convicted.
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Quick Action of NCMEC and Law Enforcement Helps Prevent Further Exploitation

On December 15, 2006, a concerned individual in Georgia reported to the CyberTipline that an adult male had been checking in to the motel where she worked every weekend since mid-November. Each time, he was accompanied by several young males. She was concerned that the individual may be sexually abusing the children. In the report, she stated that the suspect had booked a room for that very evening.

An Exploited Child Unit (ECU) analyst recognized the urgency of the situation and began gathering additional information. The analyst learned that the reported suspect always requested a single bedroom, and that the boys, whom the reported suspect introduced as his cousin and brother, were never permitted to leave the room. The reporting person also noted that the suspect tried to avoid surveillance cameras in the motel and made certain that he and the boys checked out before they might be seen by other guests.

The ECU analyst contacted the Georgia Bureau of Investigation?s Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, an OJJDP-funded program, and explained the situation. The analyst provided instant, real-time access to the report while the ICAC investigator contacted the Dekalb County Police Department and enlisted their assistance. Within an hour, representatives from the Dekalb County Police Department and the Stone Mountain Police Department were at the scene.

Investigators found two 14-year-old males, an 18-year-old male, and the reported suspect alone in the room. The suspect was found to be their neighbor. Law enforcement?s intervention that night likely prevented a sexual assault, although they did feel the suspect had engaged the children sexually during previous encounters. The children?s parents, who had not been aware of their sons? location or circumstances, were immediately contacted and the children were returned to their custody. The investigation continues.

National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
Charles B. Wang International Children's Building
699 Prince Street Alexandria, VA 22314-3175
703-274-3900 | 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678) | www.missingkids.com
Retrieved January 18, 2007 from http://www.missingkids.com/en_US/e_news/ct-success-stories.htm

Louisville, Kentucky - Prosecutors say man shopped for porn at library

Whas11.com, 01/18/07

Louisville, KY -- A local man is facing at least five years in prison after pleading guilty to child pornography charges.

This case began back in 2005 with a tip from Yahoo to U.S. postal inspectors. It ends with Michael Davis is headed to prison,    caught ordering kiddie porn in a very public place. Federal authorities believe in a place of knowledge and learning, Davis was up to no good.

“It's unbelievable that people still fall for ordering stuff like this on the Internet,” says Postal Inspector Lisa Fitzpatrick. “We're not going to tolerate it.”

The 49-year-old Louisville man recently pleaded guilty to one count each of receiving and possessing child pornography, material the feds say he ordered on a computer at the Louisville Free Public Library.

“So eventually the mail is used and that's where we come in and investigate,” says Fitzpatrick.

The U.S. attorney's office says Davis’s order, placed in December of 2005, was delivered to an address in Old Louisville. Authorities say inside the house, they found pornographic DVDs and four photo albums filled with images of boys as young as 5 -- some of them engaged in sex acts. “If he's conducting an illegal business in the library -- he's out of here.”

Craig Buthod, the chief of Louisville’s public libraries, says there's filtering software in every library on all 450 computers. “SurfWatch, the company we buy it from, has 60 people searching for this kind of illegal material,” says Buthod.

There's no evidence Michael Davis was using library computers to look at porn -- just order it. Yet authorities say he still learned a hard lesson here.

“They caught him, they arrested him,” says Buthod. “He's going to prison. The system worked.”

Davis is supposed to be sentenced in April. The minimum sentence, according to the law, is five years in prison.

Web story produced by Jay Ditzer.

Retrieved January 19, 2007 from http://www.whas11.com/

Four families have sued News Corp and MySpace

By Jessica Mintz, AP Business Writer. 01/18/07.

New York - Four families have sued News Corp. and its MySpace social-networking site after their underage daughters were sexually abused by adults they met on the site, lawyers for the families said Thursday

The law firms, Barry & Loewy LLP of Austin, Texas, and Arnold & Itkin LLP of Houston, said families from New York, Texas, Pennsylvania and South Carolina filed separate suits Wednesday in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging negligence, recklessness, fraud and negligent misrepresentation by the companies.

"In our view, MySpace waited entirely too long to attempt to institute meaningful security measures that effectively increase the safety of their underage users," said Jason A. Itkin, an Arnold & Itkin lawyer.

MySpace, based in Los Angeles, did not immediately return calls for comment.

Critics including parents, school officials and police have been increasingly warning of online predators at sites like MySpace, where youth-oriented visitors are encouraged to expand their circles of friends using free messaging tools and personal profile pages.

MySpace has responded with added educational efforts and partnerships with law enforcement. The company has also placed restrictions on how adults may contact younger users on MySpace, while developing technologies such as one announced Wednesday to let parents see some aspects of their child's online profile, including the stated age. That tool is expected this summer.

