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SICK child sex dolls modelled on a 14-year-old Instagram star are being sold on Etsy, say shocking reports.
Cops in Australia say they have seized more than 100 of the twisted mannequins over the past five months.
One seller - with the username Sexy Lady Fox - reportedly claimed some of those being sold online were based on an underage social media star.    
The sex dolls are advertised as being 156cm tall - the average height of a 13-year-old girl.
Fiends were even able to send in a photos of real children to have them customised to order, reports news.com.
“We can change the wig,” the seller said in reply when sent two computer generated images of young children.
“I think it is very similar to the images you send me.”
After Etsy was told what was happening by NCA Newswire it quickly deactivated the "shop" from the popular sales platform, say the reports.
The outrageous trade was revealed when sexual assault advocacy group - Collective Shout - posed as an interested buyer.
However, those selling the twisted items initially appeared to try and justify what they were doing.
“We are selling the most required real dolls on the market,” the seller said, who identified themselves simply as Federica.
When asked if it was the intention to make the dolls look underage, they replied: “To be honest, if I think that somebody (will) buy and use a real doll instead doing something wrong with a young girl, I’m grateful.”
However, this sick claim was branded “self-serving” by Collective Shout.
“Men who are found with child abuse dolls are also (often) found with other forms of child sex abuse material, including things like photos and videos of children and babies being raped and tortured,” said its campaign manager Caitlin Roper.
“There are reported scenarios from this year of men still incorporating living children into their child sex abuse doll use,” she added.
Ms Roper cited research from the Australian Institute of Criminology, which stated there was no evidence these kind of dolls prevent child sexual abuse.
“Instead, they present a risk of escalation and may actually increase the likelihood of child sexual abuse,” she said.
The providers of these vile sex dolls have shown they will go to sick lengths to supply customised material to pervets, Ms Roper told NCA NewsWire.
“Men could see a girl out in public, take a photo and say, ‘I want a doll modelled on her’,” she said.
“They could send in photos of children they know or have some kind of caretaking power over, so there’s lots of ways men can use this to victimise living children.
“It’s a new way they can be victimised and abused even without their knowledge and without their presence.”
Assistant Customs Minister Jason Wood said the Australian Border Force and law enforcement were working to stop the vile dolls entering the country.
“Increased intelligence work undertaken across the Home Affairs portfolio and the ABF’s commitment to detecting this abhorrent material has ensured these items are stopped at the border,” he said.
Legislation introduced in June allows for a mandatory minimum sentence of four years’ imprisonment in situations where it is the person’s “second-strike” child sexual abuse offence.
“These penalties reflect the serious role that these products can play in normalising and desensitising offenders to child sexual abuse,” added Mr Wood.
“The ABF is committed to working closely with our law enforcement partners, both here in Australia and overseas, to combat this issue, and we will continue to pursue and prosecute.”
Australia has seen a spike in childlike sex doll imports with the Australian Border Force seizing more than 100 dolls in less than five months to November 18.
At least 191 dolls have been found this calendar year, in comparison to 145 in the whole of 2019. The majoritywere discovered in packages from China, Hong Kong, Japan and Singapore. 
Etsy has reportedly been contacted for comment over the shocking revelations.
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U.S. |The Internet Is Overrun With Images of Child Sexual Abuse. What Went Wrong?
By MICHAEL H. KELLER and GABRIEL J.X. DANCE SEPT. 28, 2019
Online predators create and share the illegal material, which is increasingly cloaked by technology. Tech companies, the government and the authorities are no match.
Last year, tech companies reported over 45 million online photos and videos of children being sexually abused — more than double what they found the previous year.
Each image shown here documents a crime. The photos are in a format analysts devised to protect the abused.
Twenty years ago, the online images were a problem; 10 years ago, an epidemic.
Now, the crisis is at a breaking point.
Images provided by the Canadian Center for Child Protection
Online predators create and share the illegal material, which is increasingly cloaked by technology. Tech companies, the government and the authorities are no match.
