Police urge people to watch their space
Lauren Vane
When local teenagers go online to talk and share pictures with
friends in chat rooms on websites, they can access much more than
yearbook photos and a friend’s favorite color.
Promiscuous photographs of young girls in their underwear litter
the popular website MySpace.com, a site that labels itself as “a
place for friends.” By posting personal information on websites such
as this one, police say, minors are making themselves available to
pedophiles. In Laguna Beach, it’s starting to become a problem.
Recently in Laguna, at least one reported sexual assault has
stemmed from a contact that was made on MySpace.com, said Capt.
Danell Adams, of the Laguna Beach Police Department.
“I think that MySpace is a good example of why parents need to pay
very close attention to their children’s use of the Internet,” Adams
said.
Police have been monitoring the website because there have been
concerns about inappropriate photographs of minors that are posted on
the site and the adults who are accessing these photos and then
interacting with minors, Adams said.
“The chat rooms are worrisome,” Adams said.
Anyone who sets up a free account on MySpace.com can access and
talk with members from anywhere and there is even an option to run a
search by age and zip code, making it easy to specifically locate
minors in the Laguna Beach area. Although the website only allows new
members to sign in as 18 and older, it is an obstacle that is easily
avoided. With one click of the mouse, a 14-year-old girl can become
18.
Det. Zach Martinez, an investigator who specializes in crimes
against juveniles, logs in undercover and monitors MySpace.com for at
least one hour every day to protect Laguna Beach minors from becoming
victims of internet pedophiles, Martinez said.
“They [MySpace.com] made it easy for pedophiles to track down kids
who live in this area,” Martinez said.
When Martinez finds racy photographs posted in the online page of
a local teenager, he investigates this person’s “friends,” the people
who visit and talk with the teen, he said. If the teenager looks to
be a minor and any of the friends appear to be adults, Martinez takes
action.
The first step is to contact Laguna Beach High School and verify
the name and age of the minor, Martinez said. Next, Martinez will
call the teenagers and their parents and talk with them about the
dangers of posting provocative pictures and chatting with adults
online, Martinez said.
If enough information is provided in the online profile, Martinez
will sometimes contact any adult who is interacting inappropriately
with a minor online, he said.
Though many of the photographs on MySpace.com depict girls who
look much younger than 18 in sexual poses, the website is not
breaking any laws, as long as the photographs are not pornographic or
showing nudity, Martinez said.
The key to preventing local minors from making online contact with
potential pedophiles is for parents to be involved with their
children’s Internet usage, Adams said.
“The common response is that the kids are more computer savvy than
they [the parents] are,” Martinez said.
Parents should be encouraged to learn about the internet and what
kind of information is available online to their children, Adams
said.
“Complacency is our greatest threat, I have this fear that people
have this feeling that this sort of thing doesn’t happen in Laguna,”
Adams said.
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