NEWS RELEASE
Wednesday
June 4, 2008
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Contact:
Communications Department
(703) 837-6111
media@ncmec.org
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CONGRESS MAKES MISSING AND SEXUALLY EXPLOITED CHILDREN
A PRIORITY
National Center for
Missing & Exploited Children is Reauthorized and has Programs Expanded
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - The
new bipartisan law Protecting Our Children Comes First Act (H.R.
2517, S.1829) was signed into law yesterday by President George W. Bush. The
bill was approved by the U.S. House of Representatives by a vote of 408
to 3, and was unanimously approved by the U.S. Senate. The bill reauthorizes
funding for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)
through 2013 and adds new programs and services to those already being
offered by the organization.
NCMEC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that has worked in partnership
with the U.S. Department of Justice to bring missing children home and to
protect children from sexual exploitation for 24 years. Since the organization
was created in 1984, it has helped recover 126,000 missing children and the
recovery rate of missing children has increased from 62% in 1990 to 97 percent
today. In 2007, NCMEC helped recover more children than any other year
in the organization’s 24 year history. The bill signed into law
by President Bush authorizes up to $40 million per year in federal funding
to NCMEC to support 19 specific programs, mandated by statute, and designed
to bring more missing children home and keep every child safe.
Leadership
Heading the effort that resulted in the passage of this important legislation
were longtime child advocates Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) and Orrin
Hatch (R-Utah) in the Senate, and Representatives Nick Lampson (D-Texas) and
Judy Biggert (R-Illinois) in the House, along with Chairwoman Carolyn McCarthy
(D-New York) of the Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities of the
House Committee on Education and Labor.
Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont): “As a father
and grandfather, I can imagine that an abducted child is any parent’s
worst nightmare,” Leahy
said. “Unfortunately, it is a nightmare that happens all too often. These
families need the assistance of the American people and a helping hand
from Congress. I am proud that Congress and the President have also
realized their obligation to our Nation’s children by supporting the
Protecting Our Children Comes First Act.”
Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah): "For many years, I have
worked closely with NCMEC and its founder, John Walsh. Together we have
celebrated many important legislative victories that have improved this nation's
response to crimes against children. I am pleased and proud to have
helped pass this vital bill which will do so much to protect our children."
Representative Nick Lampson (D-Texas): “Child safety is
a national priority that deserves every weapon in our arsenal; and every tool
in our tool box,” said Lampson, founder and co-chairman of the Congressional
Missing and Exploited Children’s Caucus. “Parents form the front
line when it comes to keeping children safe, but child safety is a shared
responsibility. The funding we have provided will increase resources for law
enforcement to capture, prosecute and incarcerate the worst of criminals that
work to harm our children.”
Representative Judy Biggert (R-Illinois): “It seems like
every time I open the newspaper, I read another story of a child that has
been victimized,” said U.S. Rep. Judy Biggert (R-IL-13), Co-Chair of
the Congressional Caucus on Missing & Exploited Children. “Clearly
more can and must be done. That’s why this bill is so important. It
will provide the National Center with the tools and resources it needs to
help keep our children safe, and it addresses the modern, online threats that
face today’s youth. I’m very pleased that Congress and the
President have been able to unite behind this critical legislation.”
Representative Carolyn McCarthy (D-New York): Chairwoman
McCarthy added, “the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
has done vital work for nearly a quarter century. The risks that modern
children face today are daunting and unprecedented. It was important
that we not just reauthorize NCMEC, but that we provide clear, specific
mandates to address the issues facing today’s children and their safety. I
look forward to continued collaboration with NCMEC in working to keep our
nation’s children, families, and communities safe.”
19 Core Programs and Services
Since 1984, NCMEC has operated the national resource center and clearinghouse
on missing and exploited children; operated the national missing children’s
hotline; coordinated public and private programs to locate, recover, or reunite
missing children with their families; and provided training and technical
assistance to law enforcement.
Today, Congress has mandated that NCMEC perform 19 specific functions on
behalf of the federal government:
- Operate the official national resource center and information clearinghouse
for missing and exploited children;
- Operate a national 24-hour toll-free missing children’s hotline;
- Coordinate public and private programs that locate, recover, or reunite
missing children with their families;
- Provide technical assistance and training to law enforcement;
- Provide assistance to families and law enforcement in locating and
recovering missing and exploited children, nationally and internationally;
- Provide analytical support to law enforcement through searching public
records databases in locating and recovering missing and exploited children
and helping to locate and identify abductors;
- Provide direct on-site technical assistance to law enforcement agencies
in child abduction and exploitation cases;
- Provide forensic assistance to law enforcement in the identification
of unidentified deceased children through facial reconstruction of skeletal
remains;
- Track the incidence of attempted child abductions to identify links
and patterns, and provide such information to law enforcement;
- Provide training and assistance to law enforcement agencies in identifying
and locating non-compliant sex offenders;
- Facilitate the deployment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center
to assist in reuniting missing children with their families during periods
of national disasters;
- Operate a CyberTipline for reporting Internet-related child sexual
exploitation;
- Work with law enforcement, Internet service providers, electronic payment
service providers, and others to reduce the distribution on the Internet
of images and videos of sexually exploited children;
- Operate a child victim identification program to assist law enforcement
in identifying victims of child pornography and other sexual crimes;
- Develop and disseminate programs to the general public, schools, public
officials, youth-service organizations, and nonprofit organizations on
the prevention of child abduction and sexual exploitation; and Internet
safety;
- Provide an annual report to the Justice Department regarding the number
of missing children reported to NCMEC in four categories: total
missing; nonfamily abductions; parental kidnappings; and recoveries;
- Work with governments and nonprofit agencies to use school records
and birth certificates to locate missing children;
- Assist governments, nonprofit agencies and individuals in providing
legal, restaurant, lodging and transportation services to benefit missing
and exploited children and their families; and
- Provide information about model programs, services and legislation
that benefit missing and exploited children.
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About the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organization. Since it was established by Congress in 1984, the organization
has operated the toll-free 24-hour national missing children’s hotline
which has handled more than 2.2 million calls. It has assisted law enforcement
in the recovery of more than 126,000 children. The organization’s
CyberTipline has handled more than 594,000 reports of child sexual exploitation
and it’s Child Victim Identification program has analyzed 14,437,865
child pornography images and videos. The organization works in cooperation
with the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention.
To learn more about NCMEC, call its toll-free, 24-hour hotline at 1-800-THE-LOST
or visit its web site at www.missingkids.com
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