Trinity Mount Ministries

Sunday, May 27, 2018

New ID cards promise to increase child safety in APX



WoodmenLife Chapter 71 of Appomattox has partnered with the Appomattox County Sheriff’s Department to provide a Smart 30D identification system. This system will be used to create identification cards for children, with information printed on them including the child’s name, their parent(s) name(s), phone number, and address, as well as information such as the child’s height, weight, eye color and hair color. 
This service will be available to the public during various public events throughout the county. The Sheriff’s Department will have a tent or table where parents can bring their children to their mobile setup and have an I.D. card made. 

Woodmen of the World representative Becky Henderson was pleased to present such an important safety tool. 

“Sergeant Nipper presented to us the need for this system,” she explained. “One of Woodmen’s goals is community outreach and providing services to our community.”
The Smart 30D identification system is designed to work well with the Project Life Saver devices that the Sheriff’s Department offers as well. These small devices that look similar in shape to a wristwatch contain transmitters which transmit a signal to the receiver at the Sheriff’s Department. If a child, or elderly person dealing with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, for example, is wearing this device and becomes lost, the Sheriff’s Department can use the receiver to help find them. 

If a person is set up in the system with the Project Life Saver program, their Smart 30D I.D. card will provide their transmitter number, which would assist greatly in a search if they should get lost. 

The identification cards, alone, can be helpful in the event that a child should become lost, because if the child has the I.D. card in their pocket, they can show it to a helpful adult, such as a police officer or another authority figure.

If the child does not carry the card, their parent can carry it and have it available to present to authorities in the case that the child should go missing. Because the card contains a photo and description of the child, the search process could begin faster and easier with this sort of documentation.   

“This is something that Appomattox is fortunate to have gotten from Woodmen of the World,” Sergeant K.C. Nipper stated. 
Sheriff Barry Letterman agreed.  
“ We appreciate the Woodmen of the World’s assistance in purchasing the equipment, and it will be used to help the community during public safety events,” Letterman said.

Times Virginian

TrinityMount.Info

New ID cards promise to increase child safety in APX


WoodmenLife Chapter 71 of Appomattox has partnered with the Appomattox County Sheriff’s Department to provide a Smart 30D identification system. This system will be used to create identification cards for children, with information printed on them including the child’s name, their parent(s) name(s), phone number, and address, as well as information such as the child’s height, weight, eye color and hair color. 
This service will be available to the public during various public events throughout the county. The Sheriff’s Department will have a tent or table where parents can bring their children to their mobile setup and have an I.D. card made. 
Woodmen of the World representative Becky Henderson was pleased to present such an important safety tool. 
“Sergeant Nipper presented to us the need for this system,” she explained. “One of Woodmen’s goals is community outreach and providing services to our community.”
The Smart 30D identification system is designed to work well with the Project Life Saver devices that the Sheriff’s Department offers as well. These small devices that look similar in shape to a wristwatch contain transmitters which transmit a signal to the receiver at the Sheriff’s Department. If a child, or elderly person dealing with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, for example, is wearing this device and becomes lost, the Sheriff’s Department can use the receiver to help find them. 
If a person is set up in the system with the Project Life Saver program, their Smart 30D I.D. card will provide their transmitter number, which would assist greatly in a search if they should get lost. 
The identification cards, alone, can be helpful in the event that a child should become lost, because if the child has the I.D. card in their pocket, they can show it to a helpful adult, such as a police officer or another authority figure.  
If the child does not carry the card, their parent can carry it and have it available to present to authorities in the case that the child should go missing. Because the card contains a photo and description of the child, the search process could begin faster and easier with this sort of documentation.   
“This is something that Appomattox is fortunate to have gotten from Woodmen of the World,” Sergeant K.C. Nipper stated. 
Sheriff Barry Letterman agreed.  “ We appreciate the Woodmen of the World’s assistance in purchasing the equipment, and it will be used to help the community during public safety events,” Letterman said. 


Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Virginia Man Pleads Guilty to Producing and Distributing Child Pornography

Department of Justice -
Office of Public Affairs

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Virginia Man Pleads Guilty to Producing and Distributing Child Pornography

A Manassas Park, Virginia man pleaded guilty today to producing and distributing child pornography.

