Australian Police Bust Pedophile Ring, Charge 18 Suspects Who Targeted Teens on Facebook

Australian Police Bust Pedophile Ring, Charge 18 Suspects Who Targeted Teens on Facebook
(Illustration - M. W. Hunt/Shutterstock)
8/31/2020
Updated:
8/31/2020

Australia’s Perth Police are advancing the fight against child sexual exploitation with the disbanding of a pedophile ring that was grooming teens on social media. On Aug. 29, they announced the arrest of 11 men connected to the operation, charging a further seven suspects with a string of related offenses.

Operation Timing Belt successfully identified 140 targeted teenagers across the city of Perth, reports the Daily Mail. Of those, 23 had suffered sexual abuse, and some were as young as 13 years old.

Those suspected of running the pedophile ring were aged between 18 and 41. They reached their targets using social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram and their aim, explained Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Matt Daly of the Western Australia Police Force, was to “ultimately engage in sexual contact with them.”

(Illustration - Simone Hogan/Shutterstock)
(Illustration - Simone Hogan/Shutterstock)

The majority of offenses were “nonphysical communication,” he clarified, “and via mobile phones.”

Operation Timing Belt was launched in April 2020 by detectives from the police department’s Sex Offender Management Squad and involved months of covert surveillance, reports Perth Now. Police amassed enough evidence to charge the 18 offenders on Aug. 29. Of the charges, 135 comprised nonsexual offenses, including drug-related, trespassing, and animal cruelty charges, while 79 were related to sexual offenses.

The predatory operation involved collaboration among its ringleaders; WA Police explained that a number of suspects would “compare information” about their victims and share their targets with one another. At least four of the accused are believed to have previous convictions for child sex offenses.

“They come in from ‘likes’ and friends from other people, and they get accepted and then they start grooming,” said state crime assistant commissioner Brad Royce, adding that Operation Timing Belt demonstrates just how vigilant teens and their parents need to be.

“You wouldn’t let a stranger into your home if they randomly knocked on the front door,” Royce continued; “likewise, you shouldn’t allow someone to access your online profile unless you know them.”

(Illustration - Mama Belle and the kids/Shutterstock)
(Illustration - Mama Belle and the kids/Shutterstock)

The allegations against the 18 perpetrators of the pedophile ring were made in conjunction with seized computer equipment obtained during police raids. Daly cited mobile phones and social media as two of the biggest modern-day tools for sexual predators, each providing them with “new ways to reach out to youths” in order to commit heinous crimes.

“These are adult men, for the most part, that aren’t much older [than the teens],” Royce lamented, speaking of the 18 suspects. “But they’re old enough to know better.”

Despite the successful sting, Operation Timing Belt is by no means complete.

The dissolution of a large pedophile ring in the capital city of Western Australia is a huge boon for the cause, but sexual predators remain at large. WA Police are keeping the operation afloat, channeling their expertise into saving more vulnerable minors from becoming victims of sexual abuse.

News of the disbanding of the ring comes just days after a large-scale suspected sex-trafficking operation was busted in the U.S. state of Georgia. Thirty-nine missing children were recovered after a two-week mission by the U.S. Marshals; nine adult suspects are behind bars, facing sex offender violations.

Operation Not Forgotten, spanning 20 counties around Atlanta, rescued 26 missing children and located 13 more, some of whom were suffering from medical and mental health conditions.

In a statement released on Aug. 27, Donald Washington, the director of the U.S. Marshals Service, explained, "These missing children were considered to be some of the most at-risk and challenging recovery cases in the area. One missing child is worth thousands, in my mind, of fugitives that we go out and get.

“The message to missing children and their families is that we will never stop looking for you,” he said.

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Louise Chambers is a writer, born and raised in London, England. She covers inspiring news and human interest stories.
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