- This organization provides free technology to law enforcement agencies to help protect children from Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) and identify individuals involved in the possession and distribution of such material.
Trinity Mount Ministries
Friday, March 28, 2025
CRC Technology Assists in Arrest of Man Involved in Online Child Abuse Network
Thursday, March 27, 2025
@elonmusk by Brett Fletcher @TrinityMount
@elonmusk
I think it is hilarious how the world of social media seems very upset since the brilliant and wealthy man, Elon Musk, purchased Twitter! "That’s it! I'm leaving Twitter!" Twitter is ruined!" "Advertisers are leaving Twitter!" Etc., ad nauseum!
The only thing I know: When I founded Trinity Mount Ministries back in 2011, the two main social media platforms that would be instrumental for the cause of sharing information about Missing and exploited children, related news articles and child safety content would be Twitter and Facebook. Now, as we are approaching 2023, (12 years later) this remains true. No other social media platforms comes close to the combination of Twitter and Facebook, in relation to Trinity Mount Ministries, Trinity Mount Global Missing Kids and Trinity Mount International Missing Kids.
So, leave these platforms if you must... I will continue to utilize these valuable tools for the above-mentioned cause: helping to find missing and exploited children, domestically and internationally, as well as promoting child safety. I hardly think Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg are too concerned about anybody's departure(s) from their social media platforms. My guess - these two platforms will do whatever necessary to stay afloat.
The only difference I've noticed on Twitter: it's interesting and even exciting to some extent. I've always believed and maintain this to be true: if you don't like what someone shares: ignore it, fight against it, block it, protest it... though, a platform is there for you to use as well, as you see fit...to some extent. I believe in moderation as well as free speech. They can co-exist... when clear, cool and sound heads prevail.
Brett Fletcher, Founder of Trinity Mount Ministries
@TrinityMount https://www.twitter.com/TrinityMount
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Arrested in underage sex sting, Minnesota lawmaker resigns
Republican state senator Justin Eichorn resigned Thursday before the Minnesota Senate could vote on his expulsion. Bloomington Police arrested Eichorn, 40, on Monday on charges of attempted coercion and enticement of a minor. He is presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. He was expected to appear in federal court Thursday afternoon.
How have public officials responded to the arrest? Minnesota Republicans called for Eichorn to resign on Tuesday when the charges became public. They were preparing to expel him on Thursday when he resigned, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported. State Senate Majority Leader Mark Johnson said Eichorn’s resignation was the best option for both the Senate and his family. Eichorn is married and has four children.
How did officers catch Eichorn? Eichorn was caught by a police sting operation meant to suppress the demand for juvenile sex trafficking, according to an FBI agent’s affidavit. According to the Wednesday court filing, Eichorn communicated with an undercover law enforcement officer posing as a 17-year-old girl. Eichorn allegedly solicited inappropriate photos from the fictitious girl and arranged to meet up for sex. Police arrested him when he arrived at the predetermined location.
Saturday, March 15, 2025
TBI Arrests, Charges Medina Man in Ongoing Child Exploitation Case
GIBSON COUNTY – Special agents assigned to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s Cybercrime & Digital Evidence Unit have arrested and charged a Medina man accused of uploading child sex abuse material.
On December 26, 2024, TBI agents opened the investigation after receiving a cybertip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) about an individual uploading child sex abuse material to an electronic service provider account. During the course of the investigation, agents identified the user account to be associated with Brandon Fairchild.
On March 9th, 2025, a search warrant was executed for the electronic service provider account, and Brandon Fairchild (DOB: 05/27/1981) was subsequently taken into custody and charged with one count of Sexual Exploitation of a Minor, and two counts of Unlawful Photography. He was booked into the Gibson County Jail.
The charges and allegations referenced in this release are merely accusations of criminal conduct and not evidence. The defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and convicted through due process of law.
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is an ICAC affiliate of the Tennessee ICAC Task Force. Anyone with information about these cases or other cases of online child exploitation should contact the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Tipline at 1-800-TBI-FIND, TipsToTBI@tbi.tn.gov, or report via the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) CyberTipline at CyberTipline.org.
