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Friday, August 26, 2016

FBI promotes child pornography?

This may be the connection to why thousands of missing children in the USA or throughout the world remain unaccounted for. Plus it's rare for the FBI to be involved in the investigation of child porn rings, other than local and state law enforcement. - FUA

Last January, Corey Rayburn Yung of the University of Kansas School of Law declared that there were some allegations which pointed to the direction that the FBI was implicitly promoting child pornography. Yung moved on to write,

“If the allegations against the F.B.I. are true regarding its control of the network [child pornography] for approximately two weeks, it actively participated in the revictimization of those depicted in child pornography with no possibility of controlling distribution.”[1]

Yung declared that “In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Supreme Court held that child pornography was not protected under the First Amendment.”[2]

Elizabeth E. Joh of the University of California School of Law responded by saying,

“Participating in the distribution of child pornography is a federal crime. But that’s exactly what the F.B.I. did in this case. In order to identify more than 1,000 people suspected of trading in child pornography, the F.B.I. operated a child pornography website for nearly two weeks.

“During that period, more than 23,000 images of child pornography were available for viewing, downloading and endless reproduction in ways completely beyond the F.B.I.’s control. In short: The government has criminalized an activity and acted to further the commission of just that crime.”[3]

Read for more - Veterans Today

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