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46 Arrests in UK as Sex Offender Network Smashed

CEOPThe Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP) Centre has coordinated the UK response in smashing a global child sex offender network.
 
So far, 46 suspects have been arrested in the UK in operations involving 22 police forces around the country with more arrests expected in the near future.
 
Operation Koala was initiated in 2006 and involved the sexual abuse of children from a modelling website based in Italy. ‘Customers’ from all over the world were able to order tailor-made videos depicting the abuse.
 
The investigation began when a child abuse video - made in Belgium - was discovered in Australia. A Belgian perpetrator and two victims were identified. Consequently, the sole producer of the material, a 42 year old Italian national, was arrested. He was running a website on which he sold over 150 self-made, sexually explicit videos of young girls. The business had been running for eighteen months and generated considerable profits from around 2,500 customers worldwide.
 
The abusive material was mainly produced in the man’s private studio.  Some material was filmed in Belgium and the Netherlands.  One of the video’s sold by the Italian suspect shows a father sexually abusing his daughters of 9 and 11 years of age. ‘Customers’ of this website were able to order tailor made videos and some even travelled to the studio in order to watch and record the abuse, making their own private videos.
 
Shortly after the Italian child sex offender was arrested in Bologna, the Italian authorities forwarded all digitalised material, including ‘customer’ details to Europol and Eurojust. From here, the material was disseminated to the countries in which customers were identified.
 
In June 2007, the material was passed to CEOP which holds UK responsibility for receiving intelligence and information from overseas on child sexual abuse crimes.
 
CEOP’s Intelligence Faculty analysed and developed the material and passed details of individual suspects to their local police forces who in turn initiated their own investigations. Operational activity in relation to these investigations is ongoing and likely to continue for some time.
 
Chief Executive of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre Jim Gamble said:
 
“Yet again we see the technology used by paedophiles to facilitate child abuse now turned against them as a result of coordinated and effective international law enforcement cooperation. Operation Koala uncovered the true meaning of ‘online child abuse’: in this case, the exchanging of images in which real children were subjected to horrific sexual abuse, often to order.
 
The work by Eurojust and Europol on this complex and dynamic investigation will, through working with partners internationally, make children safer in many different countries.”
 
 
- Ends -
 
 
 
Notes to editors
 
               Every photograph captures an actual situation where a child has been abused. This is not pornography.
 
 

Created: Mon, November 5th, 2007 | Last Modified: Mon, April 21st, 2008

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