ERNIE ALLEN
PRESIDENT & CEO
NATIONAL CENTER FOR
MISSING & EXPLOITED CHILDREN
STATEMENT
ON
SENTENCING GUIDELINES FOR CHILD PORNOGRAPHY OFFENSES
UNITED STATES SENTENCING COMMISSION HEARING
ON THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE PASSAGE OF THE SENTENCING REFORM
ACT OF 1984
DENVER, COLORADO
OCTOBER 20, 2009
Mr. Chairman, members of the Commission, I appreciate the opportunity
to testify regarding the sentencing guidelines for child pornography
offenses.
For the past nine months, this Commission has heard testimony from judges,
prosecutors, defense counsel, and issue experts. Some have argued
that the guidelines for child pornography offenses are baseless, excessive
or too severe. In the aftermath of the Booker decision, we are
seeing increasing examples of downward departures from the guidelines
and token sentences for child pornography offenders.
I come before you today to make a simple point. Child pornography
is a serious crime. It merits serious penalties. The guidelines
are not the problem. The problem is the lack of understanding of
the true nature and severity of this crime, and the harm caused by these
offenders.
At the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, we have
been battling this problem for a quarter century. The Center is
a nonprofit organization working in partnership with the U.S. Department
of Justice. In 1985 we launched the first child pornography tipline. In
1998 at the request of Congress, we created the CyberTipline, an online
reporting mechanism for child sexual exploitation. To date, we
have handled 744,000 reports from Internet Service Providers and the
general public.
In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision in Ashcroft v.
Free Speech Coalition, we created the Child Victim Identification Program
in 2003 to assist law enforcement and to identify, locate and rescue
child victims. In the past six years we have reviewed 28 million
child pornography images and videos, currently 250,000 per week.
Child pornography is misnamed and misunderstood. It is not pornography. It
is not protected speech. It is not victimless crime. These
are crime scene photos, images of the sexual abuse of a child. They
are contraband, direct evidence of the sexual victimization of a child. The
circulation of these images among offenders not only revictimizes the
child, but it also drives the market for the production of new images.
Some have said, “child pornography, isn’t that just adult
pornography, 20 year olds in pigtails made to look like they are 14?” Well,
not exactly. From the millions of images we have reviewed and the
thousands of children we have identified, we have learned that most of
the victims are prepubescent, and that a growing number are infants and
toddlers.
Many of these children are being abused violently in images depicting
bondage, sadism, torture, vaginal, anal, and oral penetration, bestiality,
and sexual humiliation. Offenders tell us that the growing demand for very
young children is because they are pre-verbal.
Most offenders have not innocently or mistakenly downloaded a single
image or even a handful of images. We find offenders who build
libraries of child pornography images, collected and viewed for the offender’s
personal sexual gratification and, more commonly, traded, shared, and/or
sold online.
The Supreme Court has long recognized the harm.
In New York v. Ferber, the Court wrote, “pornography poses an
even greater threat to the child victim than does sexual abuse or prostitution. Because
the child’s actions are reduced to a recording, the pornography
may haunt him in future years, long after the original misdeed took place. A
child who has posed for a camera must go through life knowing that the
recording is circulating within the mass distribution system for child
pornography.”
The Supreme Court wrote those words in 1982 before the birth of the
Internet.
In Osborne v. Ohio, the Court wrote that “the victimization
of children does not end when the pornographer’s camera is put
away. . . . The pornography’s continued existence causes the child
victims continuing harm. . . .”)
In United States v. Norris, the Court said, “the sheer
number of instances in which a child’s pornographic image may be
possessed and distributed in the indelible context of the Internet is
incalculable. Even after a single offender is prosecuted, the images
they traded, sold, or posted online continue to circulate to ever widening
circles of offenders.”
Each
viewing, each possession, each redistribution of an image revictimizes
that child anew. In a victim impact statement cited in US v. Ward,
the victim said, “when I was told how many people have viewed these
images and videos I thought my pulse would stop. Thinking about
all those sick perverts viewing my body being ravished and hurt like
that makes me feel like I was raped by each and every one of them.”
Like any other contraband, child pornography images are an illegal commodity
that must be combated both at the point of production and at the point
of distribution and possession.