Acting Assistant Attorney General John P. Cronan of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Acting U.S. Attorney Tracy Doherty-McCormick of the Eastern District of Virginia and Assistant Director in Charge Nancy McNamara of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement after the plea was accepted by U.S. District Judge Liam O’Grady of the Eastern District of Virginia.

Michael Gerald Moody, 44, pleaded guilty to two counts of producing child pornography and one count of distributing child pornography.  According to admissions made in connection with his guilty plea, Moody admitted that, between 2017 and February 2018, he used a child to engage in sexually explicit conduct and he captured numerous images of that conduct with his cellular phone.  In addition, Moody engaged in text chats with other individuals through the online messaging application Kik Messenger.  These chats principally focused on the exchange of child pornography and discussions of the sexual abuse of children.  In the course of these chats, Moody distributed child pornography—including images that he himself produced, as well as other images—to at least eight other individuals.

Sentencing is scheduled for Sept. 14.

The case is being investigated by the FBI with the assistance of the Manassas Park Police Department.  Trial Attorney Kyle P. Reynolds of the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jay V. Prabhu of the Eastern District of Virginia are prosecuting the case.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit: www.justice.gov/psc.

Trinity Mount Ministries

UNICEF Reunite Children With Their Families

Sarah Ferguson

Becoming separated from their children is a nightmare scenario for parents. When families are caught in humanitarian crises — natural disasters, armed conflict, emergencies — thousands of children go missing.  The longer a child is separated from her or his family, the more difficult it is to locate them and the more at risk a child is to violence, economic and sexual exploitation, abuse and potential trafficking. UNICEF and partners are dedicated to keeping families together, and to reuniting children with their parents and loving caregivers when crisis pulls them apart. 

UNICEF helped reunited 7-year-old Daoussiya with her mother, Hassana, after the little girl spent four months being forced to beg in Algeria.

When children from Niger were recruited into a begging ring in neighboring Algeria, UNICEF and partners worked hard to locate them and reunite them with their families. Seven-year-old Daoussiya spent four months begging on the streets before UNICEF helped her get home to her mother, Hassana, for a joyful reunion on Mother's Day.  © Ashley Gilbertson/VII Photos for UNICEF

Thousands of civilians were killed in brutal urban warfare in the fight to free Mosul, Iraq from the Islamic State.  Thirteen-year-old Mohammed and his family became prisoners in their own home. "They ruined everything," Mohammed says. "People were starving. I tried to escape four times, but I got caught."

His mother feared for his life, so she sent him away. He and a cousin ran through gunfire to cross a checkpoint, but they were worried about the rest of the family, still trapped in their neighborhood. Months later, Mohammed's mother and the other children dashed to safety. "I don't know how we escaped," his mother says, still in shock. "It was like a story from a book. These kids were running in the rain and the mud, barefoot and cold."  After three months on his own, Mohammed was reunited with his family by UNICEF. See Mohammed tell his powerful story above.

In South Sudan, grateful mothers who have been reunited with their missing children hug UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.

Since civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013, over 17,000 children have been reported missing or have become separated from their families. UNICEF and partners have reunited almost 5,400 of those children with their families, to date. Above, ecstatic mothers hug UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta H. Fore in gratitude for bringing their children back to them. © UNICEF

You can help UNICEF reunite children with their families:

PROTECT CHILDREN

Original Article

Trinity Mount Ministries

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Boys — the silent victims of sex trafficking

More than 1 million children, according to the International Labour Organization, are exploited each year in the commercial sex trade. IndyStar columnist Tim Swarens, through the support of a Society of Professional Journalists fellowship, spent more than a year investigating a lucrative business where children are abused with low risk to buyers or traffickers, despite tougher laws and heightened international awareness of the scourge. Google, Eli Lilly and Co., and Indiana Wesleyan University provided additional support for this project.

This is the fourth of 10 columns in the EXPLOITED series, which explores the cultural and economic forces that contribute to commercial sexual exploitation.

SAN DIEGO, Calif. — The silence nearly killed Tom Jones.

As a child, Jones was raped, abused and sold to men for sex. The brutality ended when he was 15. But, like many male victims, Jones didn’t seek help, didn’t tell anyone about the trauma he had suffered.

Instead, he buried his pain and shame deep inside, carrying the burden alone and in silence for another 15 years.

Silence did not equal acceptance. “I’m lucky, because I shouldn’t be here,” Jones says. “I put a lot of focus and energy into taking my own life.”

