Overheard in passing
Apart from the day The New York Times goes out of business — and the stellar work Paul Krugman’s column does twice a week helping people house-train their puppies — the newspaper has done the greatest thing it will ever do in its entire existence. (Calm down: No, the Times didn’t hold an intervention for Frank Rich.)
Monday’s Times carried a major expose on child molesters who use the Internet to lure their adolescent prey into performing sex acts for Webcams. In the course of investigating the story, reporter Kurt Eichenwald broke open a massive network of pedophiles, rescued a young man who had been abused for years, and led the Department of Justice to hundreds of child molesters.
I kept waiting for the catch, but apparently the Times does not yet believe pedophilia is covered by the “privacy right.” They should stop covering politics and start covering more stories like this.
In order to report the story, the Times said it obtained:
copies of online conversations and e-mail messages between minors and the creepy adults;records of payments to the minors;
membership lists for Webcam sites;
defunct sites stored in online archives;
files retained on a victim’s computer over several years;
financial records, credit card processing data and other information;
The Neverland Ranch’s mailing list. (OK, I made that last one up.)
Would that the Times allowed the Bush administration similar investigative powers for Islamofacists in America!
Ann Coulter
Posted on December 23rd, 2005 by pwyll
Filed under: law, politics, war
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