Overcoming Inertia on Porn
Sexual images of children are the target of Canadian Christian campaign
Carol Lowes | posted 9/01/2003 12:00AM
Two years ago, Dallas police officers, U.S. postal authorities, and the Justice Department announced the arrests of 100 people in a global Internet child pornography ring. More than 250,000 people from 60 countries were paid subscribers, netting organizers more than $1 million a month. The bust has led to the arrests of hundreds of suspects around the world.
But comparatively few arrests have been made in Canada, even though police have the names of over two thousand suspects. Many understaffed police units have not followed up on the names and credit card numbers of the 2,300 Canadians who downloaded images advertised as child porn. Child porn generates $3 billion annually in online sales, according to a report by Internet Filters Review.
Robert Matthews of Ontario's police unit investigating child porn told the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, "Canadians produce as much or more child pornography, per capita, as any other developed country."
The EFC has expounded on the problem in a background paper, "Innocence Preserved."
Project Snowball
Many Christian groups are calling for action. But they are finding inertia hard to overcome. Many Canadians consider graphic sexual content involving minors as a matter of free expression. Few police divisions across Canada have assigned officers or funds to the investigation, dubbed Project Snowball.
Toronto's police force is one of the few that have responded. Six Toronto officers have made 21 arrests in Project Snowball so far. They have also seized two million images.
"There are many divisions that have not even opened their files on this case because they lack the manpower or funds to proceed," said detective sergeant Paul Gillespie of Toronto's sex crimes unit.
All officers involved in Project Snowball are required to visit psychologists every three months for debriefing and counseling. Lutheran police chaplain Paul Lainen, who works in the College Street Chapel inside Toronto police headquarters, said both Christian and non-Christian officers vent their frustrations about limited funds and staffs.
"Churches need to speak up and write letters—not on the evil of child pornography, but on what they believe politicians and legislators can do about it," Lainen told Christianity Today.
Toronto police are seeking more federal funds and a national strategy to coordinate their efforts. Some collections seized during raids contain 500,000 images, all of which must be documented.
Police also say sentences are too light. Two men convicted of possessing, producing, and distributing child pornography in Project Snowball raids each received six-month conditional sentences and eighteen months of probation.
Christian organizations such as the EFC, real Women, Focus on the Family, and Crossroads Christian Communications are lobbying the federal government. The federal justice department announced this spring it would help police develop a national strategy, but it has not provided details.
Closing loopholes
Advocates want to close what they say are loopholes in Canada's Criminal Code. Some graphic images and fictional stories about children deemed to have "artistic merit" are legal, according to a 2001 Supreme Court of Canada decision regarding the work of Vancouver author John Robin Sharpe. In March 2002, the provincial court ruled that Sharpe was not guilty of possessing written child pornography. The court did find him guilty on two counts of possessing pornographic pictures of children. It sentenced him to four months of house arrest, but no prison time.
September 2003, Vol. 47, No. 9