In another example of the increasingly
international nature of crime, a man was recently indicted on federal
charges of running 18 Chinese-language child pornography websites out of
his apartment in Flushing, New York. The websites were being advertised
to Chinese-speaking individuals in China, in the U.S., and other
countries.
This case serves as an example of something else as well:
the increasingly international nature of law enforcement. While the FBI
investigated this case in the U.S., we received what U.S. Attorney
Preet Bharara of the Southern District of New York called “extensive
cooperation and assistance” from the Chinese Ministry of Public
Security.
How it all started. In late 2010,
the FBI—through our legal attaché office in Beijing—received information
from Chinese officials about their investigation of a large-scale child
pornography website housed on U.S. servers. And one of their main
suspects, a Chinese-born man, was living in New York. So our New York
office opened an investigation under our Innocent Images National
Initiative and instituted an undercover operation.
The investigation. While the main
webpage advertised the various categories of pornographic pictures that
were available, our undercover agents—with the help of an FBI Chinese
language specialist—discovered that in order to actually view, post, or
download the pornography, you had to pay a membership fee ($25
quarterly, $50 annually, and $100 for a “lifetime” membership). The
website conveniently accepted all payment types—credit cards, wire and
bank transfers, online payments, and even cash that could be mailed to
what turned out to be a money transfer office in New York. After
becoming “members,” the agents saw hundreds of disturbing pictures and
videos of children of all different nationalities engaging in sexually
explicit conduct.
Through our investigative efforts, we were
able to determine that the site—and its related online payment
system—resided on the servers of a web hosting company in Dallas and
that the subscriber of the website domain lived in Flushing. We also
traced two e-mail accounts—one featured on the site and the other
affiliated with the website domain—back to the same individual. Through
billing information, we learned that the man had made about $20,000 per
month from his subscribers. We believe he had been operating the site
since at least 2007.
After the arrest, we identified 17
additional Chinese-language child pornography websites he allegedly
maintained and operated. We also seized two servers in Dallas where
those sites were hosted. All 18 websites have been shut down.
During the course of the operation, FBI
and Chinese investigators and prosecutors met to discuss the case and
to talk about future cooperation on similar cases.
One concrete outcome of this partnership?
The Ministry of Public Security sent its first Chinese officer to join
the FBI’s Innocent Images International Task Force and receive
specialized training on such topics as legal principles, emerging trends
and technologies, and investigative techniques. Once the fall 2011
training session is completed, the task force will number 100 officers
in 43 countries. Since its launch in 2004, the task force has built an
international network of Internet child sexual exploitation
investigators who share intelligence and work joint operations across
national borders. Exactly what’s needed to combat the many child
pornographers using the Internet to extend their nefarious reach around
the globe.
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