The images are horrific. Children, some just 3 or 4 years old, being sexually abused and in some cases tortured.
Pictures of child sexual abuse have long been produced and shared to satisfy twisted adult obsessions. But it has never been like this: Technology companies reported a record 45 million online photos and videos of the abuse last year.
More than a decade ago, when the reported number was less than a million, the proliferation of the explicit imagery had already reached a crisis point. Tech companies, law enforcement agencies and legislators in Washington responded, committing to new measures meant to rein in the scourge. Landmark legislation passed in 2008.
Yet the explosion in detected content kept growing — exponentially.
Exploited
Articles in this series examine the explosion in online photos and videos of children being sexually abused. They include graphic descriptions of some instances of the abuse.
Part 1: The Web's Darkest Corners
Part 2: Pictures Are Forever
Part 3: Predators in Your Home
Part 4: An Epic Battle
An investigation by The New York Times found an insatiable criminal underworld that had exploited the flawed and insufficient efforts to contain it. As with hate speech and terrorist propaganda, many tech companies failed to adequately police sexual abuse imagery on their platforms, or failed to cooperate sufficiently with the authorities when they found it.
Law enforcement agencies devoted to the problem were left understaffed and underfunded, even as they were asked to handle far larger caseloads.
The Justice Department, given a major role by Congress, neglected even to write mandatory monitoring reports, nor did it appoint a senior executive-level official to lead a crackdown. And the group tasked with serving as a federal clearinghouse for the imagery — the go-between for the tech companies and the authorities — was ill equipped for the expanding demands.
A paper recently published in conjunction with that group, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, described a system at “a breaking point,” with reports of abusive images “exceeding the capabilities of independent clearinghouses and law enforcement to take action.” It suggested that future advancements in machine learning might be the only way to catch up with the criminals.
In 1998, there were over 3,000 reports of child sexual abuse imagery.
Just over a decade later, yearly reports soared past 100,000.
In 2014, that number surpassed 1 million for the first time.
Last year, there were 18.4 million, more than one-third of the total ever reported.
Those reports included over 45 million images and videos flagged as child sexual abuse.
By Rich Harris | Source: The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
The Times reviewed over 10,000 pages of police and court documents; conducted software tests to assess the availability of the imagery through search engines; accompanied detectives on raids; and spoke with investigators, lawmakers, tech executives and government officials. The reporting included conversations with an admitted pedophile who concealed his identity using encryption software and who runs a site that has hosted as many as 17,000 such images.
In interviews, victims across the United States described in heart-wrenching detail how their lives had been upended by the abuse. Children, raped by relatives and strangers alike, being told it was normal. Adults, now years removed from their abuse, still living in fear of being recognized from photos and videos on the internet. And parents of the abused, struggling to cope with the guilt of not having prevented it and their powerlessness over stopping its online spread.
Many of the survivors and their families said their view of humanity had been inextricably changed by the crimes themselves and the online demand for images of them.
“I don’t really know how to deal with it,” said one woman who, at age 11, had been filmed being sexually assaulted by her father. “You’re just trying to feel O.K. and not let something like this define your whole life. But the thing with the pictures is — that’s the thing that keeps this alive.”
The Times’s reporting revealed a problem global in scope — most of the images found last year were traced to other countries — but one firmly rooted in the United States because of the central role Silicon Valley has played in facilitating the imagery’s spread and in reporting it to the authorities.
While the material, commonly known as child pornography, predates the digital era, smartphone cameras, social media and cloud storage have allowed the images to multiply at an alarming rate. Both recirculated and new images occupy all corners of the internet, including a range of platforms as diverse as Facebook Messenger, Microsoft’s Bing search engine and the storage service Dropbox.
From top: An officer carrying away a hard drive from a home in Salt Lake City. An agent with a task force in Kansas reviewing messages a suspect sent to a child.
Clockwise from left: An agent with a task force in Kansas reviewing messages a suspect sent to a child. An officer carrying away a hard drive from a home in Salt Lake City.