Parents seeking additional information about cybercrime, child exploitation, and how best to safeguard their loved ones can visit www.NetSmartz.org for a variety of topical, age-appropriate resources.
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Child Safety Experts Testify in Support of "Duty of Care" to Protect Kids Online
WASHINGTON, D.C.] – U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), the author of the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) with U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), asked two child safety experts about their support for a “duty of care” that would require online platforms to prevent and mitigate certain harms that they know their platforms and products are causing to young users.
KOSA includes a “duty of care” that forces online platforms to consider and address the negative impacts of their specific product or service on younger users, including things like their recommendation algorithms and addictive product features. The specific covered harms include suicide, eating disorders, substance use disorders, and sexual exploitation.
“There needs to be a duty of care because ultimately these children are on their platforms,” answered John Pizzuro, the CEO of Raven, an advocacy organization focused on focused on ending child exploitation. “So there's a burden on them to make sure that the children are safe.”
Michelle DeLaune, the CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), agreed: “We cannot prosecute our way out of the problem. The reports are coming in, law enforcement rightly is investigating. Really, we need to be looking upstream about preventing these crimes from happening in the first place.”
Blumenthal and Blackburn first introduced KOSA in February 2022 following reporting by the Wall Street Journal and after spearheading a series of five subcommittee hearings with social media companies and advocates on the repeated failures by tech giants to protect kids on their platforms. KOSA will require platforms to enable the strongest privacy settings by default, force platforms to prevent and mitigate specific dangers to minors, provide parents and educators new controls to help protect children, and require independent audits and research into social media companies.
The full text of Blumenthal’s exchange with Pizzuro and DeLaune is available here and copied below:
U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT): Thank you very much, Senator Hawley. We have worked together, and my hope is that we will continue to work together, especially on the issues that are before us today—and most especially, the Kids Online Safety Act, which was approved by the United States Senate in a vote of 91-3. 91-3. Doesn’t happen very often these days in the Senate. It was last session, and unfortunately the House never gave it a vote, which in my view, is a tragedy because it helps protect kids against the toxic content and the algorithms, the black box methodology that social media uses.
And of course, the tech companies who would be held accountable under this law say they are for it and then they worked behind the scenes against it, and they try to shift blame for this skyrocketing increase in online harms to others, avoiding the blame that they well deserve. But more important than the blame is reforms that they could well institute, providing tools and safeguards for parents and children and a duty of care so that they are required to mitigate harm if they know it is happening or have reason to know what is happening. And of course disclosure of the algorithms—the black box drivers of that toxic content.
Mr. Pizzuro, you say that we are not going to arrest our way—I think in your testimony, we cannot arrest our way out of this problem. Let me ask you, perhaps you and Ms. DeLaune, what you think about the duty of care as a means of providing some safeguards here.
John Pizzuro: Well, I think from my standpoint, is that there is no safeguards. And I think that's the problem, right? The AI algorithms push all this content to them, and it doesn't matter what the mechanism is. So, there needs to be a duty of care because ultimately these children are on their platforms. So there's a burden on them to make sure that the children are safe.
Michelle DeLaune: Thank you, Senator. It is really incumbent upon the companies to know their customer. You know, at this point, most of the sites, most things online, you just check a box, “You’re over 13,” “You’re over 21,” whatever it may be. They are working and looking at age assurance, knowing who the child is, what age they are at. Going back to the case that we just saw a moment ago, knowing who they are engaging with, whether or not they are over age, under age. There is a shared responsibility, in our view, for the platforms, for the app stores, for the device, in knowing who the child is and building and designing safer experiences for them, recognizing their age.
I will also talk briefly about the necessity. We cannot prosecute our way out of the problem. The reports are coming in, law enforcement rightly is investigating. Really, we need to be looking upstream about preventing these crimes from happening in the first place.
One feature that we are seeing an increase, we actually saw a 1300% increase in one year, in the use of generative AI to create child sexual abuse imagery. There, our blockers right now in trying to prevent that. The current legislation allows the National Center to provide specific elements to help in the prevention of these crimes only with electronic service providers.
