Task Force Argos

Task Force Argos is a branch of the Queensland Police Service, responsible for the investigation of online child exploitation and abuse.[1][2][3] Founded in 1997, the unit's original charter was to investigate institutional child abuse allegations arising from the Forde Inquiry.

Queensland Police Service
MottoWith Honour We Serve
Agency overview
Formed1 January, 1864
Employees10,237
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionQueensland, Australia
General nature
Headquarters200 Roma Street,
Brisbane, QLD 4000
27.4664°S 153.0182°E / -27.4664; 153.0182
Units
Website
www.police.qld.gov.au/

The unit's name was derived from Greek mythology, in which Argus Panoptes, or Argos, was a primordial "all seeing" giant with multiple eyes, guardian of the goddess Io. As protector of the goddess, Argos was great and strong: sleep never fell upon his eyes, and he kept sure watch always.

Technological advances and wider access to the Internet led the unit in 2002 to explore avenues to address growing community concern over the proliferation of child exploitation across the internet. Task Force Argos identified potential threats to children in online chat rooms, where sexual predators were grooming children and recruiting them to engage in sexual activity.

Notable cases

In March 2002, Argos began an undercover operation against a person whom they had discovered in a chat room seeking underage girls for sex. An Argos operative, posing as a 14-year-old girl, was asked to meet the offender in Brisbane so he could photograph her nude and have sex with her. During the online conversations the offender claimed to have some 66,000 images of child exploitation. Argos identified the offender, and a search of his computer identified contact offences involving multiple children. One child was 12 years of age at the time, and had been befriended by the offender on the internet. The other child was aged five, and was made available to the offender by her father whom the offender had met in an internet chat room.[4]

In 2004, a child pornography website, located in Belarus, was taken down by an international task force, involving the Australian Federal Police and the Australian High Tech Crime Centre under the codename Operation Auxin.[5] The operation saw the arrest of 154 Australians, including 57 in Queensland. Officers of Task Force Argos identified seven children located in Brisbane from the child exploitation material and rescued them from further harm.[6]

In 2006, a similar international operation was undertaken, codenamed Achilles.[7] Task Force Argos formed an alliance with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in a lengthy covert operation that smashed a sophisticated international network of online offenders responsible distributing and creating on-demand graphic, child exploitation material.[8] Operation Achilles began in January 2006 and closed in February 2008, with the execution of warrants and arrest of offenders in Australia, the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom. Task Force Argos officers infiltrated the international child sex offender network who were trading images and videos depicting the violent sexual abuse of children. The completion of Operation Achilles and its associated sub-operations around the world resulted in the removal of more than 60 children from sexually abusive situations, the arrest of 22 network members globally and the closure of four commercial child exploitation websites.

The work of Task Force Argos in raising community awareness to the dangers of online predatory behaviour has been recognised globally. The team was awarded the International Law Enforcement Cybercrime Award 2011 (Gold award) by The Society for the Policing of Cyberspace (POLCYB), a Canadian-based organisation committed to enhancing partnerships in order to prevent and combat crimes in cyberspace.[9]

Task Force Argos has also been responsible for partnering with software powerhouse Microsoft to develop the Australian National Victim Image Library aimed at reducing investigator exposure to child exploitation material and improve opportunity to identify children at risk. Microsoft donated its technical development expertise to build this capability and the identification database is currently in national deployment.[10]

Task Force Argos works closely with international counterparts to deliver positive outcomes for child victims, irrespective of where those children might be geographically located. The unit relies on victim identification expertise and their specialist is also the chair of the Interpol Specialist Group on Crimes Against Children.[11] By employing robust victim identification strategies that effectively identify and locate child victims then their offenders can be found and prosecuted. One such operation involved the police taking over and running a dark web network for several months, resulting in the rescuing of 85 children and hundreds of arrests,[12] including notorious British paedophile Richard Huckle[13] and the site's operator Shannon McCoole.[14]

Task Force Argos expends considerable effort to protect children on-line by researching contemporary technology to effectively target on-line predators. Adopting the mantra to 'Leave No Stone Unturned' and the insignia of the scorpion (the natural predator of the 'rock spider') their focus is squarely on child protection to ensure exhaustive inquiries are conducted so that no child victim of sexual exploitation is ever overlooked.

During 2016-2017, Argos operated the darknet child pornography site Childs Play for eleven months.[15]

Notable Abandoned Prosecutions

In December 2008, task force members arrested and charged Maroochydore man with 'using the internet to access and publish child-abuse material' after he allegedly reposted on Liveleak a viral video of another man swinging a baby by its arms.[16] Although the offender was successfully committed to the District Court for trial, on 9 September 2009 it was announced that the charges had been dropped by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions after reviewing the case. The poster has called for an inquiry into how he came to be charged in the first place.[17]

References

  1. Child Pornography
  2. "A web of evil, Gotcha". The Australian. 5 September 2006. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  3. "NZer charged with using web to procure child". The New Zealand Herald. AAP. 21 January 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  4. Queensland police stings in online chat rooms, Australian Institute of Criminology
  5. Raids expose huge child porn ring, The Age. Published 30 September 2004. Retrieved 7 April 2017
  6. Child Victims rescued in Brisbane, The Age. Published 30 September 2004. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  7. Police crack global child porn ring, ABC News
  8. FBI, Operation Achilles, Federal Bureau of Investigation
  9. Task Force Argos recognised internationally, Queensland Police Service
  10. Cops add image matching anti-paedophile arsenal, Computer World
  11. IPSG Crimes against Children, Interpol
  12. Safi, M. (13 July 2016). "The takeover: how police ended up running a paedophile site". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  13. Robb, S. (2 June 2016). "How 'Britain's worst paedophile' Richard Huckle was caught". The Metro. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  14. Li, T. (28 February 2016). "'I thought it was a passing thing': Childcare worker who raped children in his care and filmed it for a global paedophile web ring says his urges were NOT his fault... and he never considered he would get caught". Daily Mail. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  15. Håkon F. Høydal, Einar Otto Stangvik and Natalie Remøe Hansen. "VG exposed the largest child sexual abuse forum. It was run by the police". VG Nett. Archived from the original on 10 January 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  16. Moses, Asher (11 December 2008). "Police defend baby swinging video charge". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  17. "Baby-swinging video charges dropped". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.