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Prof. Alisdair A. Gillespie De Montfort University, UK
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Examines the response of the criminal law to child sexual exploitation. Focuses primarily on the issue of child solicitation/grooming. Also considers the response where children generate harmful content.
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Child Solicitation/Grooming Attack ◦ No previous identification of the child. ◦ No intention to abuse in the future. ◦ Extremely high-risk. Abuse ◦ Offender unlikely to want to be caught. ◦ Likely to want to create a pattern of abuse ◦ Control required. Grooming is neither new nor particularly hi- tech. How does an offender abuse a child?
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Child Solicitation/Grooming Controlling a Child ◦ Negative control Abuse of power (teacher, cleric etc.) Threats to child (violence, care etc.) Threats to those known to the child ◦ “Positive” control Befriending a child McLachlan notes that “monsters don’t get children, nice men do.” Create a situation where the child “acquiesces”
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The Internet allows for a degree of anonymity. Quayle & Taylor “You can’t go up to a boy in the street and say… do you fancy having sex… whereas you could online.” Yet we also know that (increasingly) it is not by subterfuge.
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Place in International Law. Instrument OPSC CoE Sexual Exploitation CoE Cybercrime EU Directive
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CoE Convention on Protection of Children. ◦ Each party shall take the necessary legislative measures...to criminalise the intentional proposal, through information and communication technologies, of an adult to meet a child who has not reached the age [of consent]...for the purpose of committing any of the [sexual] offences...where this proposal has been followed by material acts leading to such a meeting. ◦ EU Directive (Article 6.1 has similar wording).
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Difficulties: ◦ Proving intent. ◦ What are “material steps”? ◦ “Thought crime”? ◦ Proactive or Reactive?
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Some changes in grooming behaviour. There appears some evidence that less meeting and more on pornography. Difficulty where law focuses on meeting a child.
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The EU Directive is the only international instrument that appears to have recognised this directly. ◦ Member states shall…ensure that an attempt, by means of information and communication technology, to commit the offences…by an adult soliciting a child…to provide child pornography depicting that child is punishable. (Article 6.2) ◦ Other instruments arguably cover it through procuring child pornography. Still limiting: Cyber-sex?
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England (famously) has a ‘grooming’ offence (s.15, SOA 2003) but this is somewhat misunderstood. ◦ It arguably does not criminalise grooming but the results of grooming. ◦ It is focused on the issue of a meeting. ◦ It is only one of a patchwork of offences that relate to grooming.
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Causing/inciting a child to engage in sexual activity Criminalises the invitation to a child to engage in sexual activity. s. 10 Causing a child to watch a sexual act. Includes sending pornography (adult or child) to a child. s. 12 Arranging or facilitating the commission of an offence. An inchoate offence that criminalises the arrangement of an offence that will lead to a child sex offence. s.14 Meeting a child following grooming. Intentionally meeting a child to have sexual relations with it following previous meetings or communication. s.15
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Tackling the solicitation/grooming of a child requires a multi-faceted approach. Traditional approaches concentrated on the meeting with a child but this is not the only form of exploitative situation. ◦ Some studies suggest that once a child has sent indecent material / posed in front of a webcam the footage is then used to blackmail the victim into contact offending. Recognition of the portability of technology.
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