The lawyers who filed the latest lawsuits said the plaintiffs include a 15-year-old girl from Texas who was lured to a meeting, drugged and assaulted in 2006 by an adult MySpace user, who is currently serving a 10-year sentence in Texas after pleading guilty to sexual assault.

The others are a 15-year-old girl from Pennsylvania, a 14-year-old from New York and two South Carolina sisters, ages 14 and 15.

Last June, the mother of a 14-year-old who says she was sexually assaulted by a 19-year-old user sued MySpace and News Corp., seeking $30 million in damages. That lawsuit, filed in a Texas state court, claims the 19-year-old lied about being a senior in high school to gain her trust and phone number.

Retrieved January 19, 2007 from http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20070118-1401-myspace-lawsuit.html

January 17, 2007

Orlando, Florida - Man Gets 10 Years After Soliciting Officers of CyberCrime Unit

01/16/07

An Orlando man was sentenced to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to sexually soliciting a minor. John Scott Smith was charged with sexual solicitation after he went to Jacksonville intending to have a sexual encounter with a person he believed was a 13-year-old boy, but who in fact was an undercover Child Predator CyberCrime investigator from the Attorney General's Office. His prison sentence will be followed by five years of sex offender probation and requires mandatory electronic monitoring and registration with the state as a sexual offender.

"This case leaves to the imagination the horrors that could have occurred if this victim had been real and if there were no efforts made to stop this type of perversion," said McCollum. "Without the dedicated work by this unit, countless children would be at the mercy of these Internet predators."

Smith pled guilty to two counts of soliciting an illegal act from a minor via an online service and one count of transmission of material harmful to minors, both third- degree felonies.

Smith's arrest was the 17th arrest made by officers with the Child Predator CyberCrime Unit since its inception only eight months earlier. The unit has arrested a total of 34 sexual predators in only fifteen months and is expanding enforcement and prosecution of these crimes in Florida.

The CyberCrime Unit's mission statement directs it to protect children from computer-facilitated sexual exploitation. Unit members do this by working cooperatively on a statewide basis with law enforcement agencies and prosecutors to provide resources and expertise, while preventing the spread of these crimes through education and community awareness. The agencies involved in this case were all members of the North Florida Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, a federally funded program working nationwide to educate and support law enforcement to stop Internet crime against children.

Retrieved January 16, 2007 from http://www.govtech.net/news/news.php?id=103355

January 15, 2007

Saranac Lake, New York - Suspended Police Chief Fired

01/15/07 By Kim Smith Dedam, Courtesy of The Press Republican

Saranac Lake, N.Y. -- Village trustees fired suspended Police Chief Donald G. Perryman Jr. after reviewing 67 pages of findings and recommendations from an administrative officer.

Perryman was suspended in early October, when events surrounding a police patrol-car accident went to administrative hearing.

Officer Robert S. Hite’s presided over two days of testimony that brought forward evidence and eyewitness accounts of an Oct. 5, 2005, crash involving two Saranac Police officers, who totaled a police car just outside the village limits after spending the day in Plattsburgh.

The officers, Sgt. Bruce Nason and Casey Reardon, had been at a police training seminar that morning. Both admitted drinking alcohol between noon and 4 p.m. before driving back to the Saranac Lake police station.

Investigation of the crash was delayed under Perryman’s watch until the day after the crash; no breathalyzer or blood-alcohol testing was ever done.

Hite’s review found Perryman guilty of misconduct as defined in 12 specifications.

He also found Perryman guilty of “creating the appearance of facilitating a coverup” and of “not taking appropriate steps on the evening of October 5, 2005, to address the behavior and conduct” of Nason for “operating a police vehicle after consuming alcoholic beverages.”

The report found Perryman not guilty of 14 definitions of incompetence.

In the report, Hite said: “Chief Perryman engaged in a deliberate course of conduct to prevent the State Police from properly and thoroughly investigating the accident.

“A simple breathalyzer test and an opportunity for Trooper (John) Moody that evening would have prevented the substantial controversy, embarrassment and mistrust of the Saranac Lake Police Department that resulted from the conduct of the chief and other members of the Saranac Lake Police Department on the evening of October 5, 2005.”

The Village Board, in a meeting held in executive session Tuesday night, decided to fire Perryman.

In a statement released Wednesday, trustees said Perryman caused a breach of integrity, one that “is absolutely essential to public trust. And public trust is the foundation upon which all of the activities of a police department are built.”

According to minutes from the closed session, trustees unanimously voted to terminate Perryman.

“Based upon the serious misconduct which has been identified to, but not be limited to, engaging in a deliberate course of conduct to prevent the State Police from properly and thoroughly investigating the events and accident of October 5, 2005, the village has elected to terminate Mr. Perryman’s employment with the village, effective immediately.”