What the Stop CSAM Act also allows us to do is share this information with other entities who are furthering the protection of children—whether it be an NGO, whether it be a gen AI tech provider. Right now, we are hearing requests working with Meta, with OpenAI, with Google, who are looking to build classifiers to detect generative artificial CSAM, AI CSAM. But there is limited information in some cases about what we can share. So, another really important thing that we just keep going back to is we will continue responding. We need to be preventing, they need to know who their customers are, and we need to be able to share good data, helpful data, to help them build solutions to the problems.
Blumenthal: And I agree that they have the technology. They know the customers. The burden should be on them. That is the importance of the duty of care. It is a design feature, it’s not a censorship mechanism. It does not block content. It gives the consumers choices so that they can block it if they wish, or their parents to take action to protect their children with tools that they deserve to have. And the duty of care imposes a measure of responsibility on the tech companies themselves to address the kind of problems that they are seeing and we are seeing children facing.
Thank you all for your testimony today. Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
Monday, March 10, 2025
FBI - What We Investigate - Human Trafficking
Human trafficking is the illegal exploitation of a person. Anyone can be a victim of human trafficking, and it can occur in any U.S. community—cities, suburbs, and even rural areas. The FBI works human trafficking cases under its Crimes Against Children and Human Trafficking program. We take a trauma informed, victim-centered approach in investigating these cases.
Here in the United States, both U.S. residents and foreign nationals are being bought and sold like modern-day slaves. Traffickers use violence, manipulation, or false promises of well-paying jobs or romantic relationships to exploit victims. Victims are forced to work as prostitutes or to take jobs as migrant, domestic, restaurant, or factory workers with little or no pay. Human trafficking is a heinous crime that exploits the most vulnerable in society.
Under the human trafficking program, the FBI investigates:
- Sex trafficking: When individuals are compelled by force, fraud, or coercion to engage in commercial sex acts. Sex trafficking of a minor occurs when the victim is under the age of 18. For cases involving minors, it is not necessary to prove force, fraud, or coercion.
- Labor trafficking: When individuals are compelled by force, threats, or fraud to perform labor or service.
- Domestic servitude: When individuals within a household appear to be nannies, housekeepers, or other types of domestic workers, but they are being controlled and exploited.
Report Trafficking & Get Help
If you are a human trafficking victim or have information about a potential trafficking situation, call the National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC) at 1-888-373-7888 or text 233733. NHTRC is a national, toll-free hotline, with specialists available to answer calls from anywhere in the country, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. You can also submit a tip on the NHTRC website.
If you believe a child is involved in a trafficking situation, submit a tip through the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s CyberTipline or call 1-800-THE-LOST. FBI personnel assigned to NCMEC review information that is provided to the CyberTipline.
Human Trafficking Task Forces
The most effective way to investigate human trafficking is through a collaborative, multi-agency approach with our federal, state, local, and tribal partners.
- FBI Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Forces operate within nearly every FBI field office. The ultimate goal of these task forces is to recover victims and investigate traffickers at the state and federal level.
- The Anti-Trafficking Coordination Team Initiative builds human trafficking enforcement efforts and enhances access to specialized human trafficking subject matter experts, leads, and intelligence. Each team develops and implements a strategic action plan, which leads to high-impact federal investigations and prosecutions. The initiative is a collaborative effort among the FBI, the Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of Labor. Twelve FBI field offices participate in the initiative, including Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, El Paso, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Memphis, Miami, Minneapolis, Newark, Portland, and Sacramento.
- The Enhanced Collaborative Model Human Trafficking Program is a multi-agency task force initiative funded through the Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crime and Bureau of Justice Assistance. This program supports the development and enhancement of multi-disciplinary human trafficking task forces that implement collaborative approaches to combat all forms of human trafficking. These multi-disciplinary task forces include members from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, local prosecutor’s office, federal law enforcement, state/local law enforcement, and a community service provider, with the goal of proactively identifying and recovering victims of human trafficking.
Investigations
Human trafficking investigations are conducted by agents within the human trafficking program and members of our task forces. Investigations often begin through:
- Tips from the public
- Calls to the National Human Trafficking Resource Center Hotline
- A referral from a law enforcement agency
- A referral from a non-government organization
- Proactive victim recovery operations
- Outreach to state governments and community entities
Victim recovery is the primary goal of trafficking investigations. The FBI’s multi-disciplinary team of agents, analysts, victim specialists, and forensic interviewers work together to ensure a victim-centered, trauma-informed response. FBI victim specialists work with local state and federal resources to provide immediate assistance (shelter, food, clothing) and long-term support (counseling, education assistance, job training). After recovering a victim of human trafficking, field offices seek to arrest and successfully prosecute the traffickers.
