Monday, July 09, 2007




















What a great Job have done the Porn patrol arresting 13 Adults on Child Pornography.

By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI
New Hampshire Union Leader Staff
Thursday, Jun. 28, 2007


CONCORD – A statewide crackdown on child pornography trafficking over the Internet so far resulted in 13 adult arrests, 40 search warrants and nine juvenile petitions over the last eight months with more charges expected, state Attorney General Kelly A. Ayotte said yesterday.

Now the specially trained, undercover online investigators who formed the Child Exploitation Task Force will return to their respective local agencies where they will continue to pursue offenders and train colleagues in how to mount these highly technical probes.
"These images involve real children who are being abused," Ayotte said.

One child pornography suspect allegedly was downloading illegal images when police arrived at his door, Portsmouth Police Lt. Timothy A. Brownell said. Another in Raymond had a large amount of Viagra in his home, Brownell said. And police found such a large computer server in a Hudson home that they needed an ambulance to haul it away.
Ayotte describes the photographic and videotaped images being traded and downloaded over the Internet across the state as "child sexual abuse images," saying the term child pornography does not accurately capture the horror of the crime.
The images include a 3-year-old child being raped on a bed, she said. Another shows a 12-year-old tied to a tree and raped. Others are of 9- and 10-year-old girls performing oral sex on adults.

"These are probably some of the most horrendous images that anyone could see," said Portsmouth Police Chief Michael J. Magnant.

"Every time a criminal downloads one of these images, that child is being exploited again and again and again," Magnant added. The Portsmouth department hosts the New England Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, which worked with the Attorney General to launch the Child Exploitation Task Force task force last October. About 20 local, county, state and federal law enforcement agencies dedicated officers to the task force, who were trained by computer forensics experts from the Portsmouth-based team.

Their work resulted in 13 adults arrested or indicted between Nov. 16 and May 25, Ayotte said. Ten men and one woman are charged with possessing child pornography, a class B felony. None of the people arrested work with children.

When making one of the arrests, police discovered a 13th individual wanted in another state and charged him as a fugitive, state officials said. His name was not available.

Other cases are pending before grand juries, Ayotte said. She said confidentiality laws protecting juveniles barred her from discussing the nine juvenile petitions filed.
Investigators also identified nine children between 12 and 16 in the homes of those arrested for possible child abuse, Brownell said. Authorities are following up to determine if they were sexually abused.
None of the children depicted in the images discovered by the task force are from New Hampshire, Ayotte said.

An estimated 7 million child sexual abuse images exist on the Internet, Magnant said. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in Washington, D.C. has been able to identify about 1,000 of the children portrayed in the images through forensic analyses, Magnant said he learned at a two-day conference on Internet Crimes Against Children held in Charleston, S.C. last week.

Of the 1,000 children identified so far, two were traced to New Hampshire and authorities notified, he said.

While those arrested so far have been charged with possessing child pornography, authorities said they also are investigating the manufacture of child pornography in New Hampshire.
"That's part of the investigation. It's ongoing," Brownell said. "It's pretty easy to do that now with some of the technology out there."
Ayotte also issued commendations to the task force investigators for their work.

Child porn arrests
David Curtis: 42, of Derry

Jessica Doty: 20, of Manchester

John Fironini: of North Hampton

Matthew Greenwood: 27, of Dover

Jeremy Leavis: 32, of Epping

Charles Lyons: 33, of Hudson

David Martinuk: 41, of Rye

Nicholas Plourde: of Meredith

Patrick Roddy: 51, of Portsmouth

Ryan St. Jean: 18, of Hampstead

James Skerry: 62, of Raymond

None of those were Hispanics, Mexicans, Latinos, etc. Wonder why the media won't (CNN. CBS,ABC, FOX, ETC) cover this information about those child predators that just want to stealing their innocence and the future of the children's and the xenophobics (Anchors Media), missinforming the public and put the blame on Undocumented, (Illegals) Immigrants for raping, robbing, etc.
Lets talk about real facts. Let's expose the real facts and not myth's or spreading the Xenophobia and racism against Latinos.

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