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24/01/03
I
cannot admit what I am to myself
Jim Bell
The
Guardian
The news that 7,000 men in this country had
used a US child porn website shocked Britain. Were there really so many
paedophiles among us? How could so many trusted professionals such as police
officers, judges and doctors be implicated? But despite the acres of newsprint,
we have learned little about the kind of images involved and what drives the
people who look at them. Jim Bell knows about both: he was sentenced to two
years in jail for secretly filming young girls and downloading indecent images
of children from the net. Here he offers a rare insight into why most users of
child porn refuse to accept they are paedophiles
For three years, as an internet consultant, I
collected child pornography off the web and saved it to disk. I used my
knowledge of the internet to find it, from the mildest to the most extreme. Four
thousand of these images and video clips were deemed indecent and I served a
jail sentence [for downloading and storing these images, and also for secretly
making indecent videos of young girls near his home]. I was locked up for a year
with various other sex offenders: rapists, child molesters, those who used child
pornography, those who tried to groom children in internet chatrooms. I can at
least use this shameful expertise to explain why so many people have been caught
subscribing to child pornography sites, and what may be happening in our
society. The internet is at the heart of this: an information resource without
frontiers, that cannot be policed, and whose content is determined by
individuals as much as organisations. It is a freedom that governments are quite
keen to limit and was part of the objective, I suspect, of Operation Ore, which
has identified 7,000 British users of an American child pornography site.
The worst child pornography is free, posted on
news servers by individuals who want to share their interests with others. By
this I mean pictures of small children forced to engage in sexual activity with
adults. I remember a picture of a sad little Asian child prostitute in a leather
harness, seated on her client's knee. Such extremes of child pornography are
free, fairly easily accessed by journalists and researchers, and tend to set the
standard of discussion about this problem.
There are a few hundred such pictures that
circulate on the internet. Few new ones ever surface: they are part of a grubby
tradition of internet extremism. There may, of course, be more that are
distributed within "paedophile rings", but I have no experience of
that. I rather doubt that these rings are as common as the paedophile hunters
claim. In prison, I never met anyone who claimed to have been a member of one,
and paedophiles, frankly, are not clubbable people. Those who have pictures to
share put them on news servers so that everyone in the world can see them.
Or they charge for them, and this brings us to
the credit card subscriptions of Operation Ore. The commercial exploitation of
the net is down to the global purchasing power of credit cards. You can buy
services in Azerbaijan as easily as the UK. Up until now the credit card
companies have distanced themselves from the content or nature of these
services. The first time I saw line entries on my statement, such as
"Pretty Preteens, Colorado - $40", I worried, but it clearly didn't
worry the credit card company.
Nor, although I was an internet professional,
did I have to search very hard for these sites. They are commercial sites; they
do not hide themselves. We are not talking of secret addresses known only to the
members of paedophile rings, but sites which publish their existence via the
search engines. They have had - up to now - a spurious respectability. Tacitly
accepted by the service providers that host them, the credit card companies that
take subscriptions, and the search engines that publicise them, it is hardly
surprising that men who enjoy such pictures have used them, and that, worldwide,
these sites have become a very lucrative business.
My own experience suggests that many of these
men did not believe, or did not allow themselves to believe, that they were
guilty of using child pornography. As commercial site users, they were not
downloading the extremes of child pornography that I described above. In three
years, I never came across a website that took credit card subscriptions for its
own photography that showed explicit sexual activity involving children.
We have to be clear as to what we are talking
about here. By "explicit", I mean children engaged in intercourse,
fellatio, sodomy, masturbation or any other sexual activity that adults perform
with each other, or alone. But I also mean any of the forms of softcore sexual
titillation that you will see on the legal television porn channels.
All the subscription sites I ever came across
advertised little girls (I never looked at the ones with boys) looking
"pretty". Or "pretty and sexy". The ages would range from
adolescent down to perhaps nine or 10. There was a very clear distinction
between American and European artistic sensibilities. American sites would
feature the girl next door, in a bikini or a sexy little outfit, looking like a
fashion model or a pop star. European sites would favour nude little girls
indoors or outdoors, singly or in groups, with a high standard of photography. A
harder quality of porn than this is certainly available, but not from sites that
are so easily accessible.
The website to which the men on the Operation
Ore list subscribed was Candyman, one of a large number of American sites
working to the standard girl-next-door formula. I vaguely remember seeing its
banner, having a quick look and deciding not to subscribe because it looked as
if it would duplicate the material offered on other sites. Perhaps I missed the
only commercial hardcore child-porn site in America, but I doubt it.
You may wonder what the definition of an
indecent picture of a child is. In a book of case law, I read of a picture of a
girl of 13, dressed, wearing a loose top, and leaning forward to draw attention
to her breasts. That is indecent. What counts is the intention of sexual
display. So, let us be clear that all of these sites are illegal. The intention
is always pornographic; that is to say, calculated to arouse sexual excitement.
The advertising often claims that parental consent is obtained, and the content
is, as I have said, somewhere between decorous and artistically or playfully
nude. But the intention is to provide men with masturbation fantasies of young
girls: in the case of Candyman, reportedly 250,000 men worldwide. If that number
startles you, remember that anything up to 35% of internet traffic deals in
pornography. The world's appetite for sexual titillation is inexhaustible.
The paedophile hunters do not correct the
popular idea that child porn is about child prostitution and the miserable abuse
of children, but it is actually about something far more insidious and
pervasive. It is about innocence: the sexual innocence of the child offered for
the pleasure of adults who have no innocence left. That is why these websites do
not need to offer pictures of explicit sex acts. Hardcore is not the name of
this game.