Hite went so far as to call Perryman’s actions “willful” and “deceitful.” “Chief Perryman engaged in willful, deceitful conduct. Chief Perryman’s conduct has undoubtedly eroded the public trust and caused a negative impact on the integrity of the Saranac Lake Police Department, thereby shaking its foundation.”

Trustee Susan Waters moved to terminate Perryman “with cause, effective immediately,” and was seconded by Trustee Christina Fontana.

Attorney Lori Cantwell, who represented the village at the hearing, called the findings “the correct outcome.”

“The village has zero tolerance for what Chief Perryman engaged in and will continue to have this position with all its law-enforcement personnel,” she said.

Cantwell said she was not surprised by anything in the report.

“The village spent an extensive amount of time bringing forward the charges based on solid evidence.”

The two officers involved in the accident are also under suspension pending review of their actions by members of the police union.

Perryman was unable to be reached for comment Wednesday morning.

His attorney, Greg LaDuke, did not return phone calls.

Retrieved January 15, 2007 from http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?id=34399&siteSection=1

January 13, 2007

Chicago, Illinois: The Internet, Craig's List & Child Prostitution

 Dr. Kardasz: The free Internet service, Craig's List, is being used to facilitate crimes in many areas of the United States, as described in the following story.

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The Internet, Craig's List & Child Prostitution

The Associated Press, US & WorldFriday, 01/12/07 

Two women used the online classified site Craigslist to offer sex with girls in exchange for "donations" or "roses" -- codewords for money, police said.  Tamara Cotton, 25, and Christina Holt, 19, were arrested separately and were not working together, Cook County Sheriff's officials said Thursday.

Police arrested Holt on Monday and charged her with keeping a house of prostitution for allegedly arranging a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old girl. The three minors arrested were not taken into custody, sheriff's spokeswoman Sally Daly said.

January 12, 2007

Los Angeles Task Force announces arrests involving Federal child pornography charges and state charges of child molestation: Public's help sought in identifying victims

FBI Press Release - Los Angeles, California Field Office. 01/12/07

Two individuals were taken into custody within the past week on charges involving sexual exploitation of children ranging from possession and distribution of child pornography to child molestation, announced J. Stephen Tidwell, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI in Los Angeles. Mr. Tidwell made the announcement on behalf of the SAFE (Sexual Assault Felony Enforcement) Team, a task force with members from agencies at the local, state and federal level which investigates and prosecutes crimes that involve the sexual abuse and exploitation of children. The SAFE Team is comprised of members from the FBI, Los Angeles Country Sheriff's Department, Los Angeles Police Department, California Highway Patrol, Orange County Sheriff's Department, California Department of Justice Bureau of Investigations, the United States Attorney's Office and the District Attorney's Office.

On this past Wednesday, members of the SAFE Team arrested Jeffrey Blaine Hall, 51, of Valley Village, California, on charges of possession and distribution of child pornography. According to a complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, Hall was a subscriber to a website known as www.namgla.net. The namgla site, meant to stand for North American Man Girl Love Association, was shut down by the SAFE Team in July 2006 as part of the FBI's Innocent Images National Initiative targeting child pornography online networks operating globally.

The www.namgla.net website functioned as a message board where users could view and post messages to what is essentially a computerized bulletin board. The site served as a mechanism to advertise and directly link users to websites containing child pornography and serviced an international community of online predators where thousands of graphic images of sexually abused children could be shared.

A search of Hall's residence on July 25, 2006 resulted in the seizure of three desktop computers, several hard drives and several discs. These items were examined and found to contain over 7,600 images of child pornography. Hall used the screen name pleasemr to access and post messages on the namgla site. Hall was afforded an initial appearance in U.S. District Court yesterday and was denied bail.

In a second case investigated by the SAFE Team, Christopher Jarold Hoff, of Lancaster, California, was arrested last Friday based on a complaint called into the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. According to the tip, Hoff had been molesting and taking photographs of a minor girl over a period of several years. The SAFE Team's investigation led to a 48 felony count complaint filed in Los Angeles Superior Court charging Hoff with the molestation, including five counts carrying life sentences. He also faces multiple potential federal charges. Based on evidence collected during the investigation, including four computers and dozens of movies, disks and other media, members of the SAFE Team believe Hoff has additional victims who may have left the greater Los Angeles area. Therefore, his photographs are being released so that these or any other additional victims might come forward. Hoff is being held on $5 million bail at Men's Central Jail in Los Angeles.

