Three children charged with creating social media child porn hub
By Karl Doyle
The three children have been charged over setting up the porn site
Three Florida youngsters created a social media account to solicit and post explicit photos of other children, it has emerged.
Pembroke
Pines police said the Instagram account - with more than 500 followers -
led detectives to charge the 12 and 15-year-old boys and the
13-year-old girl with electronic transmission of child pornography.
They said the trio were posting photos of naked Broward County
children to the account and then encouraging their followers to do the
same.
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The postings included the victims' names and other personal
information. Police, who began investigating the Instagram account in
December, say followers harassed victims by posting insulting comments.
Man who was allowed rape girl by her mum gets sentence increase
A
man whose neighbour allowed him to rape her five-year-old daughter
repeatedly over a three year period has been sentenced to 14 years in
prison following a finding last year by the Court of Appeal that his
original eight-year-sentence was too lenient.
President
of the Court of Appeal Mr Justice Seán Ryan had said the man's crimes
stood “on the most heinous level” of offending which involved “depravity
amounting to torture”.
The Roscommon man who cannot be identified, had pleaded guilty to
repeated categories of rape as well as the sexual assault of a
neighbour's young daughter on dates between 2004 and 2008. Mr Justice
Ryan said the victim was five-years-old when the first offence took
place.
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He had been sentenced By Mr Justice Paul Carney to eight years
imprisonment on each of the fifteen counts of rape and five years
imprisonment on five counts of sexual assault.
The sentences, which were to all run concurrently, were found to be
unduly lenient by the Court of Appeal in December last year following a
successful application by the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Mr Justice Ryan said today that the case had to be among "the worst that the courts have considered”.
He said the man's guilty plea, though late, was given its full value.
Equally, there were some mitigating circumstances such as difficulties
in childhood, in schooling and the loss of a parent at a crucial stage.
However, the sentence had to be severe to meet the justice of the
situation. He said a much more severe sentence could have been imposed
and would “not have been set aside on appeal”
He said the minimum sentence for these horrific crimes was 14 years
on each of the fifteen rape counts to run concurrently. The court did
not interfere with the sexual assault charges.
Mr Justice Ryan, who sat with Mr Justice Garrett Sheehan and Mr
Justice George Birmingham, emphasised that mitigating factors were taken
into account and a more severe sentence could have been allowed.
In December, counsel for the DPP, Ms Caroline Biggs SC, had told the
court that the victim was of particular and extreme vulnerability. Her
mother was also abusing her, and she allowed the man to have access to
her daughter. Her father also sexually abused her but not to the degree
of her mother, Ms Biggs said.
As some of the offences were being detailed to the court, Mr Justice
Ryan said the extent of the depravity visited on the child could
scarcely be exaggerated. He reiterated comments by Ms Biggs that there
were instances of “depravity amounting to torture”.
The court heard of “extremely depraved events” involving a dog leash before she was raped.
Mr Justice Ryan said the man had fixed on a five-year-old child and
invaded her body in every possible way over the next
three-and-a-half-years.
He said the offences took place between July 2004 and January 2008
until she was taken into the care of the Health Service Executive. For
each year from 2004 to 2008 there was a “series of the most serious
sexual crimes”, Mr Justice Ryan said.
The crimes were accompanied by instances of depravity and perversion
including incidents which Mr Justice Ryan said he would “spare the court
the sordid details” of.
He pleaded guilty a few days before the trial took place and was sentenced on July 31 2013.
Mr Justice Seán Ryan said the sentencing judge did not say anything
about the facts of the case because other court proceedings concerning
the victim were pending at the time. As a result, it was not possible to
know the judge's thinking process.
It was clear, Mr Justice Ryan said, that the offences had to be placed at the highest end of the scale.
The guilty man was a neighbour who had been in a sexual relationship
with the child's mother. The violations were frequent, forceful and
painful and involved perverse modes of gratification. On any appraisal
it stood “at the most heinous level”, Mr Justice Ryan said.
The accused was not the only person who abused this unfortunate child but that didn't affect his culpability, he said.
He said the sentencing judge fell into “grave error” by holding that a
sentence of eight years for the rape charges was appropriate.
Ms Biggs had told the court that the victim's mother has since been
sentenced to 14 years imprisonment with four-and-a-half suspended and
her father had also pleaded guilty to similar offences.
She said the victim was anxious to maintain her anonymity and Mr
Justice Ryan so ordered that the man not be identified to preserve her
anonymity.