RCMP to tackle ‘increase’ in child pornography in the North

The distribution of child pornography has seen a ‘steady increase’ in the North over the past five years according to police; now a dedicated unit is being formed to combat it.

“We’ve noticed an increase in online activity involving children, distribution of child pornography, child luring, distribution of intimate images, extortion, those kinds of things in the North,” said RCMP Sgt. Bruce McGregor.

RELATED: 14 months for YK man who viewed, shared ‘torture’ child porn

RELATED: Hay River man arrested ‘for soliciting child porn’

McGregor believes the increase is due in part to the growing accessibility of the internet within Northern communities, making it easier for Northern youth to connect with strangers online.

“It’s creating an environment inviting for nefarious people to take advantage of certain situations,” he said.

Funding has been announced for the creation of a three-person Internet Child Exploitation Unit (ICE) in Yellowknife dedicated to investigating these types of cases.

The Department of Justice will contribute $429,000 (or 70 per cent) of the cost of the unit, while the remaining 30 per cent will come from the federal government.

Before, tackling child pornography was a task carried out by the RCMP’s major crimes unit, something McGregor said was difficult to handle.

“These types of investigations are very complex, and we have very limited resources here,” he said.

“It does require a fair bit of training and development internally to have an investigator properly investigate these types of activities.

“With the increase in these types of activities in the North and the need for technical investigators … and to do all that in-house in the Northwest Territories, we saw the need for funding for a dedicated unit towards this.”

With the dedicated unit, McGregor says major crimes will have more time to investigate additional cold cases and current homicide investigations among other things.

It will also allow members of the unit to focus on educating Northern youth about safety online.

“Having that dedicated unit is going to allow us the time to get out there and basically, for lack of anything better, to talk to people, get into schools, talk to children who are currently online using the internet,” McGregor said.

“We can certainly relay some key messages to them that they should be following, and also for parents, what they should be doing in terms of monitoring their children in their online time.”

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Yellowknife airport could be moving to a new location

At a public briefing today in Yellowknife, Assistant Deputy Infrastructure Minister Sam Shannon said YZF may be moving to a new location soon.

Behchokǫ̀ residents asked to conserve water

The Tłı̨chǫ government is asking Behchokǫ̀ residents to conserve water due to low water levels in the region, effective immediately.

Minister Caroline Wawzonek speaks about Northern infrastructure investments

Caroline Wawzonek, Minister of Finance and Minister of Strategic Infrastructure, Energy and Supply Chains, has released a statement on the infrastructure investments in the North announced earlier this month.  

Hay River conducting public survey on impacts of climate change

The town of Hay River is conducting a public survey on the impacts of climate change as part of their Climate Adaption Plan. The plan will focus on how climate change is affecting people in town, what actions and priorities are identified as important and will gauge how concerned people are about it.

Investigators interviewing witnesses in Yellowknife after 35-year-old dies in custody

Saskatchewan RCMP report that they are currently interviewing witnesses and collecting evidence after a 35-year-old man from Nunavut was found dead less than three hours after being taken into custody on Thursday. A team from Sask. has been deployed to Yellowknife to conduct the investigation as an independent agency.