Additional information on the namgla.net investigation:

The namgla.net investigation has led to searches at 35 locations in the United States which resulted in the seizure of dozens of computers and related evidence. The investigation was conducted by agents and task force officers in 24 FBI field offices in the following 20 states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin.
Prior to Wednesday's arrest of Hall, eight other individuals have previously been arrested and charged in the United States with child pornography offenses in connection with this investigation of Joseph M. Jones, 47, of Roseville, Ohio; Russell Christie III, 48, of a school bus driver in Newtown, New Jersey; Eric Andrew Olson, 39, of Superior, Wisconsin; Thomas R. Herman, 65, of Spokane, Washington; Charles Michael Rochon, 39, of Middlesboro, Kentucky; Douglas Knight, 48, of Fort Washington, Maryland; Rick Nicholson, 51, of Phoenix, Arizona; Pedro Alexander Rodriguez, 31, of Portland, Oregon.

Investigation of namgla.net site has been conducted overseas in Ecuador, Chile, Poland, Canada, Spain, Portugal, Bulgaria and Sweden. In all, 49 namgla.net subjects have been identified in 27 foreign countries, and multiple coordinated international investigations continue.

The cases against Hall and Hoff are continuing investigations by the SAFE Team in conjunction with agents and task force officers from around the country as well as FBI Legal Attaches and foreign law enforcement agencies around the world.

Columbia, S.C. - Lexington Sheriff Arrests Local Man In Internet Predator Sting

From http://theshotsc.com

Columbia, S.C. - January 11, 2007 - Dwight J. Kaiser, 22, of 287 Filhol Road in Gilbert, was arrested on January 11, 2007, in an undercover Internet sting conducted by the Lexington County Sheriff’s Department.

The Lexington County Sheriff’s Department is a member of the Attorney General’s Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force.

Kaiser was arrested on two (2) count of Criminal Solicitation of a Minor (§ 16-15-342), a felony offense punishable to ten (10) years imprisonment on each count.

Arrest warrants allege that Kaiser twice used a computer webcam to solicit sex and demonstrate sex acts on the Internet with an individual he believed to be a minor. In reality, he was communicating with an undercover Lexington County Sheriff’s Deputy. The online sex acts allegedly began on August 31, 2006.

A search warrant was executed at Kaiser’s parents’ residence (505 Windy Road, Gilbert) on January 11, and resulted in the seizure of two (2) computers, a webcam, and other computer-related equipment.

A bond hearing for Kaiser is set for 3:00 p.m. today at the Lexington County Detention Center. A booking photo is available through the Attorney General’s Office.

The case will be prosecuted by the Attorney General’s Office. McMaster stressed that all defendants are presumed innocent unless and until they are proven guilty in a court of law.

Retrieved January 12, 2007 from http://theshotsc.com/?p=147

January 11, 2007

Sex-offender stings get thousands of illegals: Experts still concerned U.S. children could become prey to repeat offenders

 

Dr. Kardasz: Not all of the alien sex offenders described below were Internet-related but the story is a disturbing commentary on the state of the immigration system in the U.S.

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Sex-offender stings get thousands of illegals: Experts still concerned U.S. children could become prey to repeat offenders

01/09/07, By Chelsea Schilling, WorldNetDaily.com

More than 9,000 sex offenders have been arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials through a series of stings called Operation Predator in three years of operation, a 2006 Department of Homeland Security Report says. But some experts are wondering if the efforts are enough to protect innocent American children from being preyed on by returning criminal alien sex offenders.

Foreign nationals account for roughly 85 percent of child sex offenders arrested by the operation, which was launched by Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge in July 2003, officials say. And as WND previously has reported, authorities also have linked illegal aliens to a wave of gang-rapes across the U.S.

The program was designed to safeguard children from foreign national pedophiles, human traffickers and international sex tourists, and in the first year alone, ICE arrested more than 3,200 child predators in the U.S. who committed forms of child exploitation.

But Deborah Schurman-Kauflin, a researcher of violent crimes and criminal profiler who consults with FBI, state and local police, told WND, "Illegal immigrants who commit sex crimes first cross the U.S. border illegally, then gradually commit worse crimes and are continually released back into society or deported. Those who were deported simply returned illegally again. There is a clear pattern of criminal escalation. From misdemeanors such as assault or DUI, to drug offenses, illegal immigrants who commit sex crimes break U.S. laws repeatedly."

Re-entering the United States after having been deported is a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison, but many aliens try and do succeed. Schurman-Kauflin estimates nearly 100 percent of deported illegal immigrant sexual offenders will return to the U.S. and molest again.

"Every expert on sex offenders knows that the likelihood of child predators re-offending is extremely high," she told WND. "Child molesters in general assault many victims before they are apprehended. And if they can return through an open border, it is very likely that they would. Why not?"

In fact, ICE reported a twice-deported child molester from Mexico was arrested with 25 pounds of marijuana and eight firearms in his possession in May 2004. "Nicolas Sandoval-Medina" first entered the U.S. illegally in 1996 and was deported to Mexico in July 1997. He later re-entered the country illegally and had sex with a 12-year-old girl in a Des Moines motel room, and was subsequently convicted on two counts of Lascivious Acts with a Child in December 1999. He was also criminally prosecuted for re-entering the country after deportation, a felony, and was deported to Mexico again in July 2000.

