Crimes
Against Children
The FBI provides a rapid and
effective investigative response to reported federal
crimes involving child victims, such as kidnappings,
sexual assaults, sexual exploitation of children, international
parental kidnappings, and Child Support Recovery Act
matters.
On-line child pornography and child sexual exploitation are the largest crimes
against children problems confronting the FBI. To respond, the FBI started
the Innocent Images National Initiative. Innocent Images is a proactive on-line
undercover operation designed to prevent child pornography and child sexual
exploitation committed via the Internet and on-line services, to identify and
rescue witting and unwitting child victims, to identify and prosecute child
sexual offenders, and to create an on-line environment where would-be offenders
are deterred because of the possibility of communicating with undercover law
enforcement Agents.
INTERNATIONAL PARENTAL KIDNAPPING: MOHAMAD SALAH HAMOUDA
On April 25, 2000, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)
was notified of a potential International Parental Kidnapping case by Mary
Hamouda, the mother of three children, ages ten, six, and four. Mary and her
husband Mohamad Salah Hamouda were going through a divorce. Mary had physical
custody and a final custody order had not been issued. The couple had a written
agreement, arranged by their lawyers, that Mohamad would have the children
from the evening of April 21, 2000, through the evening of April 22. On April
23, the children did not report for school. On April 27, Mary filed a complaint
with her local police department regarding the kidnapping of her children.
Mohamad had been born in Lebanon, and she feared that he most likely fled to
that country. The next day a police sergeant brought the case to the attention
of an FBI Agent detailed to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children,
and asked the FBI for assistance. It was determined that Mohamad and the children
had taken a flight to Lebanon.
The FBI contacted relatives of Mohamad, including his brother Samir. On June
12, Mohamad contacted his brother in the United States. Samir notified the
FBI that Mohamad had called and was planning to call him again in approximately
one hour. FBI Agents arrived at Samir's home and spoke with Mohamad when he
called to speak with his brother. Mohamad said he planned to return to the
United States, arriving at Dulles Airport in Virginia on June 18. Upon his
arrival, Mohamad was arrested and the children were re-united with their mother.
CASE STUDY: MULTIPLE CHILD ABDUCTIONS
In the spring of 2001, a young girl playing outside her apartment in Louisiana
was abducted by an unidentified man in a van. The local FBI field office quickly
set up a 24-hour command center at the local police department. Neighborhood
searches were conducted via the ground and air. The National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children and the America's Most Wanted television show gave the
case media publicity. A few days later an employee at a bus station recognized
the girl and called the police. The girl was recovered alive-thanks to well-orchestrated,
cooperative action between law enforcement, the media, and the public.
The investigation revealed that the kidnapper drove the girl to a remote hunting
cabin where he repeatedly raped her. He then drove to a bus station with the
intention of putting her on a bus back to her hometown.
The FBI believed this kidnapping might be related to another kidnapping which
had occurred a month earlier. In that case, another young girl was taken from
outside her Texas residence by an unknown white male. She was held at a remote
cabin for six days, sexually assaulted, then driven back to her neighborhood
and released.
Interviews of both girls revealed similarities in the description of the cabin.
A month later another Texas girl was reported
missing to the FBI. She was last seen getting off a school bus and talking
to a white male who was driving a white car. A witness observed the girl enter
the car and drive away with the subject. Based on the similarities in the subject's
description, the FBI believed this incident was related to the two earlier
cases. The FBI established a local command post.
Two days later a vehicle used during the abduction was described as being light
colored with a Texas license plate. FBI Houston disseminated a composite of
the kidnapper, and students from a Houston elementary school reported they
had been approached by an individual fitting the suspect's description. The
students thought this man's actions were strange and wrote down his license
plate number. The FBI traced the car to its registered owner and interviewed
him. They learned that the car was recently sold to a white male, possibly
a transient, who paid cash for the car. No identifying information on the subject
was obtained, which is apparently common practice in Texas. The seller of the
car was shown a composite of the wanted subject and verified the composite
resembled the person who purchased the car.
A search located a traffic citation for the suspect's car issued a few months
earlier in Texas to Gregory Cox.
A report of a suspicious vehicle near a remote cabin in Texas was received
by the sheriff's office. Law enforcement officers responded to the call and
observed a compact car occupied by a young female and a male subject parked
next to a small cabin. The female ran from the car toward the law enforcement
officers. The male simultaneously got out of the car and ran away from the
law enforcement officers. The male ran a short distance and then fatally shot
himself in the head.
The suspect was later confirmed to be a known sex offender. Because his DNA
was on file, the FBI Laboratory was able to link known DNA belonging to the
suspect with unknown DNA samples obtained from the victims.