Everyday heroes who protect our children

Mr. Leary

Adventurist
Founding Member
I ran across a story today on CNN.

As a parent, there is no greater fear for me than something happening to my daughter. Knowing that there are dedicated folks out there whose job it is to track down predators and protect kids makes me sleep a little easier.

I raise my glass to these (mostly) unsung heroes who bust their tail every case to save kids from harm.

Washington (CNN) -- Federal agents watched in horror as an unknown man in an internet photo appealed for stomach-churning advice -- how to rape the child beside him.
The girl was in pajamas and the man appeared intent on abusing her sometime soon.
Homeland Security agents knew they were in a race against time to save the girl.

In a narrow, windowless office outside Washington, DC, Special Agent Jim Cole sits at a bank of computer screens. The room is modest but the technology Cole is using is second to none.
He showed CNN's Freedom Project how Homeland Security Investigations agents chase down child pornographers. The tone in his voice changes when he begins to tell us about the 11-year-old girl and the special case, which the agency has termed "Sunflower."
"This Sunflower series [of photos] was being posted by an individual who was looking for information on how best to rape this little girl and get away with it."

Cole, who has daughters of his own, says he began scanning the photos being posted online for any clues that might give away their location. And he knew, he didn't have much time.
"The advice he was getting online ranged from drugging her to brutally attacking her," says Cole. "It was progressing so we were extremely concerned for her welfare."
The agent noticed a blurry highway road sign in the window. It was his first, and best, clue. He and his colleagues set to work.

The road sign looked like a sunflower logo -- a clue that led agents to Kansas where the sunflower is the state flower.
And the first number on the sign was surely a 2. But the other numbers were too blurred to be sure which road it was.
"We began looking at the road sign. It really looked to most of us like a highway 203, and there was a highway 203 in Kansas, [but] when we got there, got off the plane the agent from Kansas said "it's not 203, we just drove the whole highway, the sign's not there.""

So Cole and the other agents got back on the road and started driving every highway in Kansas that starts with a 2.
"At the very end of the highway where it teed into another highway, we found the sign. I jumped out of the vehicle on a very busy highway and almost got hit by a car."
Knowing the approximate location, Cole called the local sheriff's department, who recognized a backyard swimming pool in another one of the photos.

Read the rest here:

http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/19/us/cfp-us-race-against-time/index.html?c=us
 
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Very disturbing that this sort of thing goes on. I dread to think what their success rate is. Hope for 100% but fear it is much lower. Sad.
 
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