In another case, an illegal immigrant from Mexico who attempted to abduct a 7-year-old girl from a laundromat was one of 25 arrested in a sting targeting criminal alien sex offenders in Los Angeles last August. Four of the offenders, two Salvadorans, a Honduran and a Mexican, previously had been deported from the U.S. A fifth man, Alejandro Rodriguez Villegas, 50, convicted of lewd and lascivious acts on a child under 14, also faces criminal charges but remains on the loose.

Immigration officials and Border Patrol agents match criminal records databases with Megan's law directories across the U.S. to apprehend alien sexual predators. However, Americans for Legal Immigration PAC's president, William Gheen, doesn't believe the efforts are enough.

"I think that what ICE is doing is the equivalent of putting a band-aid on a shotgun blast," Gheen told WND. "ICE is attempting to target the worst of the worst illegal aliens when, in fact, we can't just do that," he told WND. "We've got to address illegal immigration holistically. You can't just hope the computers are going to tell you which ones to deport and which ones to not."

He adds that despite some long-needed immigration enforcement efforts, immigration officials may still be doing too little too late while illegal alien child molesters return to prey on more victims.

"Before we start applauding ICE for their scrap enforcement, we need to start thinking about how many American children have already been raped and violated because they failed to do their jobs. Before I start clapping, I want to know where the hell they have been for the last couple of years."

One of the largest hurdles to effective immigration enforcement has been cooperation between local, state and federal police. Last year, officials of the House Judiciary Committee said that U.S. immigration officers and police are not always on the same page. Police do not always inform immigration authorities about arrests of undocumented aliens, and immigration officers are often too late to identify the aliens before they are released on bail.

Jim Kouri, CPP is fifth vice president of the National Association of Chiefs of Police. He says the problems lie with some larger police departments who have leaders with political ideologies that do not promote department policies to turn illegal immigrants over to ICE.

"Some police departments are prohibited from cooperating with ICE or other federal agencies regarding crimes committed by illegal aliens," he told WND. "The problem is that these cities have liberal mayors who appoint liberal police chiefs or those who will implement liberal policies in spite of their personal views. However, there are many more police departments that cooperate with ICE than don't cooperate."

According to a 2006 Department of Homeland Security Report, since January, ICE has trained an additional 40 state and county law enforcement officers as part of the 287(g) program to provide targeted immigration enforcement by state and local authorities. The Immigration and Nationality Act section 287(g) grants local and state jurisdictions the ability to enforce immigration law with proper training and supervision by federal authorities.

In addition, ICE, in partnership with other DHS entities, is now detaining all illegal aliens apprehended along the borders for removal, effectively signaling the end of “catch-and-release.”

"The best way is to capture them at the border—a proactive approach—rather than catching them after they rape or molest a child—a reactive approach," Kouri says. "To do that we need to control our borders. Right now they are out of control. When you have Mexican gunmen on U.S. soil chasing away National Guard troops, that should tell you something is very, very wrong."

