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States Press MySpace For Data On Sex Offenders

"Staggering" that MySpace Has Not Taken Action



By Mark Huffman
ConsumerAffairs.com

May 15, 2007


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MySpace Complaints
Facebook Complaints

Attorneys General from several states are pressing MySpace.com to turn over the names of convicted sex offenders the company knows are members of the site.

In a letter to MySpace.com, the state attorneys general said they believe that data from Sentinel Tech Holdings, a company working with MySpace, indicate that thousands of known sex offenders may have been confirmed as MySpace members.

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said it was "really staggering" that MySpace had not come forward with the information that it knew the identity of sex offenders registered with its site.

The letter asked the company to provide the names and states of all registered sex offenders with profiles on its social networking site.

MySpace responded that it has recently started using new software to "proactively identify and remove any known sex offenders from the site."

Hemanshu Nigam, the "chief security officer" of MySpace, said the company has spent five months testing the software, which compares its registrants against a nationwide database of known sex offenders.

States Unimpressed

But the state officials were unimpressed and gave the company until May 29 to respond.

“MySpace is a treasure trove of potential victims for child predators,” said North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper. “Sex offenders have no business being on this site, and we believe MySpace has a responsibility to get them off the site.”

The AGs said that besides spurring MySpace.com to act, they are hoping to warn parents about the dangers social networking sites present.

"I tell parents every day that MySpace is a dangerous place for teenagers," said Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden.

The letter requests that MySpace tell the attorneys general by May 29 how many registered sex offenders have been found on its site and what steps the company has taken to remove them from the site.

In addition the letter asks MySpace to provide details on what it has done to alert other MySpace users who have communicated with these offenders, and also to alert law enforcement about these offenders.

Cooper and Blumenthal are leading a group of attorneys general from 50 states and territories who have been pushing MySpace to do a better job protecting children from dangers on its site such as sexual predators and inappropriate content.

100 Incidents

In 2006 alone, the media reported almost 100 criminal incidents across the country involving adults who used MySpace to prey or attempt to prey on children.

In North Carolina, a former sheriff’s deputy was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2006 for molesting a 15-year-old Cary boy he met on MySpace. In 2006, the NC State Bureau of Investigation arrested a Boiling Spring Lakes police officer for raping a 14-year-old girl he lured through MySpace.

Both North Carolina and Connecticut and a handful of other states are currently pushing legislation that would require social networking sites including MySpace to get parents’ permission before letting children join.

Cooper is also pushing a measure that would make it a felony for convicted sex offenders to join social networking sites where children are members.

Virginia and Kentucky already require convicted sex offenders to register their email addresses and instant messenger accounts with authorities.

The letter was signed by attorneys general from Connecticut, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania.



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