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   alt.celebrities      We're supposed to give a shit about them      3,205 messages   

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   Message 3,049 of 3,205   
   WELL HUNG JURY to All   
   DEATH PENALTY FOR PEDOPHILIA & CHILD POR   
   15 Nov 13 00:16:48   
   
   From: gibberich@gmail.com   
      
   CASTRATION ISNT ENOUGH!THEY'LL STILL REOFFEND.OUR CHILDREN NEED PROTECTION.    
   WE NEED PROTECTION.THE WORLD NEEDS THESE LAWS DESPERATELY!!!    
      
   (1)DEATH PENALTY FOR TORTURE (TOO MANY PSYCHOS & HITLERS)    
      
   (2)DEATH PENALTY FOR FINANCIAL CORRUPTION (TOO MANY MANAGERS GAMBLING OUR    
    MONEY AWAY.THEY THINK IT'S THEIR MONEY.DEATH PENALTY WILL KEEP BASTARDS   
   HONEST    
    & ENSURE INVESTMENT AGAIN.    
      
   (3)DEATH PENALTY FOR PEDOPHILIA & CHILD PORN.(WAY TOO MANY CHILD MOLESTERS.    
   CHILD PORN IS DISGUSTINGLY DEGENERATE & SUCH MONSTROUSLY INHUMAN UNCARING    
   RACKETEERING FOR PROFIT AT THE EXPENSE OF OUR CHILDREN DESERVES THE DEATH    
   PENALTY.GRRR!    
      
   ANIMAL PORNOGRAPHY WITH ALL IT'S CRUELTIES DEEPLY CONCERNS US ALL & ANIMAL    
   WELFARE    
   SHOULD BE NOTIFIED SO APPROPRIATE PENALTIES TO DETER THIS DEPLORABLE    
   BEHAVIOUR BE IMPLEMENTED    
      
   MIGHT AS WELL TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SUGGEST THESE LAWS NOW THAT PROJECT   
   SPADE    
   HAS BUSTED ALL THESE NEVER DO WELLS    
      
   CANADA    
   TRENDINGRob Ford | Budget surplus | Philippines | Justin Trudeau | Senate   
   reform | Mike Tyson    
      
   Project Spade, massive international child porn bust centred on Toronto, nets   
   348 arrests in ‘horrific sexual acts’    
      
   Diana Mehta, Canadian Press | 14/11/13 | Last Updated: 14/11/13 3:57 PM ET    
   More from Canadian Press    
   Detective constable Lisa Belanger speaks at a news conference about Project   
   Spade, a three-year, worldwide child exploitation investigation involving   
   child pornography, in Toronto on November 14, 2013 . The investigation lead to   
   386 children being    
   rescued which include 24 Canadian children and 341 people arrested   
   worldwide.      
   Michelle Siu for National PostDetective constable Lisa Belanger speaks at a   
   news conference about Project Spade, a three-year, worldwide child   
   exploitation investigation involving child pornography, in Toronto on November   
   14, 2013 . The investigation    
   lead to 386 children being rescued which include 24 Canadian children and 341   
   people arrested worldwide.    
     Twitter Google+ LinkedIn Email Comments More    
   TORONTO — At least 386 children have been rescued from sexual exploitation and   
   hundreds of suspects arrested in a sweeping child pornography investigation   
   that began with a Toronto man, police revealed Thursday.    
      
   “It’s a first for the magnitude of the victims saved,” said Insp Joanna   
   Beaven-Desjardins, of the force’s Sex Crimes Unit. “The amount of arrests   
   internationally, also a first.”    
      
   At least 348 people were arrested around the world as part of Project Spade,   
   including 50 in Ontario and 58 from other parts of Canada.    
      
   Related    
   Former popular New Brunswick politician Donnie Snook given 18-years for making   
   child pornography    
   Dozens of Canadians among 1,000 adults who try to pay for web sex with   
   ‘virtual’ 10-year-old girl    
   School teachers, doctors, nurses, pastors and foster parents are among those   
   facing charges in the wide-ranging operation that can be traced back to a   
   business operating out of Toronto’s west end, police said.    
      
   “Its success has been extraordinary,” Beaven-Desjardins said of the   
   investigation which spanned more than 50 countries.    
      
   “When we work together regardless of the borders that divide us, we can   
   successfully track down those who not only prey on our most vulnerable but   
   also those who profit from it.”    
      
      
   The investigation was sparked in October 2010 when undercover officers made   
   contact with a Toronto man on the Internet who was allegedly sharing child   
   pornography online.    
      
   The probe revealed a far-reaching web of child pornography which involved some   
   of the most shocking abuse investigators had seen.    
      
   Police allege Brian Way, 42, had been running an “exploitation movie,   
   production and distribution company” called Azov Films since 2005, and had   
   made more than $4-million from the business.    
      
   Michelle Siu for National Post    
   Michelle Siu for National PostThe Toronto police Unit commander of sex crimes,   
   Joanna Beaven-Desjardins, speaks at a press conference about Project Spade, a   
   three-year, worldwide child exploitation investigation involving child   
   pornography, in Toronto on    
   November 14, 2013 .    
   Through his company, the man would allegedly contract people to create child   
   porn videos involving kids, largely boys, between the ages of five and 12.   
   Many of those videos were allegedly shot in Ukraine and Romania in apartments,   
   dingy saunas and    
   backyards.    
      
   Police allege the videos were then distributed from Toronto — through the mail   
   and the Internet — to customers around the world.    
      
   Toronto authorities moved in to arrest Way in May 2011 and then, along with   
   the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, spent months re-creating a customer   
   database.    
      
   That information was shared with the RCMP and Interpol, which led to arrests   
   of customers around the world and to the apprehension of those who allegedly   
   created the videos.    
      
   Officers located hundreds of thousands of images and videos detailing horrific   
   sexual acts against very young children, some of the worst that they have ever   
   viewed    
   Way has been charged with 24 offences, including the instruction of a criminal   
   organization, a charge which police said had been applied for the first time   
   in Canada in relation to child pornography. Police are still looking for Way’s   
   mother, Susan    
   Waslov.    
      
   Police say the sheer amount of images and videos seized in their investigation   
   — 45 terabytes worth — was staggering.    
      
   “This is equivalent to a stack of paper as tall as 1,500 CN Towers,” said   
   Beaven-Desjardins.    
      
   “Officers located hundreds of thousands of images and videos detailing   
   horrific sexual acts against very young children, some of the worst that they   
   have ever viewed.”    
      
   Gerald O’Farrell, acting deputy chief inspector of the U.S. Postal Inspection   
   Service, provided an unflinching snapshot of some of those arrested in the   
   investigation.    
      
   They included a school employee who allegedly placed a hidden video camera in   
   a student washroom, a youth baseball coach who pleaded guilty to making more   
   than 500 child exploitation videos and a police officer, he said.    
      
   “The investigations involving these customers span across all segments of   
   society,” O’Farrell said. “The success of this investigation was identifying   
   those who posed an immediate risk to children.”    
      
   The Canada Centre for Child Protection commended the range of police forces   
   that worked together on the international investigation but also issued a call   
   Thursday for better safeguards against child abuse.   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
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    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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