Below are just a few of the arrests of foreign national sex offenders by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement since the beginning of Operation Predator in July 2003. Many of the sex offenders had been deported at least once before they returned to molest children again.
  • Humberto Gabriel Zamora -- On July 10, 2003, ICE agents in Minnesota arrested Zamora, a Mexican who was living under an alias in Willmar, Minn. He had been convicted of first degree sexual abuse involving a 15-year-old girl in March 2001. He was deported to Mexico in April 2001. He subsequently re-entered the country illegally and moved to Willmar, where he began working under another name.
  • 27 child predators arrested in Florida -- On July 24, 2003, ICE agents in Miami arrested 25 men convicted of sexually abusing children and 2 women convicted of child abuse or endangerment. ICE agents had targeted for arrest Bayardo Rafael Chamarro, a Nicaraguan national who was a registered sex offender and who had evaded law enforcement efforts to deport him. As they prepared to arrest him, Chamarro was caught groping a 12-year-old girl in a Sears department store. He was subsequently charged with lewd and lascivious molestation on a child under the age of 16. Chamarro had been charged previously with similar crimes against minors and was a registered sex offender under Megan’s Law.
  • 50 alien child predators arrested in Maryland -- On August 13, 2003, ICE agents in Baltimore announced the arrest of 50 aliens who had been convicted of sexual offenses involving minors, but had evaded deportation. Among those arrested were a summer camp employee convicted of molesting three pre-pubescent sisters.
  • 13 alien child predators arrested in Colorado -- On September 13, 2003, ICE agents in Denver announced the arrest of 13 aliens who had been convicted of sexual offenses against minors, but had subsequently evaded deportation. Among those arrested was Pedro Gutierrez-Lozano, a Mexican national convicted in 1999 of 2nd degree sexual assault on a mentally impaired minor. Gutierrez was deported to Mexico in 2000 after serving his 180-day jail sentence. He returned to the United States illegally and began living in Colorado until his arrest by ICE agents.
  • Ramon Amador -- On September 13, 2003, ICE officers arrested Ramon Amador, 53, a man wanted in Minnesota on charges of raping a 9-year-old, when he applied for U.S. immigration benefits in California. A background check revealed that Amador was a wanted fugitive.
  • On September 16, 2003, a federal judge in Newark sentenced Rafael Ruiz, a Dominican national, to 44 months imprisonment for operating a house of prostitution in Plainfield, N.J. He was involved in a ring that smuggled female juveniles from Mexico into the United States and then held them to work as prostitutes against their will. ICE agents closed down the trafficking ring.
  • Fritz Laguerre --On September 16, 2003, ICE agents in West Palm, Florida arrested Fritz Laguerre based on an outstanding deportation order. Laguerre, a citizen of Haiti, had been arrested by the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office in July 2002 for raping his 12-year-old daughter. Laguerre had subsequently evaded ICE efforts to deport him.
  • Julio Cesar Rabago-Magana -- In March 2005, ICE deported a Mexican illegal alien who had been convicted of raping a 4-year-old boy in the basement of Mercado Central in Minneapolis. Rabago-Magana asked the boy to help him carry boxes to a basement storeroom. The boy agreed, but when they entered the room, Rabago-Magana sexually assaulted him. Rabago-Magana pleaded guilty to first-degree criminal sexual conduct. After serving his sentence, removal officers deported him to Mexico six days later.
  • 12 criminal alien child sex predators arrested in Calif. -- On May 4, 2005, 60-year-old Martin Salgado-Rivera, a Mexican national with a criminal history that spans three decades, was one of twelve foreign child sex predators arrested in southern Santa Clara County, Calif. Salgado-Rivera’s criminal past includes convictions for the rape and molestation of several minors. His arrest was part of a daylong operation targeting convicted alien sex offenders who now face deportation.
  • 47 criminal alien sex offenders arrested in N.Y. – October 25, 2005, thirty–six of the offenders were in the U.S. illegally, and fourteen were legal permanent residents. All were foreign-born and had been convicted of rape, sodomy, assault with intent to cause physical injury, sexual abuse and sexual misconduct, endangering the welfare of a child, reckless endangerment, coarse sex conduct and possessing a sexual performance by a child. One victim was only 3 years old.
  • 8 criminal alien sex offenders arrested in Washington, D.C. –- Dec. 2005, ICE Agents arrested 8 criminal alien sex offenders in Washington, D.C. and Virginia over a period of three days. All are citizens or nationals of El Salvador, Honduras, and Mexico who have previously been convicted of sex crimes against children -- including rape, statutory assault on a child, aggravated sexual battery, sexual abuse, and indecent liberties.
  • Gasper Almilcar Guzman -- July 10, 2006, In Sayre, Pa., the Evening Times reported he was among a group of men who were found July 10 to be in this country illegally following a routine traffic stop in Athens Township. Guzman had been convicted of raping a 14-year-old girl in Alabama in 2005. Guzman was deported before he could begin serving his five-year sentence.
  • Miguel Gutierrez -- July 13, In Noblesville, Ind., the 20-year old illegal alien faces two counts of rape for taking a 14-year-old into a garage and participating in a four-man gang rape on the girl. Following the gang rape, the girl was forced into a car and raped again, according to news reports.
  • Sinoe Salgado Garcia – July 21, a 28-year-old Fontana, Calif., man convicted of kidnapping and raping a 4-year-old girl, was sentenced to a 30-years-to-life prison term, according to the Riverside Press Enterprise. The child was found hours later inside a shed, thrown over a 6-foot-tall block wall, investigators said. She underwent surgery to repair damage caused by the rape and sodomy, court records show. The site reported that she also suffered three facial fractures.
  • 25 criminal alien sex offenders arrested in Los Angeles – August 24, 2006, four of the offenders, two Salvadorans, a Honduran and a Mexican, previously had been deported from the U.S. A fifth man, Alejandro Rodriguez Villegas, 50, convicted of lewd and lascivious acts on a child under 14, also faces criminal charges but remains on the loose.
  • 45 criminal alien sex offenders arrested in New York -- Nov. 29, 2006, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and officers of the New York City Department of Probation, arrested 45 child predators and criminal alien sex offenders in Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and Manhattan.
The earlier report, from the Violent Crimes Institute in Atlanta, reported about 240,000 illegal-immigrant sex offendersare living in the U.S., and estimated 93 sex offenders and 12 serial sex offenders cross the border illegally into the U.S. each day.

