Florida Man, Kent Frank, Convicted of Sex Tourism and Child Pornography Involving Cambodian Children

April 9th, 2007

By Donna Porter
From Associated Content

Kent Frank of Miami, FL was convicted today of eight counts of sex tourism and child pornography charges following a five-week trial in federal court. His sexual victims extended to Cambodia, and after almost two days of deliberations the federal jury in Miami found Frank guilty of eight counts charged in a 10-count indictment. The trial was held before Judge Adalberto Jordan.

Child sex tourists are individuals that travel to foreign countries to engage in sexual activity with children. It is estimated that more than one million children worldwide are drawn into the sex trade annually. The victims frequently live in poor countries where the law is thought to be more easily avoided or corrupted. These poverty-stricken areas are home to children who are sold for sexual exploitation, or who sell themselves, for basic necessities such as food.

The jury found that Frank engaged in commercial sex acts with three minors during two separate trips to Cambodia between September 2003 and January 2004. Evidence showed that Frank paid three Cambodian minors money so that he could take sexually explicit and nude pictures of the girls. The jury heard evidence that the defendant took sexually explicit images of several other minors in addition to the four females referenced in the indictment. Read the rest of this entry »

‘Bangaisha’: The economics of sex tourism

April 4th, 2007

April 4th 2007
From the Kenya Times

With her sleeping six-month-old baby daughter under one arm, 17-year-old Alice (not her real name) explains why she moved to Mombasa from ‘up country’, and how she joined the growing ranks of young girls involved in the commercial sex trade on the Kenyan coast.

“When I was sixteen, I became pregnant and my parents were very upset. They threw me out of my home and I dropped out of school, so my boyfriend and I decided to move to Mombasa to start a new life. After three months he left me, and I had to find a way to make money. There are no jobs around here, and I had no money. I had to buy food to feed my growing baby. I just carried on from there,” she said.

Serving ideally ‘mzungu’ male tourists, but otherwise locals, she does not see herself as a prostitute, preferring instead to be referred to as someone who practices ‘bangaisha,’ a ‘Sheng’ word meaning ‘soliciting for business’.

According to a United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) report, commercial sex tourism is growing rapidly on the Kenyan coast, and gaining increasing acceptance as a valid way of earning an income, spurred on by a flourishing tourism industry. According to the Kenya Tourism Board, 1.68 million tourists visited Kenya in 2005. Read the rest of this entry »

Sex tryst lands Canadian, Richard Beaulac, in jail

April 4th, 2007

Tuesday, March 13 2007

By Mata Press Service

The arrest of an English teacher from Canada for allegedly attempting to have sex with a 13-year-old Cambodia beggar girl has once again put the spotlight on the child sex tourism in the poor Asian nation.

The arrest has also prompted calls by anti-child sex trade activists to charge the man under Canada’s child sex tourism laws, which has only been used once before. “We are calling on the Canadian government to investigate the serious allegation against this individual, and if they are substantiated to lay charges under Canada’s child sex tourism laws,” said Sabrina Sullivan, Managing Director of The Future Group.

file1.jpgThe Cambodian Daily reported that Richard Beaulac, a 35-year-old man from Quebec has been charged in Cambodia with the attempted rape of a 13 year-old girl, who was a street beggar.

It said that Beaulac entered Cambodia on January 1 and has been working in the tourist town of Siem Reap as an English teacher.

Beaulac allegedly picked up the 13-year old girl and three other female street children and took them back to his apartment, according to Sun Bunthang, provincial anti-human trafficking police chief. Read the rest of this entry »

Kenneth Robert Klassen, Burnaby man, accused of sex tourism with kids freed on bail

April 4th, 2007

Neal Hall, Vancouver Sun
Published: Thursday, March 29, 2007

A 56-year-old Burnaby man accused of sex tourism crimes in three countries was granted bail today by Vancouver provincial court Judge Thomas Gove.

The judge set a number of bail conditions on Kenneth Robert Klassen: that he post a $50,000 surety, report regularly to his bail supervisor, not change his residence without a court order, not possess a video camera and not to be alone with a girl under the age of 18.

Klassen, an international art dealer who is married with three children, appeared in court dressed in an orange jail-issue sweatshirt and red pants.

He was arrested March 9 and charged with 35 sex tourism counts involving six underage Colombian girls, eight Cambodians and three in the Philippines.

