Follow us on

Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | 3:33 a.m.

Powered by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Web Search by YAHOO!
 

Posted: 5:37 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013

Griffin man charged with possession of child porn

Related

Griffin man charged with possession of child porn photo
Anthony Bartlett

By Fran Jeffries

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A Griffin man has been charged with possessing child porn.

Anthony Bartlett, 36, was charged Thursday after GBI investigators and Spalding County sheriff’s deputies searched his home in the 100 block of Sidney Drive and found videos of child porn on his laptop computers, according to authorities.

The search warrant was obtained as a result of evidence developed by investigators with the Liberty County Sheriff’s Office of peer-to-peer sharing of child pornography from a computer at Bartlett’s residence, authorities said. The Liberty County Sheriff’s Office, which is also a part of the Internet Crimes Against Children task force, provided the evidence it uncovered to the GBI last month, according to GBI spokesman John Bankhead.

Bartlett was charged with four counts of sexual exploitation of children and taken to the Spalding County Jail.

This investigation is part of the ongoing effort by the GBI’s Internet Crimes Against Children task force to identify those involved in the child porn trade. The ICAC Program, created by the U. S. Department of Justice, was developed in response to the increasing number of children and teenagers using the Internet, the proliferation of child pornography and commercial sexual exploitation of children, and the heightened online activity by predators searching for unsupervised contact with underage victims, according to Bankhead. The task force consists of 180 affiliate Georgia law enforcement agencies, he added.

According to Bankhead, 972 arrests have been made in Georgia by the ICAC Task Force since it was established in 2002.

More News

 

Today on MyAJC.com

Atlanta traffic court needs changes

Your government: A closer look at the operations of traffic court

Atlanta’s traffic court needs work, including upgraded computers and judges working outside the usual business hours.

New terminal brings pleasures, perturbances

Bill rises for shuttles at Atlanta airport’s new terminal

To keep average wait times to five minutes or less, the airport is spending more than three times the original amount it originally expected on shuttles.

pjcollins0520

Personal Journeys: Mr. Collins goes to Washington

Georgia’s newest member of Congress sleeps on a cot, showers in the gym and finds the hardest part is being away from home.