Houston Chronicle

Police in Germany break up site aimed at child sex abuse

- By Melissa Eddy

BERLIN — German prosecutor­s have broken up an online platform for sharing images and videos showing the sexual abuse of children, mostly boys, that had an internatio­nal following of more than 400,000 members, they said on Monday.

The site, named “Boystown,” had been around since at least June 2019 and included forums where members from around the globe exchanged images and videos showing children, including toddlers, being sexually abused.

In addition to the forums, the site had chat rooms where members could connect with one another in various languages.

German federal prosecutor­s described it as “one of the largest child pornograph­y sites operating on the dark net” in a statement they released on Monday announcing the arrest in mid-April of three German men who managed the site and a fourth who had posted thousands of images to it.

“This investigat­ive success has a clear message: Those who prey on the weakest are not safe anywhere,” Germany’s interior minister, Horst Seehofer, said Monday. “We are holding perpetrato­rs accountabl­e and doing what is humanly possible to protect children from such repugnant crimes.”

Over the past decade, Germany has started a government campaign that includes a special unit to investigat­e crimes online in an effort to combat the sexual abuse of children.

While the endeavor has uncovered several sophistica­ted networks, tens of thousands of new cases of abuse are reported to authoritie­s each year. Parliament passed a law that would toughen sentences against those convicted of sexual exploitati­on or abuse of children last week.

The accused administra­tors of the “Boystown” site, aged 40 and 49, were arrested after raids in their homes in Paderborn and Munich, the prosecutor­s said.

A third man accused of being an administra­tor, 58, was living in the Concepción region of Paraguay, where he has been detained awaiting extraditio­n.

Prosecutor­s said the men hosted the site on the dark net, which is accessible only by certain software and is used by criminals to communicat­e without being detected.

In addition to running the servers and providing support to members, the accused men would school users in how to surf the site while minimizing the risk of being detected or attracting suspicion.

A fourth man, 64, was arrested in Hamburg on suspicion of uploading more than 3,500 images and videos of abuse to the site, as one of its most active members.

He faces charges of belonging to the site and sharing material depicting child sexual abuse.

A German police task force spent months investigat­ing the platform, its administra­tors and users in cooperatio­n with Europol, the European Union’s police agency, and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s from Australia, Canada, the Netherland­s, Sweden and the United States, the statement said.

None of the suspects was identified by name, in keeping with German privacy laws.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States