Two suicide attempts failed. And Jones says he was preparing for a third attempt when he decided finally to reach out for help.

Even then, years after the exploitation ended, it was difficult for Jones to acknowledge what he had suffered. “I was very ashamed to talk to a therapist who I knew cared about me,” he says.

“Key informants pointed out their belief that law enforcement has very little understanding of (commercially exploited) boys. For example, when filing human trafficking reports, they would often ask: ‘Why couldn’t he get away? He’s a boy.’ One informant said she was forced to explain to law enforcement professionals before filing a report that boys and young men can be bought and sold just like girls.”

— “And Boys Too,” ECPAT-USA, 2013 report.

Tom Jones’ tortuous journey — from male child trafficking victim to adult survivor — is far more common than is often acknowledged by anti-trafficking organizations, law enforcement and the news media.

“Boys hear that it only happens to girls,” Steven Procopio, clinical director of MaleSurvivor, a network of therapists and survivors,says. “This is seen as a gender-biased, gender-specific issue.”

The United Nations’ International Labour Organization reinforced that mindset in September when it released updated estimates on the number of human trafficking victims worldwide. The ILO reported that of the 4.8 million people forced to work in the sex trade in 2016, virtually all were girls and women.

As I reported on this series, some nonprofit leaders involved in the fight against trafficking in the U.S. delivered the same message. Boys, they told me, are rarely the victims of commercial exploitation.

“It makes me very angry,” Jerome Elam, a male survivor who is CEO of the Trafficking in America Task Force, said. “The UN and others are not acknowledging the problem. They’re just not getting it in terms of the sex trafficking of males.”

Multiple studies support Elam and Procopio’s contention that boys are exploited far more often than is commonly understood.

In 2016, a Department of Justice-commissioned study, Youth Involvement in the Sex Trade, found that boys make up about 36% of children caught up in the U.S. sex industry (about 60% are female and less than 5% are transgender males and females).

In 2008, researchers from the John Jay School of Criminal Justice reported that boys account for about 45% of child trafficking victims in New York City.

In 2013, an ECPAT-USA report concluded that the “scope of (the commercial sexual exploitation of boys) is vastly under reported.” The researchers also cited the need to better identify male victims, to raise awareness about the harm caused by commercial exploitation and to provide more services designed specifically for boys.

But years later, little progress has been made either in identifying or providing help for male victims.

The result is that tens of thousands of boys and men continue to suffer in silence. And like other victims of sexual abuse, they’re at greater risk of depression, suicide and chronic diseases. They’re more likely to abuse drugs and alcohol. More likely to land in prison.

Relationships also suffer, with spouses and children frustrated and perplexed by their loved one’s bouts of depression, random anger and emotional numbness.

“They haven’t told even their families what they’ve been through,” Jones says.

“We were met with more resistance because we are helping boys. But we owe it to the world to see that boys are provided with the care they need.”

— Chris Smith, co-founder (with his wife, Anna) of Restore One, a North Carolina-based nonprofit providing treatment for trafficked boys.

Why do boys continue to be overlooked in efforts to combat trafficking? Male survivors and their advocates have strong opinions about the answers.

“We live in a culture where men are perpetrators and women are victims, and there are no gray areas,” Procopio of MaleSurvivor said. “There’s a lot sexism involved with this issue.”

Boys don’t fit the popular script of who is and isn’t a victim of trafficking. Liam Neeson didn’t bust through doors in the Taken movies to rescue his son. Journalists seldom write heartbreaking stories about 15-year-old boys sold on Backpage.

And even in 2018, Procopio notes, a dangerous myth persists that an adolescent boy who is exploited by an adult is somehow “lucky” to get the sex that every young male supposedly craves. In reality, male victims of commercial exploitation and sexual abuse suffer the same types of trauma as females. Their pain is just as devastating. There’s nothing lucky about it.

Elam points to another misconception that pushes boys into silence: The fear that the abused will become an abuser. Although it’s true that sexual abuse victims are at increased risk of harming others, a strong majority do not perpetuate the crime. Still, an unfair stigma that they pose a danger to children is often attached to male survivors.

All of which makes it harder for boys and men to break the silence.

“We’re not inclined to come out and say we were raped as children because we’re afraid we’ll be ridiculed,” Elam says.

The reluctance to speak up is understandable, but it carries damaging consequences. Victims feel even more isolated. Government agencies and nonprofits are reluctant to provide services for an invisible population. Police, teachers and others in regular contact with youth don’t receive training in how to identify and help male victims.