It is alleged the girls were as young as nine years old. He faces a maximum of 10 years in prison if convicted.

It is the first time in Canada that a person charged under the sex tourism law will go to trial, where the law may be challenged for the first time.
The previous case of a Vancouver man ended in a guilty plea. The law is intended to protect children in foreign countries from sexual exploitation by Canadians. Read the rest of this entry »

Sex tourism charges dismissed against Gary Evans Jackson, Bainbridge, Wash. man.

April 4th, 2007

Thursday, March 29, 2007
From the associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal appeals court has dismissed an indictment against a Bainbridge Island man accused of traveling to Asia to have sex with minors.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled the indictment against Gary Evans Jackson only met one of two elements enabling a prosecution under April 2003 federal legislation making such conduct punishable in the United States.

Jackson faced years behind bars if convicted under the Exploitation of Children Today Act. But the appeals court said the law did not apply to Jackson because it required that he travel to the foreign country and engage in illegal sex acts after the law was passed.

Jackson moved to Cambodia in 2001, well before the law was adopted. He was accused of having sex with boys in Cambodia after the law was passed.

Jackson pleaded guilty in 2005 to having sex with children under 18 in Cambodia on the condition that he could challenge the law on grounds it did no apply to him.

To read the official United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Ciruit opinion on the case, please click here

april 12th @ the Press Club

March 25th, 2007

UPDATE: We would like to thank everyone who came out to our musical benefit at the Press Club. The evening was a success! We look forward to seeing you at our next event!

pressclub-thankyou.jpg

Come out to the Press Club on Thursday, April 12th to support Action to End Exploitation. The music starts at 7pm until close. All proceeds go to towards Action to End Exploitation and our projects overseas.

Click here for directions. If you have any other questions, please email us at info@endexploitation.org.

action to end exploitation benefit at the press club

“slave children” on the bbc

March 23rd, 2007

National Multi Cultural Institute has created a human trafficking search portal as a service to individuals and organizations working to eliminate human trafficking. Click on the visual links under “human trafficking t.v” to get download clips related to human trafficking from various organizations working in the field. Check out the portal…

For those with access to BBC2 television, “Slave Children”, a documentary about the trafficking of children by Rageh Omaar will be shown March 26th at 2100 BST. The documentary follows the story of five children from three continents. Below is an excerpt from the BBC website about Ali, a boy whose story is featured in the documentary.

Six-year-old Ali was picked up by Saudi authorities for begging on the streets of Jeddah.

He was smuggled into Saudi Arabia from Yemen in order to beg.

Ali says he ended up begging after physical abuse involving metal wire attacks on his back. He says he was beaten up when he said he did not want to beg all day.

Ali is one of thousands of Yemeni children sold to gangs and forced to beg each year.
Ali

These children are often sold by families who are duped into believing their offspring will get a better life.

Many of the children who are smuggled over the Saudi/Yemen border are beaten and sometimes even mutilated to become better, more effective beggars.

It is hard to be exact about figures, but in 2005 the Yemeni Ministry of Social Affairs acknowledged that about 300 children were crossing the border every month.

Click here to read more on the BBC website….

paedophiles in india

March 16th, 2007

Information available on the internet can sometimes be overwhelming. As such, from time to time, I will be posting links and resources related to human trafficking and sexual exploitation that I’ve found helpful or interesting.

To start of, here is a radio documentary from the BBC about paedophiles in Goa, India.

The following is an introduction to the documentary from BBC’s website:

Thousands of tourists visit the Indian state of Goa’s beautiful beaches every year, but in this BBC investigation Allan Urry discovers a darker side to beach life in a tropical paradise.

Foreigners are travelling to Goa to sexually abuse children, and the local authorities are turning their back on the problem.

Allan travels to Goa to speak to charities, NGOs and government ministers and finds out that boys and girls as young as ten are indeed being made available for sex to foreign tourists.

As tourism in Goa grows bigger and bigger, will this problem get worse and worse?

Cambodia gets tough on child sex trade

September 27th, 2006

Adam Piore | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
September 27, 2006
Phnom Pehn

Cambodian police this year have arrested at least 12 foreigners on charges of sexually abusing children - more than twice the amount snagged all of last year.

p6b.jpgIn addition to three Americans, they’ve caught four Germans, an elderly Swiss man, a Belgium national, and at least three Vietnamese nationals who helped the foreigners procure children.

