Online predator
Online predators are individuals who commit
child sexual abuse that begins or takes place on the
Internet.
Conceptions
Internet-facilitated sex crimes against minors involve deceit and
begin with adults communicating with children over the Internet with the
goal of coercing them into illegal sexual activity. Sometimes the
sexual abuse happens face to face.
[1][2]
Chat rooms,
instant messaging,
Internet forums,
social networking sites,
cell phones, and even
video game consoles have all attracted online predators.
[3][4][5][6]
Some individuals have initiated actions against laws designed to protect children.
Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010), was a
United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit case assessing the constitutionality of
Utah Code Ann. § 77-27-21.5, a law that requires
sex offenders to register
their internet identifiers with the state in order to "assist in
investigating kidnapping and sex-related crimes, and in apprehending
offenders".
[7][8] In this case, a convicted
sex offender, appearing anonymously as
John Doe, appealed a
decision by the
U.S. District Court for the District of Utah to
vacate an order
enjoining the enforcement of Utah Code Ann. § 77-27-21.5.
Prevention
Much of the current strategies emphasize parental control and the
dangers of divulging personal information. Parents are instructed to
teach children never to arrange face to face meetings with someone they
met online, never give out personal information or post photos of
themselves online, keep the computer in a common area, use
parental controls, know children's passwords and forbid internet usage when the parents are not home.
[9] Media coverage suggests that inexperienced young children are vulnerable to internet predators due to naïveté.
Criticism
Cases involving stalking, violence, abduction, rape and/or murder are
very rare. Most online sex offenders are young adults who target teens
and seduce victims into sexual relationships. They take time to develop
the trust and confidence of teens, so the teens see these relationships
as romances or sexual adventures. Nearly 75 percent of victims who met
offenders face-to-face did so more than once. Most of these offenders
are charged with crimes such as statutory rape for non-forcible sexual
contact as the victims are, by law,
too young to consent.
The youth most vulnerable to online sex offenders have histories of
sexual or physical abuse, family problems, and tendencies to take risks
both on- and offline. A 2007 study found no cases of minors being
targeted by internet predators on the basis of information they had
posted on social networking sites. The research that concluded the
statistic that "1 in 5 children are sexually solicited online"
[10] is being questioned.
[11]
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