The Dateline NBC show that sets up pedos thinking they are talking to 13-15 yo girls (or boys sometimes) and has them show up at a house to have sex
with the underage kid. They then get confronted by dateline NBC instead, and then arrested as they exit the house. It is a great show and a great
service they are doing.
i've yet to see this show. i really want to check it out, but i'm afraid i'll get too angry.defstarsteve - 4-27-2006 at 01:55 PM
ahh don't watch the tube...
but yes
kill them slowlyXnMeX - 4-27-2006 at 02:18 PM
Quote:
Originally posted by BD
i've yet to see this show. i really want to check it out, but i'm afraid i'll get too angry.
It is pretty sickening and makes you think even less of society. REALLY drives the point how that ANYONE you interact with could be doing this shit.
Watch it next week. Dateline needs to do these as offten as possible since unfortunatly, they will never run out of people for it.
In related news...
BDx13 - 4-27-2006 at 03:04 PM
Fugitive roundup nets 1,100 sex offender suspects
Thursday, April 27, 2006; Posted: 11:16 a.m. EDT (15:16 GMT)
WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than 1,100 people wanted for violent sex crimes have been arrested in a weeklong roundup of fugitives, the Justice Department
said Thursday.
The arrests were made as part of "Operation Falcon II," a nationwide dragnet timed to coincide with National Victims Rights Week.
This year's focus was on sex offenders, a group that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has made a priority in his 15 months at the Justice Department.
Gonzales and U.S. Marshals Service Director John Clark were to discuss the results of the roundup later Thursday at a news conference in Washington.
There were 1,102 arrests of people wanted for violent sex crimes April 17-23 by federal, state and local authorities, the largest number ever captured
in a single law enforcement operation, the department said.
The total number of fugitives arrested last week was not immediately available.
Last year's sweep netted more than 10,000 fugitives, 10 times the average in a week, but just 1 percent of the 1 million fugitives in the FBI's
national database.
Marshals arrested 35,500 federal fugitives for all of the government budget year that ended September 30.
They worked with state and local authorities to nab another 44,000 people, according to the Marshals' Web site.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.