Self proclaimed expert on child safety on the Internet.
Scaremongering fundraiser John Carr happily lies to and misleads the public on issues such as Operation Ore. He has misrepresented facts and even attempted to influence the outcome of Ore and other trials in the UK.
It is perhaps unprecedented in history for a conspiracy to be dismantled wholesale while it is still going on. It would be far more normal for rumours and suspicion to echo through time with occasional facts that cannot be verified. Despite Operation Ore being run with the backing of the Press, Politicians and Police in the UK, the operation has been dismantled wholesale before the IWF could complete the task that was set for it, to ring fence the UK Internet.
John Carr is or was:
An IWF board member
CHIS spokesman (all the main child advocates)
NCH chief spokesman - (Read - NCH - A Danger To The Nation's Children)
Advisor on sentencing in the UK
A member of DfES Schools Internet Safety
A member of ACPO strategic group CCAI
His wife sits in the House of Lords following similar agendas (Baroness Thornton).
Click Here to listen to John Carr telling blatant lies on BBC.
John's well known porkies include;
"Many recent studies show that people who collect and download child pornography are significantly more likely to go on and commit hands-on offences against children."
"This varies from one in five to 70% depending on the study but you can say they are definitely a risk to children."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/norfolk/4700496.stm
The charity said the arrest figures showed the urgent need for a centre to be established.
NCH's internet safety advisor John Carr said the "astonishing" figures reflected the arrests made during Operation Ore - a police operation hunting web paedophiles launched in 2002.
"But given ongoing police activity, the worry is that they represent not a blip but a new 'normality'," he said.
"Many police admit that they are still only touching the tip of a very ugly iceberg."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4316511.stm
"In pre-internet days, if you wanted to get hold of child abuse images it was quite a difficult thing to do..." (how does he know?)
"Anybody who looks at child pornography on the internet is an abuser by proxy."
"And over one in three people found in possession of child pornography, according to a very large American survey, will in fact be involved in hands-on abuse."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3390813.stm
Mr Carr called on mobile phone operators - who currently have a strong code about not marketing mobiles to children - to do more to educate them in the safe use of phones.
The phones also increase the opportunities paedophiles have to access sites which may serve only to fuel their fantasies.
And they could well make it easier for paedophiles to take and share images of children with others - or even to encourage children to take and send images of themselves, he said.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3388715.stm
John Carr, NCH's Internet Consultant, reports that in the largest study undertaken in this area, one in three of everyone arrested solely for possessing child abuse images had abused a child as well.
http://www.ccpas.co.uk/Articles/Safeguarding%20Internet.htm
“The success of the alliance between the IWF, industry and police is evidenced by the lack of child pornography found on UK-based servers."
http://www.iwf.org.uk/media/news.159.htm
The Americans handed to the UK's National Criminal Intelligence Service a list of more than 7,200 people who bought child pornography from Landslide that indicated a UK location.
http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/comment/0,1074,838567,00.html
Then in 2002, the FBI handed the UK police the names of 7,200 British people who had used credit cards to buy child abuse images from a Texas-based child pornography website.
http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/story/0,1074,1119850,00.html
What kind of minds could think up a child porn computer amnesty?
http://www.spiked-online.com/Printable/00000006E016.htm
UK police were handed the names of 6,500 people who had used credit cards to buy child abuse images from one website.
http://www.nch.org.uk/uploads/documents/children_internet_report_summ.pdf
"The scale of the offending is shocking and this is all just from one internet site", said John Carr, of the Children’s Charities’ Coalition for Internet Safety.
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=46962003
Identifying and Dealing with "Child Savers"
http://xuk.biz/UKLR/Landslide/charities/childsavers/IPT%20Journal%20-%20Identifying%20and%20Dealing%20with%20'Child%20Savers'.htm
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