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Cebu News

Italian nabbed for cyberporn

Mitchelle L. Palaubsanon - The Freeman

CEBU, Philippines —  The authorities have arrested a 57-year-old Italian after discovering child sexual abuse and exploitation materials in his electronic devices during the implementation of a search warrant last Wednesday in Davao City.

Members of the Women and Children Protection Center – Mindanao Field Unit (MFU) led by Police Captain Princess F. Obrique-Bergado, under the supervision of Police Lieutenant Colonel Christine S. Tan, spearheaded the implementation of the warrant to search, seize and examine computer data issued by Cybercrime Court Judge Retrina Espe Fuentes against Lorenzo Marchesi.

The search took place at the holding facility of the Bureau of Immigration office in Davao City, where Marchesi had been detained since November 8, after he was intercepted at the Davao International Airport due to a mission order for his arrest issued by BI Commissioner Jaime Morente.

BI’s travel database showed that Marchesi had been going in and out of the country since January this year via the international airports in Davao and Mactan, Cebu.

The International Justice Mission-Cebu, in a statement, said the suspect was considered an “undesirable alien” in light of several complaints filed by the police against him for alleged violations of the Expanded Anti-Trafficking Act, Anti-Cybercrime Prevention Act, and Anti-Child Abuse Act.

IJM-Cebu Field Office Director John Tanagho has praised and commended the excellent collaboration and commitment of the arresting officers as their determination to protect vulnerable Filipino children from sexual abuse and exploitation.

“They worked around the clock to ensure that this suspected child sex offender from Italy was restrained from abusing children anymore in the Philippines,” he said.

Tanagho said that this kind of commitment and determination from law enforcement across the country will surely lead to the protection of thousands of children from online and in person sexual exploitation, sending a message to child sex offenders globally that Filipino children are not for sale.

“He was believed to be engaging children online to lure and groom them for both online and in-person sexual exploitation,” read the statement.

Supporting the search warrant implementation were the Regional Anti-Cybercrime Unit (RACU) XI Inter-agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) – Anti-Trafficking in Persons Task Force (RATTF)-Davao Region, IACAT-RATTF-Caraga Region, Police Station 1 of the Sta. Ana Police Station (Davao City), Bislig Municipal Police Station (Surigao del Sur), BI Davao City, and nongovernment organizations like IJM and Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation–Integrated Development Center, Inc. (JPIC-IDC).

“The Philippine national police, immigration officials, prosecutors and partners from non-government organizations are making an all-out effort to apprehend those who abuse and exploit our children online. We are doing our best for our precious children to have a safer place to live, for them to enjoy their childhood,” said Police Captain Princess Obrique-Bergado in the same statement.

Deputy Regional Prosecutor Barbara Mae Pagdilao-Flores, chief of operations of DOJ-IACAT-RATTF in Davao Region, also hailed the arrest.

“Last Wednesday’s arrest of an Italian child sex offender shows yet again how the online sexual exploitation of children (OSEC) is also fueled by demand from perpetrators living in Western countries. We hope that this would push countries from the demand side to impose stiffer penalties against their citizens who pay for and direct the horrible abuse of children,” Flores said.

Occurring in different communities in the Philippines, the online sexual exploitation of children is a crime that violates the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act or Republic Act (RA) No. 9208 (as amended by RA 10364), which comes with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of P2 million to P5 million.

Typical OSEC offenses also violate RA 10175 (Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012) and RA 9775 (Anti-Child Pornography Act of 2009). Both have penalties equivalent to 20 to 40 years imprisonment.

As of November 11, 2019, the IJM has supported Philippine law enforcement agencies in the arrest of 235 OSEC perpetrators and in the rescue of 559 victims around the country since 2011.

IJM is a global organization that protects the poor from violence by partnering with local authorities to rescue victims, bring criminals to justice, restore survivors, and strengthen justice system.  GAN (FREEMAN)

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