Over the past decade, the FBI’s human trafficking investigations have been responsible for the arrest of thousands of traffickers and the recovery of numerous victims. The FBI will continue to take part in multi-agency efforts to combat the threat.
Trafficking Victims Protection Act
The 2000 Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) was the first comprehensive federal law to address human trafficking. In addition to the protections offered through immigration relief for foreign national victims of human trafficking, it focuses on prevention through public awareness programs, both domestically and abroad, and prosecution through new federal criminal statutes.
The TVPA granted the FBI the statutory authority to investigate matters of forced labor; trafficking with respect to peonage, slavery, involuntary servitude, or forced labor; sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion; and unlawful conduct with respect to documents in furtherance of trafficking.
The TVPA gave law enforcement the ability to protect international victims of human trafficking through several forms of immigration relief, including Continued Presence and the T visa. Continued Presence allows law enforcement officers to request temporary legal status in the United States for a foreign national whose presence is necessary for the continued success of a human trafficking investigation. The T visa allows foreign victims of human trafficking to become temporary U.S. residents and apply for permanent residency after three years. The TVPA also established a law requiring defendants of human trafficking investigations to pay restitution to the victims they exploited. More on human trafficking laws.
Innocence Lost National Initiative
The FBI, in conjunction with the Department of Justice’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), launched the Innocence Lost National Initiative to address the growing problem of child sex trafficking in the United States. In the years since its inception, the initiative has expanded to 86 dedicated Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Forces. These task forces, with the Offices of the U.S. Attorneys and the FBI’s Victim Services Division, have successfully worked to identify and recover thousands of children.
Victims
The FBI is committed to ensuring that victims receive the rights they are entitled to and the assistance they need to cope with crime. Treating victims with respect and providing them with assistance benefits victims and helps us build better cases.
- PSA: The FBI Warns of False Job Advertisements Linked to Labor Trafficking at Scam Compounds
- Department of Justice - Human Trafficking Prosecutions
- Department of Justice - Civil Rights Division
- Department of Justice - Human Trafficking Laws
- National Center for Missing & Exploited Children - Child Sex Trafficking
Human Trafficking News
03.04.2025
Previously Convicted Sex Offender Pleads Guilty to Federal Exploitation and Sex Trafficking Crimes
03.03.2025
02.24.2025
Charlotte Sex Trafficker and Co-Conspirator are Sentenced to Prison
02.21.2025
Colorado City Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Role in Child Sexual Abuse Ring
02.21.2025
San Diego Gang Member Sentenced in Organized Crime Conspiracy
02.19.2025
02.18.2025
02.14.2025
Man Once on FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitives List Appears in Court in St. Louis
02.12.2025
02.10.2025
CBP Officer Arrested in El Paso, Charged with Alien Smuggling and Drug Trafficking
02.07.2025
Jury Convicts Two Defendants Who Were Charged with 23 Other Ohioans in Narcotics Distribution Ring
02.06.2025
Laredo Felon Guilty in Conspiracy to Smuggle Hundreds of Aliens
02.03.2025
01.30.2025
01.24.2025
Friday, March 7, 2025
Violent Online Networks Target Vulnerable and Underage Populations Across the United States and Around the Globe
Alert Number: I-030625-PSA
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is warning the public of a sharp increase in the activity of "764" and other violent online networks which operate within the United States and around the globe. These networks methodically target and exploit minors and other vulnerable individuals, and it is imperative the public be made aware of the risk and the warning signs exhibited by victims. These networks use threats, blackmail, and manipulation to coerce or extort victims into producing, sharing, or live-streaming acts of self-harm, animal cruelty, sexually explicit acts, and/or suicide. The footage is then circulated among members of the network to continue to extort victims and exert control over them.