In many ways, it’s a repeat of how female victims were treated a decade ago. Although we still have far to go, we’ve thankfully come a long way in better identifying, assisting and accepting girls exploited in the sex trade. But we’re failing our boys.

Procopio and others say another form of bias — discrimination against gay and transgender males — also helps explain why boys aren’t acknowledged as victims and offered help. “There’s a lot of homophobia. But this issue is not about sexual orientation,” Procopio says. “Trafficking is about power and control.”

Gay and transgender youth are more likely to become trafficking victims, according to the Polaris Project, in part because family conflicts push many of them to run away from home. Once on the streets, runaway kids, no matter their gender or sexual orientation, are highly vulnerable to exploitation. Gay and transgender youth also are at significantly higher risk of physical violence than others working in the sex trade.

Yet, according to the 2016 Youth in the Sex Trade study and other research, most male child trafficking victims aren’t gay. The majority are heterosexual boys manipulated or forced into having sex with men. As a consequence, Procopio notes, it’s common for straight male victims to question their sexual orientation long after the abuse ends.

In Southern California, Tom Jones, after surviving what he calls his era of silence, now pours his energy into reaching other men struggling with the aftermath of trafficking and abuse.

Jones leads a loose network of male survivors who are at various points on the path to healing. He encourages the men to enter counseling, but many aren’t ready for that step. In fact, he’s met only about a third of the network’s members face to face. Many of the survivors are not yet ready to engage in anything more threatening than sending and receiving text messages.

One man, despite years of interaction with Jones, won’t acknowledge that he suffered the abuse he describes. “He says it happened to a friend,” Jones says.

For many victims, the shame and guilt are still buried too deep to speak the truth, to shatter the silence that holds so many men as emotional prisoners.

But Jones, Elam and others keep speaking out on victims’ behalf, keeps shouting the message that boys are exploited in the sex trade far more often than many want to admit.

Picture - © Tim Swarens/IndyStar A child plays in an Ayoreo village on the edge of Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia.

Monday, May 14, 2018

CyberTipline - NCMEC - Prevent And Diminish The Sexual Exploitation Of Children

CyberTipline - NCMEC - Trinity Mount Ministries

Make a CyberTipline Report

In March 1998, using hardware, software, and programming assistance donated by Sun MicroSystems, NCMEC launched the CyberTipline® to further NCMEC’s mission of helping to prevent and diminish the sexual exploitation of children. The CyberTipline provides the public and electronic service providers (ESPs) with the ability to report online (and via toll-free telephone) instances of online enticement of children for sexual acts, extra-familial child sexual molestation, child pornography, child sex tourism, child sex trafficking, unsolicited obscene materials sent to a child, misleading domain names, and misleading words or digital images on the Internet. NCMEC continuously reviews CyberTipline reports to ensure that reports of children who may be in imminent danger get first priority. After NCMEC’s review is completed, all information in a CyberTipline report is made available to law enforcement.

In furtherance of NCMEC’s mission, the CyberTipline allows NCMEC to engage with the Internet industry on voluntary initiatives to help reduce the proliferation of child sexual abuse images online. NCMEC uses the information submitted to the CyberTipline to create and tailor NCMEC’s safety and prevention publications that are provided to educators, parents and the public to help to prevent future victimization.

More than 27 million reports of suspected child sexual exploitation have been made to the CyberTipline between 1998 and 2017.

Members of the public are encouraged to report information regarding possible child sexual exploitation to the CyberTipline.

http://www.missingkids.com/gethelpnow/cybertipline

http://www.TrinityMount.Info

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Child-on-Child Sexual Assault at Ft. Rucker

Army officials are now acknowledging they've investigated reports of child-on-child sexual assaults at Fort Rucker.

The disclosure comes amid an Associated Press investigation that found many sexual assault reports among children at U.S. military bases where service member families live have languished in a dead zone of justice, in which victims and offenders go without help.

New documents released to AP show Army criminal investigators opened at least three cases at the southern Alabama base, concluding all were true.

Initially, Army's Criminal Investigation Command released a list of 223 sexual assaults among juveniles that showed none at major installations including Fort Rucker.

After reporters challenged the list's accuracy, the agency added 86 cases. It declines to share the number of reports it says are still being investigated.

Trinity Mount Ministries