Under the pandemic, law enforcement has seen a surge in reports of sexual crimes against minors online, driven by quarantined kids — and predators — spending more time in front of screens.
In March and April, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension has counted more than 1,000 complaints involving child pornography or other forms of cyber exploitation of children, a 30% increase from the same time last year.
"It's very unusual to see such a large jump," said Drew Evans, superintendent of the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, the agency that operates the Internet Crimes Against Children investigative unit.
The rise in Minnesota is only one piece of a pattern of opportunistic predators using quarantine conditions to exploit children around the country. The National Center of Missing and Exploited Children, which serves as a clearinghouse for these incidents reported in the United States, recorded more than 6 million tips in March and April — triple what it counted in the same period in 2019.
"That's probably the largest number of reports in a two-month period that we've ever received," said John Shehan, vice president of the center's Exploited Children Division. Shehan said child predators on the dark web are candidly discussing their intentions to exploit the stay-at-home orders.
At the same time, Minnesota has suspended the use of grand juries during quarantine, taking away the mechanism federal prosecutors rely on to indict suspects of these types of crimes.
"We're not indicting cases, but they're still coming in and we're still working them," said Minnesota U.S. Attorney Erica MacDonald.
Once the suspension ends, MacDonald expects a swell in indictments. In the meantime, she said, her office is working with law enforcement and county prosecutors around Minnesota to make sure "we don't leave people in the community who are posing an imminent threat" to children.