Violent Online Networks
Some of the violent actors in these online networks are motivated by a desire to cause fear and chaos through their criminal conduct. However, motivations are highly individualized, and some threat actors may be engaging in criminal activity solely for sexual gratification, social status or a sense of belonging, or for a mix of other reasons that may not be ideologically motivated.
Targeting
These networks exist on publicly available online platforms, such as social media sites, gaming platforms, and mobile applications commonly used by young people. Many threat actors systematically target underage females, but anyone — juveniles, adults, males, and females — can be targeted. Victims are typically between the ages of 10 and 17 years old, but the FBI has seen some victims as young as 9 years old. These violent actors target vulnerable populations to include children as well as those who struggle with a variety of mental health issues, such as depression, eating disorders, or suicidal ideation. Threat actors often groom their victims by first establishing a trusting or romantic relationship before eventually manipulating and coercing them into engaging in escalating harmful behavior designed to shame and isolate them.
Extortion and Self-harm
The networks use extortion and blackmail tactics, such as threatening to swat1 or dox2 their victims, if the victims do not comply with the network's demands. The actors can manipulate or coerce victims to produce Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) and other videos depicting animal cruelty and self-harm. Self-harm activity can include cutting, stabbing, or fansigning.3 Members of the networks threaten to share the explicit videos or photos of the victims with the victims' family, friends, and/or post the photos and videos to the internet. The networks control their victims through extreme fear and many members have an end-goal of forcing the victims they extort or coerce to live-stream their own suicide for the network's entertainment or the threat actor's own sense of fame.
Recommendations
The FBI urges the public to exercise increased vigilance when posting personal photos, videos, or personal identifying information, or direct messaging online. Although seemingly innocuous when posted or shared, the images and videos can provide malicious actors an abundant supply of content to exploit and manipulate or alter for criminal activity. Victims are vulnerable to embarrassment, harassment, extortion, or continued long-term re-victimization. The FBI recommends looking for warning signs indicating a victim may be engaging in self-harm or having suicidal thoughts.
The FBI recommends that family, friends, and associates consider the following potential indicators and warning signs:
- Sudden behavior changes such as becoming withdrawn, moody, or irritable.
- Sudden changes in appearance, especially neglect of appearance.
- Changes in eating or sleeping habits.
- Dropping out of activities and becoming more isolated and withdrawn.
- A new online "friend" or network prospective victims seem infatuated with and/or scared of.
- Receipt of anonymous gifts, such as items delivered to your home, currency, gaming currency or other virtual items.
- Scars, often in patterns.
- Fresh cuts, scratches, bruises, bite marks, burns, or other wounds.
- Carvings, such as words or symbols, on the skin.
- Wearing long sleeves or pants in hot weather.
- Writing in blood or what appears to be blood.
- Threatening to commit suicide and openly talking about death, not being wanted or needed, or not being around.
- Idealization of mass shooting or mass casualty events.
- Family pets or other animals being harmed or dying under suspicious circumstances.
- Family pets uncharacteristically avoid or are fearful of your child or you.
- Law enforcement being called to the home under false pretenses (known as swatted or doxxed) by an unknown person.
The FBI recommends the public consider the following when sharing content (e.g., photos and videos) or engaging with individuals online:
- Monitor children's and other vulnerable individuals' online activity and discuss risks associated with sharing personal information.
- Use discretion when posting images, videos, and personal content online, particularly those that include children or their information.
For more information on how to protect children and others refer to information on online risks here: Parents, Caregivers, Teachers — FBI.
Additional Resources
If you are worried about someone who might be self-harming or is at risk of suicide the following resources may help:
- Consult your pediatrician or other health care provider who can provide an initial evaluation or a referral to a mental health professional.
- Connecting your child to a mental health resource can help them learn healthy coping skills for intense emotions and help reduce the risk of a serious injury.
- If it is an immediate, life-threatening emergency dial 9-1-1.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children provides a free service known as Take It Down, which helps minor victims, even if they are now an adult, remove or stop the online sharing of nude, or sexually explicit online content. For more information, visit https://takeitdown.ncmec.org.
