On Wednesday, Europol released the results
of its first joint operation with the FBI against international child
predators, announcing the identification of eight child victims and the
arrest of 17 individuals for child sexual molestation and production of
pornography.
Operation Atlantic has led to the
identification of 37 child sex offenders in France, Italy, the
Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The investigation, which began in December 2010, continues as individuals overseas are still being sought.
“Online child predators and child
exploitation are not just an American problem,” said FBI Director Robert
S. Mueller. “The FBI is committed to working with our law enforcement
partners around the world, such as Europol, to combat these horrendous
crimes. We share actionable intelligence and resources to keep children
safe and bring those who do them harm to justice.”
Sharing intelligence was our primary role
in Operation Atlantic, and it was facilitated by our Innocent Images
Operations Unit (IIOU) at FBI Headquarters. Agents working covertly set
up an electronic dragnet on a peer-to-peer network targeting pedophiles
located in European Union (EU) countries and forwarded investigative
results to our partners at Europol.
Previously, IIOU staff worked with our
legal attachés overseas to formalize a cooperative agreement with
Europol regarding several criminal investigative programs, including
online child sexual exploitation. “The results of Operation Atlantic
validate this new relationship and offer an example of outstanding
achievement through international law enforcement cooperation,” said
Audrey McNeill, IIOU chief.
Europol works with law enforcement
agencies in the 27 EU countries, along with non-EU members such as the
U.S. and Australia. Europol personnel do not have direct powers of
arrest, but instead support law enforcement in member countries through
coordination and intelligence gathering and sharing.
“Collaboration and cooperation between
Europol and our international law enforcement partners such as the FBI
is essential if we are to bring members of these child sex abuse
networks to justice and prevent the distribution of child exploitation
material across the Internet,” said Rob Wainwright, Europol’s director.
Noting that Operation Atlantic is the first joint operation conducted
by the FBI and Europol in the area of child sexual exploitation,
Wainwright added, “Europol is ready and willing to support ongoing and
future operations to infiltrate these networks.”
The leads and intelligence gathered by the
FBI that formed the basis of Operation Atlantic helped link suspects in
five countries to pedophile groups, including the notorious “Boylover”
network, the focus of a previous Europol action called Operation Rescue.
Subjects arrested in Operation Atlantic include a web of offenders that
were producing and distributing images depicting the severe abuse of
children—in some cases toddlers and infants.
“These individuals were not just
possessors of child pornography,” McNeill said. “Some were previously
convicted child sex offenders and were actively engaged in child sexual
abuse.” In addition to providing leads to Europol, the IIOU detailed an
agent to Europol headquarters in The Hague, Netherlands last summer to
help facilitate the investigation.
“Europol is a key and valued strategic
partner for the IIOU, and we look forward to a long and productive
relationship with them,” McNeill said. “I hope that Operation Atlantic
is the first of many future successes. We are working hard to increase
our international footprint and to stop child predators wherever they
are in the world.”
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