Operation
Candyman
The FBI today announced that more than 89
persons in over 20 states have been charged in the first phase of a
nationwide crackdown on the proliferation of child pornography via the
Internet. During the course of this investigative initiative, known as
“Operation Candyman,” over 266 searches have been conducted, with more
searches anticipated. To date, 27 persons have been arrested and
admitted to the prior molestation of over 36 children. More arrests are
anticipated during the week and in coming months. Individuals identified
as subjects in “Operation Candyman” include Little League coaches, a
teacher’s aide, a guidance counselor, school bus driver, foster care
parent and professionals in the medical, educational, military and law
enforcement fields.
“Operation Candyman demonstrates our
commitment to protecting our nation’s
children from sexual predators.
The FBI’s investigation has already resulted in the arrests of many
individuals who have targeted children as their victims. This extensive
operation should serve as a warning to others that we will find and
prosecute those who target and endanger our children,” Attorney General
John Ashcroft said.
FBI Director Robert S. Mueller said, “The
FBI will diligently pursue and arrest those individuals who exploit our
children by distributing, producing and exchanging child pornographic
images.”
“Operation Candyman” should serve as an
example that the FBI will not tolerate the collectors and distributors
of child pornography who continue to exploit our children,” Mueller
said. “We will diligently shut down any and all websites, Egroups,
bulletin boards, and any other mediums that will foster the continued
exploitation of our children.”
Egroups, maintained by Yahoo, allow
individuals to correspond with like-minded persons via email, chat,
bulletin boards, and file transfers. “Operation Candyman,” named after
its Egroup Uniform Resource Locator, (URL),
www.egroups.com/groups/thecandyman was a yearlong undercover operation
conducted by the FBI’s Houston Child Exploitation Task Force and the
United States Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Texas. The task
force is comprised of select investigators from the FBI and the Houston
Police Department. The Candyman Egroup allowed collectors and
distributors of child pornography to use online resources to retrieve
and distribute child pornography.
All 56 FBI field offices, nearly every U.S.
Attorney’s Office across the country, and the Department of Justice’s
Criminal Division, through its Child Exploitation & Obscenity
Section, have participated extensively in this investigation in an
effort to identify members of the Candyman Egroup, and will continue an
aggressive investigation until all identified perpetrators have been
successfully arrested and prosecuted. In addition to the Candyman
Egroup, the FBI has initiated investigations into other Egroups that
facilitated the distribution, production and exchange of child
pornography. It is estimated there were over 7,000 members of the
Candyman Egroup, with some 2,400 residing in foreign
countries.
Executive Assistant Director Bruce J.
Gebhardt, Criminal Investigative Division, said FBI field offices
carried out “Operation Candyman ” in concert with local and state law
enforcement agencies around the country. “Without the continued support
of local and state law enforcement, it would be difficult for the FBI to
combat such an enormous tasking of this magnitude,” Gebhardt
said.
To combat the proliferation of online child
sexual exploitation, the FBI established a nationwide initiative code
named “Innocent Images.” The Innocent Images initiative is composed of
23 task forces in 56 FBI field offices around the country, their sole
investigative purpose is to investigate and eradicate online sexual
exploitation of children and the production and distribution of child
pornography.
Since their inception in 1995, Innocent
Images task forces have initiated over 5,700 investigations and have
arrested and convicted over 3,000 persons. The task forces are made up
of FBI, state and local law enforcement, United States Attorneys, and
other federal and state agencies. At FBI Headquarters, Criminal
Investigative Division, Crimes Against Children Unit, coordinated
“Operation Candyman.”