PEW Report: Social Networking Websites and Teens: An Overview

Dr. Kardasz: The following report from the researchers at PEW provides interesting information regarding the use of social networking sites by teens. The report does not measure the use of social networking sites by Internet sexual predators but mounting qualitative data indicates that predators also frequent the sites in search of victims.

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Social Networking Websites and Teens: An Overview

PEW / Internet & American Life Project, Reports Family, Friends & Community

01/07/07 by Amanda Lenhart, Mary Madden

A social networking site is an online place where a user can create a profile and build a personal network that connects him or her to other users. In the past five years, such sites have rocketed from a niche activity into a phenomenon that engages tens of millions of internet users. More than half (55%) of all online American youths ages 12-17 use online social networking sites, according to a new national survey of teenagers conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

The survey also finds that older teens, particularly girls, are more likely to use these sites. For girls, social networking sites are primarily places to reinforce pre-existing friendships; for boys, the networks also provide opportunities for flirting and making new friends.

Retrieved January 11, 2007 from http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/198/report_display.asp

Clay, New York - Man accused of having relationship with teen found guilty on three charges

From TWEAN d.b.a. News 10 Now. By: Web Staff. 01/10/07

A judge has issued his verdict in the trial of a Clay man accused of having a relationship with a teen. Connor Izard was found guilty on two counts of sexual misconduct and one count of endangering the welfare of a child. All three were misdemeanor charges.

He was found not guilty on the felony charges of rape. Police say Izard met Patricia Visco on the Internet, and picked her up from her home in Geneva in December of 2005.

An Amber Alert was issued to find Visco. Both she and Izard were found the next day at a motel in Liverpool, New York.

Retrieved January 11, 2006 from http://news10now.com/content/all_news/central_new_york/?ArID=91712&SecID=86

January 08, 2007

Largo, Florida - Fired cop back on patrol after mediation

Dr. Kardasz: Here is an unusual media report of misconduct that resulted in the firing and later reinstatement of an officer.

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Fired cop back on patrol after mediation

By Dave Shelton. Tampa Bay Newspapers. 01/04/07

Largo, Florida – Former Police Sgt. Joan Short, a 23-year veteran, returned to patrolling city streets Jan. 2, reinstated after having been fired a year ago over an off-duty birthday party in which she was allegedly sexually mistreated by other partiers.

Short was given her job back after a mediator determined that her punishment wasn’t justified. When she was fired last January, deputy police Chief John Carroll said he had decided to fire the officer because she had shown no remorse and had a previous record of misconduct.

In complying with the mediator’s recommendations, the city gave her a six-month suspension and a reduction in rank to police officer. Short was to receive six-month’s pay as an officer, at about $60,000, rather than the higher sergeant’s pay of about $65,000, according to Sgt. Steven Slaughter.

The incident that led to her termination took place in a St. Petersburg nightclub in October 2005. Police Officer Melinda “Mindy” DeKyle had invited several friends to celebrate her birthday, according to official records. She was going to be 30-years-old.

During the party, DeKyle was given a gift basket that contained liquor, a sexual device, a “Spanish Fly” and a can of chocolate whipped cream. Short said she was startled when DeKyle sprayed the cream on her chest, then licked it off. A short time later, witnesses said, DeKyle sprayed Short’s chest a second time and DeKyle’s friend then licked the cream away and fondled Short’s breasts. All of this was documented by photographs taken by one of the partiers and obtained by an internal affairs detective and by local television stations.

DeKyle was suspended as a result of the internal affairs probe and Short was fired. In January 2006, Carroll recommended Short also be suspended.

Chief Lester Aradi, however, chose to fire her, pointing to her prior record that included a 1982 careless driving incident, an improper high-speed chase in 1997 and an ethics violation and insubordination incident in 2001. She had also been punished for excessive absenteeism and had received poor performance reviews in 2003.

In 2004 she was suspended for six days after three complaints saying she had shown disrespect to supervisors.

Retrieved January 7, 2006 from http://www.tbnweekly.com/content_articles/010407_lle-02.txt

 

 

January 06, 2007

New York - Hero cop in bank robbery on the mend

By Karen James, 01/04/07, QueensCourier.com

Police & FBI investigators inspect the scene of the shootout after a bank robbery at the HSBC Bank located at 87-03 Queens Boulevard on Saturday, December 30, 2006.

An off-duty police officer from Ozone Park continues to recover from a gunshot wound he received over the holiday weekend after thwarting an attempt by two men identified as career criminals by Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly to hijack his family's car for use as a getaway vehicle following a bank robbery they had allegedly committed moments earlier.

“Officer Lopez could have no way of knowing how dangerous the individuals he encountered this afternoon were,” said Kelly in a statement released following the incident in which Lopez chased down one of the two suspects despite having been shot in the leg by him.

