On-line predators are grooming children and sharing exploitative material un-monitored via the internet due to a lack of police resources in the Child Exploitation Internet Unit (CEIU)
With just 12 officers employed State-wide in the increasingly vital CEIU, the Police Association of NSW (PANSW) is pleading with the NSW Government for these numbers to increase.
Victoria has almost double the number of dedicated officers, and Queensland has almost triple.
A lack of ‘technology enabled crime officers’ in districts and local commands also meant police in the Manning Great Lakes Police District did not have access to the full breadth of information they needed to monitor pedophiles in the area.
PANSW Manning Great Lakes branch official Jaimie Reardon said the force needed an urgent increase in the number of police dedicated to monitoring and capturing on-line predators.
“Our Child Exploitation Internet Unit is one of the best in the world, but a severe lack of resources means they’re unable to adequately monitor the predators lurking on-line, harming our innocent children,” Senior Constable Reardon said.
“We know additional people on the ground would result in additional arrests – there’s no doubt about that,” she said.
“By not resourcing the unit properly, the government is exposing our children and communities to an unacceptable degree of risk.
“The public rightly expect our police to be monitoring and capturing these on-line offenders before they ruin the lives of our children, but unfortunately the reality is our police don’t have the resources to keep up with what would reasonably be expected to keep our children and community safe.
Senior Constable Reardon said the CEIU urgently required an additional 16-21 dedicated officers, which would allow for:
- An investigative team looking into the dark web: currently these investigations are
- only done on a reactive basis;
- An investigative team focused on those sharing child sexual exploitation material:
- again, this is only done on a reactive basis;
- A boost in the team conducting covert investigations into persons using the internet
- to procure and groom children for sexual activity;
- A Victim Identification Team dedicated to the identification of victims of sexual
- exploitation and rescuing such victims. This is currently done only on a part-time
- basis.
- A technical team specifically tasked with the maintenance of all covert equipment,
- software and licences. Additionally, forensic support and triage at all CEIU warrants,
- initial triage and forensic examination of all seized electronic devices.
“We also need additional technology enabled crime officers in our districts and local commands, including in the northern region of NSW,” she said.
“Every parent out there is rightly terrified about the possibility of predators lurking online.
“The community deserves to know that we’ve got the resources we need to keep our children as safe as possible online, but unfortunately at the moment that’s not the case.”
The call for additional police dedicated to the Child Exploitation Internet Unit forms part of the Police Association of NSW’s call for an additional 2500 police in the State.