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Child-Porn Victim Brings Her Story to Washington
Aug. 31, 2006 — -- There are approximately 3 million images of child pornography on the Internet.
As large as that number may seem, it can be a sad, abstract and faceless statistic.
In May, Masha Allen, a Russian-born 13-year-old, put a face on child pornography and its victims when she testified before Congress.
She revealed the horrific pain behind those numbers in written testimony that described her experiences as a victim of online child molestation and pornography.
Masha thought she was heading for a better life in America when she was adopted in 1998 by Matthew Mancuso, who brought the 8-year-old to his home in Pittsburgh.
Instead, she became a victim of child pornography as Mancuso adopted her with the purpose of molesting her and using her to produce pornographic photos, which he would then share with others.
She appeared in more than 200 explicit photos that circulated on the Internet.
Masha's image caught the attention of authorities, who ultimately tracked her down and arrested Mancuso, removing her from his custody.
He was convicted in 2003 of distributing child pornography online and received a 35-year prison sentence on federal pornography charges, while facing additional charges.
Masha is now safe and with a new family. Mancuso is in prison.
She told Congress' Energy and Commerce Committee at its fourth such hearing this year that her horror hadn't ended.
"Because Matthew put my pictures on the Internet, the abuse is still going on," she said to legislators.
"You have to do something about the Internet," she wrote. "Matthew found the adoption agency on the Internet. They let him look at my pictures from Russia on the Internet even though they didn't really know anything about him."
"Matthew put my pictures on the Internet after he got me. People are still downloading them even though he has been in prison for two years," Masha said.
Masha first told her story to "Primetime" in an effort to help other victims.
She thanked correspondent John Quinones twice in her written testimony to Congress for helping to bring her story "to the whole world."
In her "Primetime" interview, she told ABC News she felt Mancuso "stole" her childhood.
"He took away five years of my life that I could never get back," Masha said.
She also urged other victims to seek help.
"Even if they are afraid to tell somebody, no matter what they think is going to happen, it's going to be for the better," she said. "If they tell somebody, it's going to change."
Masha's courage may now assist lawmakers as they look for ways to combat the growing child-porn industry.
Authorities say one in five children is now approached by online predators in what Congress calls a multibillion-dollar industry.
Nine other people have been convicted in federal court for downloading Masha's pictures.
There are dozens of notices of other pending cases, a number that does not begin to reflect the actual number of potential defendants in criminal and civil cases.
In July, President Bush signed Masha's Law, which dramatically increases the fines and penalties for downloading kiddie porn.
It's part of a larger law called the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006, which requires convicted child molesters to be listed on a national Internet database and face a felony charge for failing to update their whereabouts.

STOCKTON — Kathi Duffel and her journalism students are usually the ones digging up leads and reporting on what really matters around Bear Creek High School.
It’s rare that they would wind up becoming the story instead.
The award-winning journalism instructor has been engaged in a heated dispute with the Lodi Unified School District regarding First Amendment rights after refusing to allow prior review of an article to be published in The Bruin Voice on May 3.
Because of this, Duffel is worried that she may lose her job over her protection of free speech.
The article, written by junior Bailey Kirkbey, is a profile of an 18-year-old student who is working in the porn industry.
The story focuses on the challenges the student, who is estranged from her family, has faced and how she has managed to overcome and create a successful career for herself, Kirkbey, 17, said.
“In her freshman year she said her grades were really bad and she was associating with the wrong group of people. It’s just profiling how she managed to overcome these kinds of obstacles and to get to where she is now, where she has a successful career and is living on her own money — she is self-reliant.”
Word of the story eventually made its way to district officials.
On April 11, Duffel received a letter from Superintendent Cathy Nichols-Washer directing her to not publish the story until it could be reviewed for any possible obscene and defamatory content that goes against its education code.
“The district has received information that (the) interview will focus primarily on her production of adult videos,” the letter reads. “Given this focus, the district is reasonably concerned that the article may contain material prohibited by Education Code section 48907.”
The letter continued: “Accordingly, should you fail to provide a copy of the article as directed, you may be subject to discipline, up to, and including dismissal.”
Duffel, who has worked for the district for more than 30 years and helped create The Bruin Voice in 1991, said she was shocked.
“This is a whole new level of district administrators who have lost their minds, quite frankly,” Duffel said on Friday.
“I have been threatened with disciplinary action in the past, ... but this the first time where they have ever mentioned (that) outright. For this to rise to that level, on a story like this that is so solid in its approach to the topic, I’m so very proud of the story.”
In a response letter to Nichols-Washer the next day, Duffel and her seven student editors, including Kirkbey, told the district that it “grossly mischaracterized the focus and intent” of the article and added the district failed to prove the story was in violation of any educational codes.
“In fact, I anticipate that this story will be one that I submit for Story of the Year with the Journalism Education Association,” wrote Duffel. “It speaks to the very realities that our students live every day of their lives. It speaks to every 14-year-old freshman who is sitting in class reading the article who has failed three classes her freshman year and now has a choice to make — and our hope is that this article will help students think more critically about the choices they do make at this age in their lives.”
Duffel and the student editors then respectfully declined to submit the story. Duffel alleges that a school resource officer also appeared in front of her classroom asking her questions about sex trafficking and distributing pornography to minors. “The bottom line is that he wanted a copy of the story and that type of intimidation, threats has reached a new level,” Duffel said.
“If the purpose of a story is to be sensationalistic, that’s a problem,” said Don Bott, an award-winning journalism adviser for the Stagg Line student newspaper at Stockton Unified’s Stagg High School.
“But from what I’ve read and what I know about Kathi Duffel, this story is not sensationalism but rather human interest and thoughtful journalism, with a thoughtful message.”
In a statement sent Friday to The Record, Lodi Unified officials said they agreed to a proposal made by Duffel to allow an independent attorney to review the article to ensure compliance with the law.
District officials added that Lodi Unified is legally required to ensure that publications do not violate education codes, requiring districts to prevent the publication of obscenity, defamation, and incitement.
As California does not prevent prior review of high school newspapers, the reasons for preventing publication are limited to slander, libel, obscenity or articles that might so incite students as to present a “clear and present danger of the commission of unlawful acts on school premises or the violation of lawful school regulations, or the substantial disruption of the orderly operation of the school,” according to Education Code Section 48907.
“We are working cooperatively with Mrs. Duffel,” the statement read in part.
“In addition, Mrs. Duffel acknowledged that the district’s concerns raise some interesting points and that the students have more work to do. The district remains committed to the agreed upon process.”
Duffel has overseen The Bruin Voice as newspaper faculty adviser for much of its existence. The paper has gone on to win seven Best in Show awards from the National Scholastic Press Association and two Newspaper Pacemaker awards.
This is also certainly not the first time The Bruin Voice has ruffled the district’s feathers.
In 2013, The Record reported that Principal Shirley McNichols confiscated 1,700 copies of the paper, citing concerns that a front-page article questioning campus safety policies would create panic. McNichols and Vice Principal Tim Swartz later resigned in the aftermath.
Two years prior, Principal Daryl Camp resigned after he asked for prior review of a story about him losing the school’s master key, costing Lodi Unified thousands of dollars to replace locks.
Kirkbey called the current situation frustrating.
″(Lodi Unified officials) don’t know what’s in the article and they’re grossly mischaracterizing what the content actually is, and it’s more of a profile on a student,” she said. “So when they’re trying to shut it down, it’s silencing the voice of this student as well as the paper itself.”
Contact reporter Nicholas Filipas at (209) 546-8257 or nfilipas@recordnet.com. Follow him on Twitter @nicholasfilipas.
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