Police Officer John Lopez, 37, was seated in his family's car with his wife, Peggy, 4-month-old son and mother-in-law when two men wearing masks and gloves approached the car, police said. One man, Dion Mines, tried to open the passenger door as the other, Joseph Pennington, knocked on the driver's window with a gun and told Lopez to get out.

Lopez, who according to published reports doesn't want to be labeled a hero for his actions, shouted while identifying himself as police. He then bolted from the car and began to chase the two men north on 55th Avenue in Elmhurst and away from the HSBC Bank at 87-03 Queens Boulevard that police said had just been robbed.

According to the police, Mines and Pennington had entered the bank shortly after 12 p.m. on Saturday, December 30 where they gathered employees and customers together at a single teller's station at gunpoint. They carried blue bags into which they ordered tellers to empty their cash drawers, as they are suspected of having done in two previous robberies at nearby Citibank and North Fork branches also on Queens Boulevard.

Published reports put the amount they stole in the HSBC heist at about $15,000. Off-duty police officer John Lopez was shot in the leg while pursuing a suspect and was brought to Elmhurst Hospital.     

While fleeing, Pennington turned and shot at Lopez. Lopez returned the fire. Both men shot a second time. Lopez hit Pennington in the abdomen and leg and Pennington hit Lopez in the upper left thigh. According to police, Pennington dropped his .38-caliber pistol and a bag of money as he fell to the ground. The injured Lopez then moved in to contain Pennington before he could recover his gun.

Police captured Mines, who was released from prison after serving 15 years for manslaughter in 2006, along with a second bag of money from his hiding spot beneath a car parked at a nearby diner, they said. According to police, Pennington had previously been arrested 16 times on charges that included 20 felonies-six of which were for criminal possession of a weapon. A gun was recovered at the scene.     

Mines was arraigned in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn on Sunday, December 31, on charges of armed bank robbery, two counts of car jacking and use of a loaded fire arm. He is being held without bail and could face up to life in prison if convicted of the charges, according to a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney.

As of press time, Pennington remained in critical condition at Elmhurst Hospital, according to a spokesperson there.

Retrirved January 6, 2007 from http://www.queenscourier.com/articles/2007/01/04/headline_news/news01.txt

January 01, 2007

Judges...gone wild?

Dr. Kardasz: The story below describes misconduct by two judges in Arizona.

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Judges admit they were out of line in courtroom

Erin Zlomek. The Arizona Republic. 01-01-07

Surprise, Arizona - Two Surprise municipal judges have admitted acting inappropriately in their courtrooms and agreed to disciplinary sanctions after an Arizona Commission on Judicial Conduct investigation resulted in administrative charges against them.

The commission charged Judge Joseph Malka with abuse of authority, incompetence, appearance of bias, improper judicial demeanor and failure to exercise judicial independence. Judge Jerry Colglazier was charged with incompetence and failure to exercise judicial independence.

The statement of charges alleges that Malka pushed a woman's case back a week because she cracked her knuckles too loudly, disrupting the courtroom. In another commission report, Malka and Colglazier are accused of conspiring to raise a defendant's bond with no credible explanation, denying the defendant his right to speak with a lawyer and holding an informal contempt hearing with no sworn testimony from the defendant or any opportunity for the defendant to give a response. Neither Malka nor Colglazier returned phone calls for comment.

Malka was Colglazier's supervisor, said Keith Stott, executive director of the commission. Complaints portray Malka as temperamental, losing patience with defendants and lawyers. A few recorded incidents document him telling defendants to "stop talking" or to "shut up."

The judge reportedly ordered one woman handcuffed and taken into custody, denying her request to use a phone and arrange for child care. He also is alleged to have thrown a lawyer out of the courtroom when the man's cellphone rang, interrupting court proceedings. An investigation of Malka's actions began in May. "Complaints came to our attention from attorneys who were in the judge's court," Stott said.

The commission has recommended to the Arizona Supreme Court that both judges receive censure, a public statement of violation and the least severe form of disciplinary action, Stott said. In addition, Malka is required to take a weeklong "refresher course" on a topic pertaining to proper judicial conduct.

During the seven-month investigation, Surprise's Interim Presiding Judge Michael Lester was assigned to be Malka's mentor. The judges agreed in writing to the commission's recommendations.

Malka earns $122,935 a year and joined the Surprise court in July 2005. Colglazier is a pro tem, or temporary, judge for the city and has earned $12,025 since July 1. Surprise city officials were aware of general public complaints concerning Malka that were brought before the City Council in October. City Manager Jim Rumpeltes said he was not aware of any complaints brought against Colglazier.

Beyond any sanction imposed by the Arizona Supreme Court, a municipality has the authority to administer other disciplinary sanctions. Surprise may consider adding its own disciplinary actions, city spokesman Ken Lynch said.

Retrieved January 1, 2007 from http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0101judge0101.html#