Law enforcement
details new Internet child predator law
EMMA
RITCH Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - State law enforcement finally
has a law that can be used to prosecute Internet child predators
before any physical contact takes place.
South Carolina is joining 29 other states by making it illegal to
stalk, lure or entice a minor for abduction or sexual assault, said
Laura Hudson of the South Carolina Victims Assistance Network. Gov.
Mark Sanford signed the bill into law Monday.
"It's a progressive statute, I believe, because it builds in ...
the elimination of a defense that the person you're talking to is
not actually a minor but might be a law enforcement officer," said
Debra Tedeschi, an assistant state attorney general assigned to the
Internet crime children's task force.
The law mandates a 10-year sentence for each offense, which
Attorney General Henry McMaster said can multiply if there are
several online contacts before an arrest.
McMaster said previous child predators have been prosecuted in
South Carolina once an assault or meeting has taken place but this
legislation would "stop them before they got that far, to catch them
before they caught the child."
"This is a tool that law enforcement's going to be able to use
for them to be proactive in the protection of our children rather
than reactive," said state Rep. Murrell Smith, R-Sumter, who
sponsored the bill.
The state previously had to rely on federal laws, which carry a
minimum five-year sentence, to prosecute child predators before
physical contact occurred.
Federal laws were used recently to convict Wilburn Vernon
Biggers, 61, of Charleston based on Internet chats and e-mails he
thought were with a 15-year-old girl, said agent Billy Crumpton of
the State Law Enforcement Division. However, Biggers was talking to
a law officer with the federally funded South Carolina Computer
Crime Center, operated by officers from SLED, FBI and the Secret
Service.
McMaster said Tuesday the crime center is planning future
stings.
McMaster didn't know how many cases might be prosecuted under the
new law but said "South Carolina has a problem like the rest of the
country."
Hudson said her victims' advocacy group has been fighting for
several years to get a law passed. "It has taken our attorney
general to bring that to the attention of the Legislature," Hudson
said.
The measure passed easily, Smith said, because McMaster promoted
it. The bill was temporarily scrutinized because lawmakers didn't
want teenage couples to get caught up in the law. Revisions were
made to prevent teens from being prosecuted on technicalities, Smith
said. |