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mynameis
16-10-2007, 02:50 AM
Online abuser 'English teacher'
Image of suspect shown on Interpol website (www.interpol.int)
Images of the suspect were originally scrambled
Police conducting a worldwide hunt for a man shown sexually abusing children in internet pictures believe he is a teacher of English now in Thailand.

The possible identification of the man, seen in about 200 images depicting abuse, comes after Interpol released a photograph of the suspect.

The pictures of the man were digitally altered but police computer specialists have produced identifiable images.

Police said they may have been taken in Vietnam and Cambodia in 2002 and 2003.

The suspected child abuser was identified by five different sources from three continents as a man teaching English at a school in South Korea, Interpol said.

His name, nationality, date of birth, passport number, and current and previous places of work have also been established, according to the international police organisation.

'All other means'

Interpol said that on Thursday the man flew from Seoul to Bangkok International Airport, where his image was captured by security cameras.

It had said the man seen apparently abusing 12 boys in a number of images was a danger to children while he remained at large.

The international police organisation launched its unprecedented global public appeal last week, after trying "all other means" to identify the man.

It said more than 200 people had responded to their appeal.

Interpol database

The first pictures of the man were found three years ago in Germany and the search for the suspect had been codenamed Operation Vico.

The pictures had been manipulated to disguise the man's face with a swirl pattern, but computer specialists at Germany's federal police agency, the BKA, worked with Interpol's human trafficking team to produce identifiable images.

Interpol maintains a database of 520,000 images of child sex abuse submitted by 36 member states.

Using sophisticated software, investigators have identified and rescued nearly 600 victims from 31 countries.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7045701.stm

mynameis
16-10-2007, 12:31 PM
Hunted paedophile suspect named

A suspected paedophile who appears in 200 internet images abusing young boys has been named by Thai police as a Canadian teaching English in Asia.

They said he was Christopher Paul Neil, 32. Interpol said they had indentified the suspect but did not name him.

Interpol had appealed for public information after the suspect's digitally-swirled image in internet photos was unscrambled by experts.

Interpol said the suspect had flown from South Korea to Thailand last week.

It has released a security camera image of the man arriving at Bangkok airport on 11 October on a flight from Seoul.

"He is now internationally known," said Mick Moran, the Interpol officer leading the search for the suspect.

"Interpol's network is very large. I have no doubt that we will find him - maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but definitely we will find him."

Unprecedented appeal

The first pictures of the man were found three years ago in Germany. The pictures had been manipulated to disguise the man's face with a swirl pattern, but German computer specialists managed to produce identifiable images which were posted on Interpol's website a week ago.

After an appeal for information, the suspect was identified by five different sources from three continents as a man teaching English at a school in South Korea, Interpol said.

Image of suspect shown on Interpol website
Security cameras show the suspect at Bangkok airport last week
Police then established his name, nationality, date of birth, passport number and current and previous places of work.

Panaspong Sirawongse, Interpol chief in Thailand, named the suspect as Christopher Paul Neil.

He told Reuters the Canadian had worked at an international school in Thailand between 2003 and 2004.

Photographs of the suspect published on the internet show him apparently abusing 12 boys in Vietnam and Cambodia.

"Thai police are collecting evidence and information from neighbouring countries and other Interpol members to seek a court order for an arrest warrant," Thai police Colonel Apichart Suriboonya told the French news agency AFP.

Interpol maintains a database of 520,000 images of child sex abuse submitted by 36 member states.

Using sophisticated software, investigators have identified and rescued nearly 600 victims from 31 countries.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7045701.stm

tinmenace
16-10-2007, 01:21 PM
I just cannot get my head wrapped around this stuff.

mynameis
19-10-2007, 10:01 AM
Thai police arrest paedophile suspect


Mark Tran and agencies
Friday October 19, 2007
Guardian Unlimited

A composite picture of a suspected paedophile
A composite picture of the suspected paedophile, Christopher Paul Neil taken from the Interpol website. Photograph: Reuters


A Canadian paedophile suspect was arrested in rural Thailand today after German police unscrambled an image in which his face was digitally obscured.

After a week-long manhunt, the man - identified by Thai police as Christopher Neil - was found in the province of Nakhon Ratchasima, 150 miles north-east of Bangkok and well away from the normal tourist trail.

His hiding place was revealed by a trace on his Thai boyfriend's mobile phone, the tourist police chief, Chuchart Suwannakom, told Reuters.

Article continues
"They went together to different provinces, probably on the run, and the last call made was from Nakhon Ratchasima," Mr Chuchart said. "So I sent my men there."

Yesterday, Thai police issued an arrest warrant for Mr Neil after alleging that he sexually abused boys in Thailand as well as a dozen Cambodian and Vietnamese boys, some as young as sic.

Detectives in various countries have been trying to track him down for three years since German police discovered photographs on the internet of a man sexually abusing 12 boys in Vietnam and Cambodia.

His face had been obscured by a digital swirling pattern, but German police computer experts unscrambled the image, and Interpol issued a rare worldwide appeal for information on the man.

More than 350 people came forward, and Mr Neil was identified by five sources from three different continents, Interpol said.

He abruptly left South Korea, where he was teaching, after Interpol issued his photo, and flew to Thailand. There, he was photographed with a shaven head and glasses by airport security cameras.

Mr Neil could face up to 20 years in jail if convicted in Thailand. It is unclear whether Canada - which can prosecute its citizens for child sex crimes committed abroad - will seek extradition. Cambodia and Vietnam may also want to question him.

Mr Neil, who is from British Colombia, has been teaching in Thailand, South Korea and Vietnam since 2000.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/crime/article/0,,2194830,00.html

:D

tinmenace
19-10-2007, 12:23 PM
Good job! Pedophiles don't need to be teachers.