Graphic credit: Karen Jensen |
- "Things I Never Learned in Library School: Dealing with Minors and Pornography," by Karen Jensen, School Library Journal, 18 October 2016.
- You need to have a plan and train staff BEFORE something happens
- Know that pornography involving minors is a crime and you are legally obligated to report
- Preserve the evidence
- Have staff fill out a detailed incident report ASAP
- Take detailed notes during the process
- Advise staff on how to talk with the public/press
- TRAIN YOUR STAFF
- Invite the police and your legal counsel to come train your staff
- If you have an incident, do a postmortem
- Know that you may never know what happens after the fact
- Duty to Report Suspected Child Abuse Under 42 U.S.C. § 13031
- Citizen's Guide to U.S. Federal Law on Child Pornography
- Defining Child Pornography | Stop It Now
- Sexting & Child Pornography Laws in the United States
- Guidelines and Considerations for Developing a Public Library Internet Policy | ALA
Even her link to American Library Association [ALA] policy is good as ALA recently changed its policy; it now advises librarians to report child pornography—it didn't used to. This change occurred, without any fanfare or any announcement at all by ALA, only after many decades and direct pressure from SafeLibraries and Orland Park Public Library child pornography whistleblowers Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan who went on to publish SHUT UP! The Bizarre War that One Public Library Waged Against the First Amendment. See:
- "American Library Association Changes Child Porn Policies Due to SHUT UP! Busting Them!," by Kevin DuJan, HillBuzz, 27 May 2016.
In respect of that older policy, library lawyers advised librarians not to call the police on child pornography viewers as that would violate the child porn viewer's rights to privacy:
- "A Patron is Viewing What Appears to be Child Pornography On a Library Computer; What Should Be Done?," by Klein, Thorpe & Jenkins, LTD, Library Law, 27 April 2011.
In one library KTJ represented, child porn was indeed allowed and covered up, and I got caught up in a federal lawsuit to try to silence me and the child porn whistleblowers. We were not silenced and instead ALA finally advises librarians to report child pornography to the police. See:
- "Orland Park Library's Bridget Bittman Defeated Again—Judge Dismisses SLAPP Lawsuit," by John Kraft, Illinois Leaks (Edgar County Watchdogs), 16 May 2016.
To this day, certain ALA policies continue to stand in the way of what Karen Jensen has recommended, and indeed that it likely part of why she recommended what she did.
- ALA advises librarians to destroy evidence of criminal activity (despite public record retention laws) and not to create any in the first place so citizens cannot FOIA the library for information.
- ALA advises libraries to destroy all records of Internet activity ASAP, and law enforcement sources reveal child porn investigations often dead end at public libraries.
- ALA advises against using Internet filters that Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden says are very good nowadays and libraries should be using to block Internet pornography which is not protected by the First Amendment in public libraries according to the US Supreme Court.
- ALA, as the only library school accreditor, does not require library schools to teach how to plan to report child porn crimes.
- Preserve the evidence.
- Have staff fill out a detailed incident report ASAP.
- Take detailed notes during the process.
- Invite the police and your legal counsel to come train your staff.
- If you have an incident, do a postmortem.
Why is her work entitled in part "Things I Never Learned in Library School"? Why aren't library schools teaching what Karen Jensen is revealing? Why is it left to individual librarians to finally address such a serious issue? I call on library schools to incorporate Karen Jensen's work—planning to report child pornography—into library school curricula.
Librarians, please retweet this @TLT16 tweet below, start planning to report child pornography in public libraries, and ask your alma maters to include her work in their curricula:
Here's what I've learned about child pornography in the public library https://t.co/Tqc6kvLNw0— TeenLibrarianToolbox (@TLT16) October 18, 2016
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URL of this page:
safelibraries.blogspot.com/2016/10/plan-to-report.html
On Twitter:
@ALALibrary @jaslar @OIF +School Library Journal @SLJournal @StopItNow @TheJusticeDept @TLT16
Follow @SafeLibraries
safelibraries.blogspot.com/2016/10/plan-to-report.html
On Twitter:
@ALALibrary @jaslar @OIF +School Library Journal @SLJournal @StopItNow @TheJusticeDept @TLT16
Follow @SafeLibraries
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