Man admits to inciting children to engage in sexual activity.
The BBC reports on the admission by a 52 year old man of inciting children to sexual activity over the internet. North Wales Police arrested him and found 10,000 images and 356 videos of child sex abuse.
On the 2nd February 2010, we referred to another BBC report, where a 19 year old man from the Midlands had been gaoled for making and distributing indecent images and inciting sexual assault on a child under 13. The man has been banned from working with children for life and placed on the Sex Offenders List. Apparently he was found in possession of a memory stick containing footage of a woman abusing her young child at his direction.
These kinds of crimes come under Sections 9 to 15 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 which includes the offences ofincluding causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity, arranging or facilitating commission of a child sex offence and meeting a child following sexual grooming. Indecent photography is covered later in the Act from Sections 45 onwards.
It is also conceivable that the abused child might well have a claim in assault against the convicted man, although much would depend on whether he had assets sufficient to cover any judgment. Alternatively she might have a claim to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority, although under Paragraph 8 of that scheme, the offence has to arise out of an “injury sustained in and directly attributable to an act occurring in Great Britain. Consequently such a claim might be in difficulties.
The writer has considered the issue of whether the Internet Service Provider might be liable. This area seems to have very little coverage. At present this woudl appear to be a very difficult claim, since obviously an ISP would argue that it had no control whatsoever on this kind of activity.
However should ISP’s monitor their own traffic?
See BBC News
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Caren Childony






