DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE COMMEMORATES NATIONAL MISSING
CHILDREN'S DAY
WASHINGTON -- Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey commemorated National Missing Children's Day in a ceremony today by honoring law enforcement officers and citizens from across the country for their tireless commitment to recovering missing children and combating child exploitation.
This year's ceremony stressed the Department's commitment to bringing missing children home safely and highlighted the progress made through initiatives that the Department, its components and state and local partners, have developed and implemented to protect children , such as Project Safe Childhood, which marks its second anniversary this spring.
"Our children are our nation's most valuable treasure. It is therefore an honor to acknowledge those who work to make childhood the safe and hopeful time it should be," said Attorney General Mukasey. "Today's honorees set the bar high and inspire others in the fight to defend and protect innocent children."
At the ceremony, Attorney General Mukasey recognized the following awardees:
Awardees were also recognized for their outstanding contributions to the AMBER Alert program . AMBER Alerts have saved the lives of more than 397 children since the program began in 1996. In 2001, only four states had statewide AMBER Alert plans. In 2005, the Department met its goal of having statewide AMBER Alert plans in all 50 states. The Department is now working with Canada and Mexico to have plans in place in the event children are abducted across our northern or southern borders. The Department is also expanding the AMBER Alert program into Indian Country.
During today's ceremony, the Department's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) announced the release of a new publication, You're Not Alone: The Journey from Abduction to Empowerment. Written with the assistance of young adults who were abducted as children, the publication is designed to help other survivors of abduction recover from their trauma and gain a sense of empowerment over the experience. The document joins two other OJJDP publications that support those affected by abduction: When Your Child Is Missing: A Family Survival Guide, which provides helpful advice and information from other parents of missing or abducted children, and What About Me? Coping with the Abduction of a Brother or Sister, which was written by siblings of missing or abducted children and helps brothers and sisters who are left behind cope in the aftermath of an abduction.
This spring marks the second anniversary of the Department's Project Safe Childhood (PSC) initiative, which brings together federal, state, and local investigators and prosecutors to combat online child exploitation crimes. The Department implemented PSC in 2006 and has built the initiative upon integrated partnerships involving international, federal, state, and local law enforcement and prosecutors.
In 2007, PSC led to a 14 percent increase in FBI child sexual exploitation investigations over the previous year and a 28 percent increase in child sexual exploitation cases filed by federal prosecutors. In addition, the FBI opened a total of 2,443 new "innocent images" (child pornography) investigations, a 14 percent increase over FY 2006. ICAC task forces reported more than 2,400 arrests for computer-facilitated child sexual exploitation for FY 2007.
Twenty-five years ago, President Ronald Reagan proclaimed May 25 as National Missing Children's Day in memory of Etan Patz, a 6-year-old boy who disappeared from a New York City street corner on that day in 1979. Missing Children's Day honors his memory and the memory of those children who are still missing, celebrates the stories of recovery and pays tribute to the exemplary efforts of agencies, organizations and individuals engaged in protecting children.
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