Tag: Australian Federal Police

  • Dozen detained over murder of two FBI agents for alleged child sex abuse

    Dozen detained over murder of two FBI agents for alleged child sex abuse

    More than two years after two FBI agents were assassinated while looking into an alleged global paedophile network, authorities in the US and Australia announced Tuesday that 98 people have been detained in connection with child sex abuse and 13 children have been saved from harm.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Australian Federal Police (AFP) announced in a news conference on Tuesday that the joint operation resulted in 19 men being detained in Australia and 79 arrests, 65 indictments, and 43 convictions in the US.

    In 2021, while carrying out a search warrant for a computer programmer suspected of having child abuse materials, two FBI agents looking into the alleged ring were fatally shot, CNN previously reported.

    According to Australian Federal Police Commander Helen Schneider, the suspected child abuse ring was a “peer to peer network” with “some offenders committing offences for over 10 years.”

    Schneider noted, “Some of the children were known to the men who were arrested,” but she would not elaborate.

    The FBI provided information about Australian users of a peer-to-peer network who were allegedly distributing child abuse material on the dark web, which led to the start of the Australian police inquiry in 2022.

    Nitiana Mann, the FBI’s legal attaché in Canberra, told reporters on Tuesday that “this operation was very complex.” No agency or nation can combat these dangers alone due to the complexity and anonymity of these platforms.

    According to a statement from the police, the majority of the suspected Australian perpetrators held positions that needed extensive IT abilities.

    In order to avoid law enforcement identification, members of the network allegedly utilised “software to anonymously share files, chat on message boards, and access websites within the network,” the statement continued.

    The alleged culprits, according to AFP Commander Schneider, ran a “sophisticated network.”

    The lengths this network went to escape detection “is an indication of just how dangerous they were,” she added. “Viewing, distributing, and producing child abuse material is a horrific crime.”

    “The longer individuals like this go undetected, the longer the cycle of abuse persists.”

    She continued that additional arrests could not be ruled out.

    The collaborative effort resulted in the sending of more than 200 foreign leads to partner nations and the opening of more than 300 investigations, according to Mann.

    On February 2, 2021, while serving a federal search warrant at an apartment complex in Sunrise, Florida, FBI Special Agents Daniel Alfin and Laura Schwartzenberger were killed in a gunfight.

    The shooting suspect passed away at the scene, and three further agents were wounded.

    When the shooting and deaths of Alfin and Schwartzenberger occurred, Miami FBI Special Agent in Charge George Piro referred to it as “a very dark day for the FBI.”

    The agents were well-known for their outstanding work in the field, which included investigating child abuse and warning students about the dangers of sex crimes.

    Since November 2008, no FBI agent had been fatally shot while on the job before their deaths.

  • Former childcare provider indicted in Australia on more than 1,600 counts of abuse

    Former childcare provider indicted in Australia on more than 1,600 counts of abuse

    The Australian Federal Police (AFP) announced on Tuesday that a former daycare worker has been charged with 1,623 child abuse offences allegedly committed against 91 children in Australia and abroad over a 15-year period.

    Since August 2022, when he was first accused of producing child exploitation material and using a carriage service to distribute it, the 45-year-old Gold Coast man has been in police detention.

    More child abuse content was allegedly found on computer devices purportedly belonged by the individual, who worked between 2007 and 2022 in 12 childcare facilities in Brisbane, Sydney, and an unidentified foreign location. Police said a special inquiry unearthed the material.

    In a news conference, New South Wales police Assistant Commissioner Michael Fitzgerald remarked, “This is one of the most horrific cases of alleged child abuse our detectives have seen.”

    Numerous more accusations relating to holding, creating, disseminating, or getting child exploitation material include hundreds of counts of indecent treatment of a child under the age of 16, counts of generating child exploitation material, and other crimes.

    Police stated that all the allegedly wronged children were prepubescent girls and that they were “highly-confident” that all 87 Australian children who were reportedly depicted in the purported material had been located and that their parents had been notified of the investigation.

    The AFP stated that it is collaborating with international authorities to assist in the identification of four minors seen in the allegedly child abuse-related foreign video.

    Acting Assistant Commissioner Col Briggs of the Queensland Police Service said, “These allegations are horrific and confronting, but I commend all investigators from each jurisdiction for their tireless efforts to make sure that our community is made safer as a result of the arrest of the alleged perpetrator.”

    On August 21, the man—who has not yet been given a name by the authorities—will appear before Brisbane Magistrates Court.

  • An ex-Australian soldier detained in Afghanistan on suspicion of war crimes

    An ex-Australian soldier detained in Afghanistan on suspicion of war crimes

    The first Australian service member or veteran in active duty to be charged with a war crime for murdering a civilian while fighting in Afghanistan is a former soldier.

    According to a joint statement from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) and the Office of the Special Investigation, the 41-year-old male was charged in New South Wales on Monday (OSI).

    He will allegedly be accused of murdering an Afghan man while serving with the Australian Defense Force in Afghanistan, according to an AFP statement.

    According to the statement, the charge carries a potential sentence of life in prison.
    It noted that the individual was remanded in jail and would appear in court later.

    His arrest follows a four-year investigation into alleged crimes committed by Australian forces in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016.

    In 2020, the long-awaited report by the inspector general of the Australian Defense Force concluded that Australian elite forces allegedly killed 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners unlawfully.

    The ADF recommended that 19 individuals from the Australian Special Forces be investigated over 36 alleged war crimes, including murder and cruel treatment of non-combatants in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2013.

    The inquiry described an environment where “blood lust” and “competition killings” were reportedly a norm. It alleged that some patrol commanders required junior soldiers to shoot prisoners to achieve their first kill, in a process known as “blooding.”

    The report presented what it said was “credible information” that weapons or handheld radios were then sometimes allegedly placed by a body to make it seem like the person had been killed in action.

    None of the 39 alleged unlawful killings happened in the heat of battle, according to the report, and the Afghans who died were non-combatants or no longer combatants.

    Monday’s AFP statement said it is continuing to work with the OSI “to investigate allegations of criminal offenses under Australian law related to breaches of the Laws of Armed Conflict by Australian Defense Force personnel in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016.”