Sheriffs' Office - Preventing
the Exploit of Children
Preventing
the Sexual Exploitation of Children
The word's
sexual exploitation evokes a number of reactions and feelings.
Perhaps one of the most devastating is silence - our inability
or unwillingness as a society to speak about this horrific
problem. That same silence may also impact a child who has
been sexually exploited. Children may be frightened or intimidated
into not telling. They may feel they won't be believed or
what happened is their fault. All of these feelings may cause
them to hide their pain.
The National
Center for Missing & Exploited Children® (NCMEC)
is working to bring sexual exploitation to the forefront;
raise awareness about this issue; and help combat its negative,
long-term effects. NCMEC wants to help families and communities
support the courageous child victims who come forward so
they may begin healing. And NCMEC wants to make more people
aware of the problem so other children don't have to suffer
in silence.
NCMEC wants
people to know that the sexual exploitation of a child has
multiple victims and the effects may extend like tentacles
into the community. Often people feel powerless to fight
its insidious nature because the problem seems too huge and
overwhelming. Or people really don't want to confront the
issue of whom the perpetrator might be. People don't want
to believe it could be a person in a position of trust or
responsibility living in their own neighborhoods.
But there
are steps that need to be taken. When taken they would lead
to a reduction in the incidence of sexual exploitation, an
improvement in how we protect our children from this scourge,
and caring and support for those children who have suffered
at the hands of these offenders. It's all about empowerment
and giving children, parents and guardians, and communities
the strength to overcome what they have lost, so they may
live healthy and productive lives.
What Families
May Do
* Listen to your children. Pay attention if they tell you they don't want to
be with someone or go somewhere. Take the time to talk to your children. Encourage
open communication and learn how to be an active listener.
*Notice when someone shows one or all of your children a great deal of attention
or begins giving them gifts.
* Teach your children they have the right to say NO to any touch or actions
by other that makes them feel scared, uncomfortable or confused. Teach them
to immediately tell you if this happens. Reassure them you're there to help
and it is okay to tell you anything. Be sensitive to any changes in your children's
behavior or attitude. Look and listen to small cues and clues that something
may be troubling your children because children are not always comfortable
disclosing disturbing events or feelings.
* If your children do confide problems to you, strive to remain calm, no critical,
and nonjudgmental. Listen compassionately to their concern, and work with them
to get the help they need to resolve the problem.
* Be sure to screen babysitters and caregivers. Many states now have a public
registry allowing parents and guardians to check out individuals for prior
criminal records and sex offenses. Check references with other families who
have used the caregiver or babysitter. Once you have chosen the caregiver,
drop in unexpectedly to see how your children are doing. Ask your children
how the experience with the caregiver was, and carefully listen to the response.
*Provide oversight and supervision of your children's computer use. Know whom
they're communicating with online and where they may have access to computers.
Establish rules and guidelines for computer use for your children.
* Be involved in your children's activities. As an active participant, you'll
have a better opportunity to observe how the adults in charge interact with
your children.
*Work with your children's school to institute sound child-safely programs
as part of their curriculum.
* Practice basic safety skills with your children and discuss their safety
openly and honestly. There is no substitute for your attention and supervision.
Being available and taking time to really know and listen to your children
helps build feelings of safety and security.
What Schools
May Do
* Make sure teachers, volunteers, and anyone else with access to children is
properly screened and trained. Implement and enforce a policy for reporting
child sexual exploitation and handling disclosures from children.
*Establish protocols and screening for school computer use. Provide training
for students and teachers regarding the acceptable use of computers.
* Choose or develop child-safety programs for the school that are based on
accepted educational theories; are appropriate for the child's age and levels
of education and development; are designed to offer concepts that will help
children build self-confidence in order to better handle and protect themselves
in all types of situations, use multiple program components repeated several
years in a row, and use qualified presenters who include role-playing, behavioral
rehearsal, feedback, and active participation in presentations.
* Assess your environmental structure and take every possible step to make
it safer for children. Make certain children arc properly supervised both in
the classroom and around the campus.
* Make certain campus security is in place so all visitors are screened through
the office and unusual incidents/visitors are handled.
* Provide programs and roles for parents and guardians to make them part of
their children's safety and security at school and 'while going to and from
school.
What Communities
May Do
* Notify the public of the sex-offender registry and community-notification
requirements. Schedule town meetings and community seminars to raise awareness
about these policies and issues.
* Support local law-enforcement efforts to establish neighborhood crime-watch
programs. Report suspicious persons/activities to local law enforcement.
*Support aggressive prosecution of offenders who victimize children within
local communities and have an action plan and protocol in place to alert the
community and assuage their fears when a high-profile arrest is made.
* Mobilize community groups and child-serving organizations to help make your
community more "child safe." Determine if available services and programs are
adequate to address the needs of your community.
* Assess local law-enforcement technology resources, and advocate for systems
and other technology available to quickly disseminate information about abducted
and missing children. Such systems include the Lost Child Alert Technology
Resource (LOCATERDI) that provides law enforcement, free of charge, the tools
and technology needed to rapidly disseminate images of and information about
missing children both electronically and on posters implement and support America's
Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response (AMBER) Alert in the community through
local media and law enforcement involvement to rapidly disseminate images and
information to the public, via radio, television, and cable "airwaves." in
serious child-abduction cases. Although these programs will not prevent sexual
exploitation, they allow for a rapid and effective mobilization if a child
is abducted.
*Advocate use of Code Adam in local retail stores to rapidly locate lost children
by using standard protocols and procedures. An immediate response to a lost
child minimizes the possibility that the child will be taken from the store.
*Institute free child-identification programs in the community to help ensure
all parents and guardians have a recent, clear, and readily available photograph
of their children.
* Advocate for meaningful legislative change with elected officials.
It is only
through unified and diligent preparation and persistent prevention
efforts that the sexual exploitation of children may be effectively
addressed. For information regarding NCMEC's resources to
help prevent the sexual exploitation of children, visit www.cybertipline.com
or call 1-800-843.5678. |