It means that it was fatally easy for 7,000
men to convince themselves that looking at pictures of heartbreakingly pretty
little girls was not wrong. It is why I do not find it surprising that men who
enjoyed teaching children, or keeping them safe in society, should have enjoyed
such pictures. We obey laws most easily when they fit our own instincts of right
and wrong. When they do not, we tend to finesse and rationalise our actions.
We have an infinite capacity for that. In
prison I met perhaps 100 men who had been convicted of offences against
children. None of them admitted that they were paedophiles - none. The social
stigma is too appalling. I cannot admit what I am to myself.
One young guy I knew, a journalist and
photographer, claimed to have been convicted for downloading two dozen pictures
by the noted photographer David Hamilton, who specialises in art pictures of
young girls. You can buy the pictures in a book, but on the net they might be
considered child pornography.
"They are beautiful pictures," he
would say. "Beautifully made pictures of beautiful girls."
Another man, also in his 20s, had been caught
because he carried a picture of a nude little girl in his wallet. Foolishly, he
left the wallet on a train and, even more foolishly, went to collect it from
lost property. I asked him why he carried the photo. "Because she was the
prettiest girl I had ever seen..."
And he had been caught as I had, and as these
other men have been, because we do not think we are doing anything wrong - not
really wrong - and therefore do not take sufficient care to avoid detection.
There is a wider perspective to be taken on
this. The internet wonderfully reflects western society. It is not a separate
world: it mirrors the attitudes and values of ordinary life. The sexualisation
of children through television, pop music and fashion is acceptable, it is done
for fun: the world of internet child pornography merely completes that process.
Please don't think that the two are unrelated.
Many of the American credit card sites I visited purported to offer girls a
first step to a modelling career. Of course they did. What better way to get a
young girl to pose sexily, and her parents to agree to it?
The parents who encourage their girl-children
to model themselves on pubescent pop idols, fashion models or footballers wives
see themselves as part of a modern world of leisure, with a healthy attitude to
personal relationships and sex. The men who look with sexual appreciation at
pictures of those girl-children on the net are seen as perverts who may prey on
children in parks or at swimming pools. I don't know whether the way our society
sexualises children is healthy or not - you who are normal must consult your
consciences on that. But it is a fact that internet child porn makes massive use
of the combination of sexual innocence and allure that results.
But that doesn't really matter. What parents
fear, and the law seeks to prevent, is harm to children resulting from either
active or passive paedophilia. If Operation Ore had not been conducted, would
these 7,000 men (not to mention the thousands who had used other sites) have
eventually sought out children to achieve sexual contact? What people are most
worried about is not parents allowing their 13- or 14-year-old daughters to pose
on the net, but that some madman will abduct, rape or murder them. Do these men
pose that sort of danger?
The effect of pornography upon the propensity
to offend has been debated for decades. You can believe that it is a harmless
substitute, or that it promotes offending behaviour. Pornography is, of course,
commonly used by men who would like to do the things they watch, but never will.
The step from a child pornography site to sexual contact with children is a big
one - but, of course, the desire for such contact is implicit in the use of
pornography.
You would expect me to say that there is no
danger of these men graduating to serious crimes against children. That may be
so, but there are things about this activity and the way our society handles
paedophilia which you are entitled to worry about. My experience suggests that
men become dangerous when they become obsessional: when they live alone, and
their minds are filled with little else but thoughts of what they want but
cannot have.
No, I do not believe that these 7,000 men are
like that now. I do not even believe that the teachers and policemen among them
pose any risk to the children with whom they deal every day. It is the lack of a
normal, healthy relationship with children that makes men dangerous.
They are not dangerous now, but they may be in
the future. I wonder what will happen to these men who will go to prison for
looking at pictures of children on the internet. I know that none of them
thought of themselves as paedophiles. None of us use that word or even admit to
ourselves the thought.
But they are now perverts, "beasts",
"animals". Their prisons will have to protect them from other
prisoners who will try to assault them. Their social workers and psychologists
will explain to them just how sick their minds are. They will be put on the sex
offender register for 10 years. They are likely to lose their jobs, their
marriages, their homes. Society does not distinguish between one paedophile and
another.
Their professional lives will be over, and
they will spend the rest of their days afraid that someone will find out what
they are. But they will be given minimal, or no treatment, for what is wrong
with them. Only serious sex offenders are offered a course of treatment, and
only a small number of them actually take the course.
The justice system normally tries to dissuade
first-time offenders; to give support, a stern warning and a second chance. But
for the crime of "internet paedophilia", moral repugnance - uninformed
at that - means these men can expect at least a one-year sentence in prison, and
a life sentence in society.
So, yes, I fear that some of these men may
ultimately pose a risk to society. Not now, but once they have been through the
justice system, been labelled as perverts and deviants, and introduced to much
more dangerous men in specialist sex-offender units; then, some of them may
become obsessional paedophiles, justifying the label that society has already
given them.
Operation Ore will succeed in frightening
people away from the credit card sites which offered the milder forms of child
pornography. It will not affect the undercurrent of hardcore child porn, nor
child prostitution, nor the appalling, frightening ways in which adults hurt
children. It will replace informed understanding with mass hysteria, will claim
some victims, and do little good. That is always the way with witch hunts.
Jim Bell was sentenced to two years in
prison in March 2002 for downloading and storing child pornography, and using a
video camera to film two small girls. He has just been released on licence. The
fee for this article is being paid to the Prison Reform Trust.
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