Orlando Sentinel

Tiny clues help solve child sex cases

- By Colleen Long

FAIRFAX, Va. — It was the odd-looking locker handles that caught their eye.

Investigat­ors spent hours poring over graphic images of little boys changing in and out of their swimsuits at what looked like a YMCA. They were hunting for any clue to help them identify the location — and ultimately, the victims and the person who exploited them.

Then they noticed that the locker handles had unusual plastic hooks. They scrubbed the photos to remove the images of children, then sent the pictures to locker manufactur­ers. One of them recognized the lockers and said they had been installed at YMCAs.

Eventually, investigat­ors matched the photos to a YMCA in Sandusky, Ohio. That led to the suspect, a former Boy Scout leader.

These weren’t FBI or local police, but investigat­ors from the agency that’s the poster child for President Donald Trump’s polarizing immigratio­n policies: U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. ICE’s Homeland Security Investigat­ions section, tasked with investigat­ing crime, has a Child Exploitati­on Investigat­ions lab where agents scour disturbing photos and videos of child sexual abuse.

They look for unlikely clues that help them identify the children and bring their abusers to justice. In one case, it was the loud, persistent chirping of a bird. Another time, it was unusual playground equipment.

“We are looking at the hidden details, the things people aren’t looking at,” said Special Agent Erin Burke, the section chief.

The work of Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents has led to thousands of child exploitati­on-related arrests.

But being part of ICE has taken a toll. Funding for HSI has fallen as a greater share of ICE’s budget is devoted to removing immigrants. And the associatio­n with ICE has created friction.

Some cities and police department­s refuse to comply with ICE on immigratio­n matters, like alerting them to criminal suspects wanted for crossing the border illegally. Sometimes that bleeds into the HSI investigat­ors’ work, too. Just having the email end in ice.dhs.gov can cause problems.

“Ninety-nine percent of what we do here has no immigratio­n nexus,” Burke said. “But people have a hard time understand­ing this.”

ICE’s involvemen­t in child pornograph­y investigat­ions dates back to when hard-copy images were traded over borders. Now it’s all online. The internet has made it so investigat­ors around the globe can’t keep pace with the tens of millions of graphic materials available today. It’s exploded in part thanks to cheaper online storage and easier encryption tools. The dark web gives additional cover to perpetrato­rs. It has made them bolder, their abuse more graphic and disturbing, the work of the investigat­ors more difficult.

The lab was created in 2011 to look for clues within images to help find child victims. It has three analysts and one special agent. They work in a small windowless room in a nondescrip­t office building in the Virginia suburbs outside Washington. A sign on the door says in red bold letters: “Examinatio­n of graphic material in progress.”

Inside, new technology meets old: Fluorescen­t office lights are turned down and specialize­d blue lights glow. Giant, state-of-the-art computers with high-definition screens are set up alongside old police sketches of faces.

The cases come to them from local police, or internatio­nal investigat­ors who notice American victims. It can take two weeks, two days, two years to identify the children. Some they can’t find. Those children haunt them.

In many cases, graphic images are accompanie­d by everyday shots of the child.

“They want to show they have access to a child,” Burke said. “So the ‘before’ images become a part of the story for them almost as much as the graphic images.”

In one case, an analyst examined images he received from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a clearingho­use and reporting center for issues on the prevention of child victimizat­ion.

One photo showed, a girl, maybe 4 years old, from the back. She was scrambling atop a rock, her curly blonde hair in pig tails. The analyst photoshopp­ed the victim out and sent the photo of the rock and the surroundin­g foliage to a horticultu­re expert at the Smithsonia­n Museum of Natural History, who narrowed the location down to the southern U.S.

Next, the analyst looked at playground equipment in another “clean” image. He sent the photo to playground manufactur­ing companies and safety experts who could pinpoint where the equipment was installed, smack in the middle of a Houston neighborho­od.

They sent their research to Texas field agents, who went door-to-door, asking schools, neighbors, businesses, anyone, if they’d seen the little girl, and eventually found the victim — and the suspect.

The girl’s father pleaded guilty last June and was sentenced to 35 years for exploitati­on. But by then, images of the girl had been widely circulated. They were found in at least 222 collection­s, officials said.

In another case, analysts heard strange bird chirping in an abuse video. They isolated the sound and sent it to an ornitholog­ist who identified the bird and its migratory patterns. That led them to three suspects, the last of whom pleaded guilty last month. They are expected to be sentenced to a minimum of 15 years.

In the locker room case, a 39-year-old man pleaded guilty last month to sexual exploitati­on of a children and will be sentenced in January.

“The bad guys will always be smarter,” Burke said. “But that doesn’t mean we don’t have the tools, the expertise and the boots-on-theground hard work to make a dent.”

The lab is a small part of HSI, which has 7,000 agents tasked with workplace enforcemen­t, human traffickin­g investigat­ions, child exploitati­on investigat­ions, plus drug and financial crime crimes.

In the budget year that ended Sept. 30, HSI agents and investigat­ors initiated 4,224 child exploitati­on cases that resulted in 3,771 arrests and identifica­tion of 1,066 victims.

Burke notes that working in the lab is “not for everyone.” Some of the team members have children and have become wary of babysitter­s. They don’t want to leave their kids with anyone in a room, especially men.

But they all feel a sense of duty, drawn to the job for the simple fact of saving a child from harm.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? A forensic analyst works at Victim Identifica­tion Lab, part of Homeland Security’s Child Exploitati­on Investigat­ions Unit.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP A forensic analyst works at Victim Identifica­tion Lab, part of Homeland Security’s Child Exploitati­on Investigat­ions Unit.

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