For those who have long fought pedophilia here, the spike is actually cause for celebration. Most agree the increase from just five arrests last year probably has little to do with the prevalence of the crimes. Rather it’s a function of increased political will, effort, and skill - encouraged by foreign governments like the US - on the part of Cambodia’s police, who have for years been accused of allowing foreign pedophiles to operate with impunity.

“They are more reactive, more willing to work on this,” says Beatrice Magnier, director of Action Pour Les Enfants, (APLE), a French nongovernmental organization that works to combat the child sex trade.

Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior, says, “The authorities have increased their knowledge and skills after cooperation with NGOs. The implementation of the law gets better from one day to the next.”

It’s a trend that’s been in the offing since at least 2000, when Cambodia first launched a major initiative funded by foreign donors aimed at targeting the exploitation of women and children and set up a hotline to receive tips. In 2002, Cambodia established a department in the Ministry of Interior specifically devoted to combating human trafficking and protecting at-risk juveniles.

But obstacles of apathy, corruption, and poverty prove to be constant challenges, NGO workers say. After all, many of the former leaders of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime continue to live freely in Cambodia’s northwestern provinces, unrepentant for crimes that killed 2 million Cambodians between the years 1975-1979. In Phnom Penh, angry mobs routinely beat thieves to death on the streets, because few trust the police to prosecute them. And corruption can often buy freedom for even the most heinous crimes.

But in recent years, foreign governments have gotten more serious about cracking down on the problem, and made it more difficult for Cambodian authorities to ignore.

In 2003, the US Congress passed the Child Protect Act, which allows the US to prosecute American citizens in the US for crimes against children committed overseas. Penalties can reach 30 years in prison. Canada, among others, recently enacted a similar law.

Since 2003, Cambodia has arrested and deported at least six Americans to face charges there, under the new law. One was Michael John Koklich, a California native who fled Cambodian police on his motorbike in February, before crashing into a barricade, and taking down Phnom Penh’s deputy municipal antitrafficking police chief in the process.

“Cambodia has become a valuable ally in arresting the worst of all sexual predators, pedophiles,” US Ambassador Joseph Mussomeli says. “We are very pleased with the excellent cooperation we have received.”

And there are other encouraging signs. For years, pedophiles flocked to Svay Pak, the brothel village on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, bragging about exploits at coffeehouses and bars. NGOs and foreign governments tried in vain to convince Cambodia to do something about the child prostitution, which operated with impunity there. The government shut it down in 2004.

Nowadays in the countryside, even in remote areas, signs abound bearing the hotline number and the slogan: “Turn a sex tourist into an ex-tourist.” The signs show a white hand holding the hand of a child in one picture, and the white hand in hand cuffs next.

Still, most agree there is a lot of work to be done. Even as Cambodia has taken steps forward, some point to recent missteps. Police arrested Terry Darrell Smith on July 31 and, according to the International Justice Mission (IJM), found evidence he was involved with two Vietnamese girls in their early teens.

But earlier this month, a Cambodian court released him and, says IJM, a US group working to end the underage sex trade, he disappeared for weeks. Police rearrested him last Wednesday following public outcry and diplomatic pressure, according to local newspaper reports. Authorities now plan to deport him to his home state of Oregon where he will face criminal charges. “The policies are improving, but the court is still very weak,” says APLE’s Mr. Magnier.

Recently, Cambodia apparently granted citizenship to Thomas Frank White, a millionaire from San Francisco currently in a Mexican jail on child sex charges. He’s also wanted in the US for violating the Protect Act and has been accused by Thai officials of abusing children there.

Suspected pedophiles often come to Cambodia hoping to find anonymity. Fifteen years ago in Oregon, Mr. Smith had been “convicted of multiple charges that he used children in displays of sexual acts,” The Oregonian reported last week. Belgian national Bessape Philippe, also arrested recently, had spent three years in a Belgian prison for abusing three Belgian boys aged 14 to 16.

APLE’s Magnier says it’s difficult to stop pedophiles operating in remote provinces. Perpetrators are often residents or long-term tourists who insinuate themselves into the lives of families, and develop the role of financial benefactors. They will prey on the child and use their financial leverage to prevent the family from taking action, he says.

Many of the recent cases came to light only because the perpetrators were careless and reported by groups like APLE, or cruel enough to make a scene. In the others, NGO workers used detective work: following tips, tracking suspects, interviewing victims, and turning cases over to the police.


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