What Should You Do If You Suspect Your Child Is Communicating With A
Sexual Predator On-line?
1. Consider talking openly with your child about your suspicions.
Tell them about the dangers of computer-sex offenders.
2. Review what is on your child's computer. If you don't know
how, ask a friend, coworker, relative, or other knowledgeable
person. Pornography or any kind of sexual communication can be a
warning sign.
3. Use the Caller ID service to determine who is calling your
child. Most telephone companies that offer Caller ID also offer a
service that allows you to block your number from appearing on someone
else's Caller ID. Telephone companies also offer an additional
service feature that rejects incoming calls that you block. This
rejection feature prevents computer-sex offenders or anyone else from
calling your home anonymously.
4. Devices can be purchased that show telephone numbers that have been
dialed from your home phone. Additionally, the last number called
from your home phone can be retrieved provided that the telephone is
equipped with a redial featuren.. You will also need a telephone pager to
complete this retrieval.
This is done using a numeric-display pager and
another phone that is on the same line as the first phone with the redial
feature.
Using the two phones and the pager, a call is placed
from the second phone to the pager. When the paging terminal beeps
for you to enter a telephone number, you press the redial button on the
first (or suspect) phone. The last number called from that phone
will then be displayed on the pager.
5. Monitor your child's access to all types of live electronic
communications (i.e., chat rooms, instant messages, Internet Relay Chat,
etc.), and monitor your child's e-mail. computer-sex offenders
almost always meet potential victims via chat rooms. After meeting
a child on-line, they will continue to communicate electronically often
via e-mail.
6. Should any of the following situations arise in your household, via
the Internet or on-line service, you should immediately contact your local
or state law enforcement agency, the FBI, and the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children:
a. Your child or anyone in the household has received child
pornography; b. Your child has been sexually solicited by someone who
knows that your child is under 18 years of age. c. Your child has
received sexually explicit images from someone that knows your child is
under the age of 18.
If one of these scenarios occurs, keep the computer
turned off in order to preserve any evidence for future law enforcement
use. Unless directed to do so by the law enforcement agency, you
should not attempt to copy andy of the images and/or text found on the
computer.
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