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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLawmakers demand stop to parents giving away adopted kids on Internet
CHICAGO -- U.S. lawmakers called Tuesday for federal action to prevent parents from giving unwanted adopted children to strangers met on the Internet, and the Illinois attorney general urged Facebook and Yahoo to police online groups where children may be advertised.
A joint Reuters and NBC News investigation last month revealed an underground market where desperate parents seek new families for children they adopted but no longer want. The parents connect through online forums on Yahoo and Facebook, privately arranging custody transfers that can bypass government oversight and sometimes violate the law.
No government agencies track the practice, but the news service identified eight Internet groups in which members discussed, facilitated or engaged in re-homing. In a single Yahoo group that the company has since taken down, a child was offered to strangers on average once a week during a five-year period. At least 70 percent of those children were listed as having been adopted from overseas.
The Reuters and NBC News series identified re-homed children who endured severe abuse and adults who used the online network to obtain children but were not properly vetted. In one case, a man now serving prison time for child pornography took home a 10-year-old boy he and a friend found online earlier that day. They picked up the boy in a motel parking lot.
http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/29/21236625-lawmakers-demand-stop-to-parents-giving-away-adopted-kids-on-internet?lite
WTF?????
JimboBillyBubbaBob
(1,389 posts)WTF?????
appleannie1
(5,067 posts)resulting in death. And because there are no legal records, in some instances no one even knows the abuser has a child so it is hard to trace the child back to a family.
alp227
(32,027 posts)cvoogt
(949 posts)Thanks a lot
surrealAmerican
(11,361 posts)The fact the the arrangements are being made on the Internet has nothing to with it, nor should the fact that the children were once adopted. Couldn't the appropriate agencies simply find the listings and make some arrests?
alp227
(32,027 posts)See the faq at end of http://www.reuters.com/investigates/adoption/#article/part2