La Semana

Seven charged in crackdown on child predators

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TULSA, OK -- U.S. Attorney Trent Shores has announced the launch of Operation Clean Sweep aimed at holding accountabl­e child predators throughout the Northern District of Oklahoma. Operation Clean Sweep concentrat­es law enforcemen­t efforts on counteract­ing the spike in internet facilitate­d child-exploitati­on crimes. The operation further seeks to identify and rescue any child victims located during the investigat­ion.

“Today I am announcing Operation Clean Sweep, an initiative designed to prioritize helping victims of child sex abuse and holding accountabl­e any adult who possesses, distribute­s, or manufactur­es child pornograph­y,” said Shores. “I have designated Assistant U.S. Attorneys Chris Nassar and Edward Snow to lead this Operation taking down child predators. I have the utmost confidence that, along with the 11 participat­ing law enforcemen­t agencies, AUSAS Nassar and Snow will make our streets safer for children.”

The operation’s first seven defendants were arrested and charged with distributi­on and receipt of child pornograph­y and with possession of child pornograph­y. The men made initial appearance­s in U.S. District Court last week.

Defendants charged as part of the operation include:

James Michael Brown, 63, of Tulsa (charged with possession of child pornograph­y only)

Michael Lee Figgeroa, 41, of Hominy

Earl Hardy Morrow, 38, and Kory Morrow, 40, both of Broken Arrow

Travis Pryce, 50, of Copan Aaron James Seney, 32, of Sapulpa

Jerry Vantine, 74, of Tulsa The production, consumptio­n and traffickin­g of child pornograph­y continues to expand at an exponentia­l rate. In 2019, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s Cybertipli­ne received more than 45 million child pornograph­y files in 16.9 million Cybertipli­ne reports. Those numbers increased significan­tly when compared to the just over 1.1 million reports made to the Cybertipli­ne in 2014.

Further, NCMEC experience­d a 63 per cent increase in Cybertipli­ne reports between January and September 2020 versus the same time period in 2019. Of the tips reported in 2020, there was a 98.6 per cent increase in the number of cases involving adults attempting to engage in a sex act with a child through use of the internet.

NCMEC’S Cybertipli­ne is the nation’s centralize­d reporting system for the online exploitati­on of children. The public and electronic service providers can make reports of suspected online enticement of children for sexual acts, extrafamil­ial child sexual molestatio­n, child pornograph­y, child sex tourism, child sex traffickin­g, unsolicite­d obscene materials sent to a child, misleading domain names, and misleading words or digital images on the internet. The Cybertipli­ne can be found at https://report.cybertip.org.

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