In Ferber, the Court said, “the distribution network for child
pornography must be closed if the production of material which requires
the sexual exploitation of children is to be effectively controlled.”
In Osborne, the Court said, “it is surely reasonable for the State
to conclude that it will decrease the production of child pornography
if it penalizes those who possess and view the product, thereby decreasing
demand.”
Some have argued that the sentences for many of these offenders are
excessive because “they just look at the pictures.” Many
judges today are sentencing offenders well below the guidelines because
they are “mere possessors.”
We are deeply skeptical. In a 2009 article in the Journal of Family
Violence, Michael Bourke and Dr. Andres Hernandez at the Federal
Correctional Institution at Butner, North Carolina reported on a study
comparing two groups of child pornography offenders.
The first group included men convicted of child pornography possession,
receipt or distribution, but no “hands-on” sexual abuse. The
second included men convicted of similar offenses but with documented
histories of hands-on sexual offenses against children.
The researchers found that the Internet offenders in their sample were “significantly
more likely than not to have sexually abused a child via a hands-on act.” And
that these offenders tended to have multiple victims.
They found that, upon being discovered, these offenders tend to minimize
their behavior. They accept responsibility, but only for those behaviors
known to law enforcement. They hide contact sexual crimes to avoid
prosecution and to avoid shame and humiliation.
The researchers also found that online criminal investigations, while
targeting so-called “Internet sex offenders,” are resulting
in the apprehension of child molesters who just happen to be using the
Internet to access this content.
We don’t know with certainty whether the number of child pornography
offenders who commit physical contact offenses against real children
is 40%, 60% or 80% of the total offender population. However, we
know that a large share of that population is not merely “looking
at the pictures.”
We also know that the number is far greater than publicly recognized
because few of the victims tell anybody. Researchers now estimate
that 1 in 3 victims of child sexual abuse report it. That represents
significant progress over even a decade ago. However, what we are
seeing today is that when there is a photo or video that memorializes
that abuse, reporting drops precipitously. These children don’t
tell.
Even if the offender cannot be shown to have victimized a real child,
he is revictimizing the child in that photo or video. Victims
of online child pornography must deal with the permanency and circulation
of the images of their sexual abuse. Once an image is on the Internet
it can never be removed and becomes a permanent record of the abuse.
Researchers studying the harm caused to a child report that child victims
experience depression, withdrawal, anger, and other psychological disorders
that can continue well into adulthood. They frequently experience
feelings of guilt and responsibility for their abuse as well as feelings
of betrayal, powerlessness and low self-esteem.
For children whose images are circulated online, their abuse is repeated
over and over through each new viewing. They feel there is nothing
they can do to prevent others from viewing the images, and they express
concern that images of their abuse may be used to entice or manipulate
other children into sexually abusive acts.
Congress has long recognized the harm child pornography inflicts on
its victims. In passing the Child Pornography Prevention Act of
1996, Congress found that “[t]he use of children as subjects of
pornographic materials is harmful to the physiological, emotional and
mental health of the child.” In 2006 Congress passed the
Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act, which concluded that “technological
advances have had the unfortunate result of greatly increasing the interstate
market in child pornography”; and “every instance of viewing
images of child pornography represents a renewed violation of the privacy
of the victims and a repetition of their abuse.”
The
Supreme Court, Congress and this Commission have recognized the extreme
harm inflicted upon victims of child pornography, harm that is compounded
when the images are recirculated. Yet, we are witnessing increasing
instances of downward departures from the guidelines, or token sentences
for offenders, simply because there is no proof of physical contact offenses
against a child. Congress did not base its enactment of these
laws on the assumption that all offenders must be abusers. The
goal of these laws is to address this growing and deplorable form of
child sexual exploitation, and stop it.
Weakening
the guidelines will do irreparable damage to the goal of stopping child
pornography and will put countless children at risk. It will also dilute the objective
of deterrence at a time when technology is emboldening these offenders.
We urge
the Commission to resist the clamor for change, and help us wake up the
nation, its policy makers and its judges about the true nature and impact
of this crime. The
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is committed to doing
everything in its power to eradicate child pornography, and is deeply grateful
for this opportunity to share its views with the Commission.
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