In a particularly disturbing trend, online groups are devoting themselves to sharing images of younger children and more extreme forms of abuse. The groups use encrypted technologies and the dark web, the vast underbelly of the internet, to teach pedophiles how to carry out the crimes and how to record and share images of the abuse worldwide. In some online forums, children are forced to hold up signs with the name of the group or other identifying information to prove the images are fresh.
To report online child sexual abuse or find resources for those in need of help, contact the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-843-5678.
With so many reports of the abuse coming their way, law enforcement agencies across the country said they were often besieged. Some have managed their online workload by focusing on imagery depicting the youngest victims.
“We go home and think, ‘Good grief, the fact that we have to prioritize by age is just really disturbing,’” said Detective Paula Meares, who has investigated child sex crimes for more than 10 years at the Los Angeles Police Department.
In some sense, increased detection of the spiraling problem is a sign of progress. Tech companies are legally required to report images of child abuse only when they discover them; they are not required to look for them.
After years of uneven monitoring of the material, several major tech companies, including Facebook and Google, stepped up surveillance of their platforms. In interviews, executives with some companies pointed to the voluntary monitoring and the spike in reports as indications of their commitment to addressing the problem.
But police records and emails, as well as interviews with nearly three dozen local, state and federal law enforcement officials, show that some tech companies still fall short. It can take weeks or months for them to respond to questions from the authorities, if they respond at all. Sometimes they respond only to say they have no records, even for reports they initiated.
And when tech companies cooperate fully, encryption and anonymization can create digital hiding places for perpetrators. Facebook announced in March plans to encrypt Messenger, which last year was responsible for nearly 12 million of the 18.4 million worldwide reports of child sexual abuse material, according to people familiar with the reports. Reports to the authorities typically contain more than one image, and last year encompassed the record 45 million photos and videos, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
All the while, criminals continue to trade and stockpile caches of the material.
The law Congress passed in 2008 foresaw many of today’s problems, but The Times found that the federal government had not fulfilled major aspects of the legislation.
The Justice Department has produced just two of six required reports that are meant to compile data about internet crimes against children and set goals to eliminate them, and there has been a constant churn of short-term appointees leading the department’s efforts. The first person to hold the position, Francey Hakes, said it was clear from the outset that no one “felt like the position was as important as it was written by Congress to be.”
The federal government has also not lived up to the law’s funding goals, severely crippling efforts to stamp out the activity.
Congress has regularly allocated about half of the $60 million in yearly funding for state and local law enforcement efforts. Separately, the Department of Homeland Security this year diverted nearly $6 million from its cybercrimes units to immigration enforcement — depleting 40 percent of the units’ discretionary budget until the final month of the fiscal year.
Alicia Kozakiewicz, who was abducted by a man she had met on the internet when she was 13, said the lack of follow-through was disheartening. Now an advocate for laws preventing crimes against children, she had testified in support of the 2008 legislation.
Alicia Kozakiewicz was abducted as a child. Now, she works at the International Center for Missing and Exploited Children, advocating laws to prevent abuse. Kholood Eid for The New York Times
“I remember looking around the room, and there wasn’t a dry eye,” said Ms. Kozakiewicz, 31, who had told of being chained, raped and beaten while her kidnapper live-streamed the abuse on the internet. “The federal bill passed, but it wasn’t funded. So it didn’t mean anything.”
Further impairing the federal response are shortcomings at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which reviews reports it receives and then distributes them to federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, as well as international partners.
The nonprofit center has relied in large measure on 20-year-old technology, has difficulty keeping experienced engineers on staff and, by its own reckoning, regards stopping the online distribution of photos and videos secondary to rescuing children.
“To be honest, it’s a resource and volume issue,” said John Shehan, a vice president at the center, which was established 35 years ago to track missing children. “First priority is making sure we’re assessing the risk of the children. We’re getting this information into the hands of law enforceme
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