If you believe you are the victim of a crime using these tactics, retain all information regarding the incident (e.g., usernames, email addresses, websites or names of platforms used for communication, photos, videos, etc.) and immediately report it to:
- FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center at www.ic3.gov
- FBI Field Office (www.fbi.gov/contact-us/field-offices or 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324))
- National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (www.cybertipline.org or 1-800-THE LOST)
Reporting these crimes can help law enforcement identify malicious actors and prevent further victimization.
Thursday, March 6, 2025
Local child pornography case leads to nine children rescued in Philippines
Collaboration between local and federal agencies results in successful rescue operation
A local investigation by the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC) has culminated in a significant international operation, resulting in the arrest of five suspects in the Philippines and the rescue of nine children from a horrific situation.
The case began with two cyber tips reported by Facebook to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. As the investigation progressed, it became evident that the case had deeper ties to the Philippines, which prompted local authorities to collaborate with federal partners.
Kelly Jasperson, 63, Wyoming
"It was reported by Facebook to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and then once it was determined the jurisdiction in which the incident occurred, it’s transferred to the ICAC commander, which in this case was Chris McDonald,” explained Special Agent Joel Greene.
The investigative team, including Special Agents Dan Allison and Joel Greene from the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigations, worked closely with Lincoln County Attorney Spencer Allred. They conducted extensive searches and interviews, uncovering alarming evidence about Kelly Jasperson, 63.
During the investigation, forensic analysis revealed that Jasperson had been involved in paying thousands of dollars to women in the Philippines for the production of child pornography over an extended period of time. “Our forensic guy in Cheyenne, had Special Agent Daniel Brown process Jasperson’s Facebook accounts, and that’s when it was revealed that it was even deeper than we originally believed,” Special Agent Greene recounted. “Not only was he contacting these women from the Philippines, he was paying them for manufacturing child pornography in real time.”
As the investigation deepened, the team faced challenges due to jurisdictional limitations.
They reached out to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), who had agents in the Philippines. “We sent them our entire case file in July 2024, and unbeknownst to us, they had been using the information to infiltrate that sex ring,” Special Agent Greene noted. The collaboration proved beneficial when HSI began using the information provided to infiltrate a child pornography ring.
“Some of those names correlated with the information from the cell phone that had been downloaded by Special Agent Brown,” Special Agent Allison explained. “He executed some additional search forms on Facebook, and we were able to collaborate an idea of the first names being utilized in the Philippines that may correspond with chats and financial transactions involving Mr. Jasperson.”
In late January, “we got an email saying, we’re getting ready to take this group down. Would you like to watch?” The night of the operation was intense. “I was on the phone and we were watching as the agents stormed the room,” Special Agent Greene said. The operation led to the arrest of five suspects including a mother, her sister, and husband and the rescue of nine children, ages 5 months to 16. “It was some of the most graphic material, especially knowing that it was actually live and taking place. It was a challenge,” Special Agent Greene admitted.
“Ultimately, a lot of children were saved, and some bad guys went to jail,” he noted. All of the children rescued were sent to the Tim Tebow Foundation, which aids in their recovery and rehabilitation.
The Philippine government is set to prosecute the suspects, with potential life sentences for those involved. Although more time was requested in the sentencing, Mr. Jasperson received a five to eight year sentence on one count and a four to eight year sentence on another after pleading guilty and being sentenced in December of 2024. Jasperson is currently being held in Torrington, at the Wyoming Medium Correctional Institution.
No comment was provided by the press deadline by Jasperson’s Defense Attorney.
This was a big case that had a happy ending for those children who were being abused daily. Allred expressed immense pride in the collaborative effort, stating, “A case that started out in little Osmond, Wyoming, led to nine kids being rescued in the Philippines.”
The successful rescue operation highlights the crucial role of the ICAC and the collaboration between local, state, and federal agencies in combating child exploitation on an international scale. “We, as a team, discuss how hard this job can be on agents. It gets difficult to view some of these images, especially when you know there are kids’ lives involved,” ICAC Commander Chris noted. “But when you see nine kids get rescued, the only reason those kids were saved is because of Dan and Joel. It’s just unbelievable. It’s fantastic.”
As Attorney Allred put it, “Dan, Joel, and Chris, this ICAC team, these guys are the real heroes out here.” Their determination and collaboration have not only made a significant impact locally but have also resonated globally, bringing hope to children who desperately needed it.