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**^Notes from
Centers for Decency (CfD) is headquartered in
Houston, offering your community the best in Morality and Decency
Conference Speakers across this Nation. Contact:
www.CentersForDecency.org, or
call 713-266-2715. Featuring Greg Abbott, Attorney General of Texas is our pleasure. Contact AG:
Help@GregAbbott or www.GregAbbott.com
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Greg Abbott, AG of Texas
Attorney General Greg Abbott was sworn in as 50th Attorney General of Texas on December 2, 2002. Prior to his election as attorney general, Greg Abbott served as a Justice on the Texas Supreme Court and as a State District Judge in Harris County.
As the state’s chief law enforcement official, Attorney General Abbott has made protecting families and values the focus of his administration.
Shortly after taking office, Attorney General Abbott established a Cyber Crimes Unit to arrest criminals who use the Internet to prey upon children; a Fugitive Unit to arrest sex offenders who violate their parole; and an expanded Medicaid Fraud Control Unit to crack down on elder abuse and waste of taxpayer dollars. Since taking office, General Abbott has collected more than $5 billion in child support for Texas children, setting new records for Texas child support collections.
In his capacity as the state’s lawyer, Attorney General Abbott oversees more than 700 lawyers who represent the State of Texas. General Abbott has personally appeared in courtrooms around the state and has obtained indictments against criminals charged with offenses ranging from attempted aggravated assault of a child to capital murder. In March of 2005, General Abbott personally appeared before the United State Supreme Court, where he successfully defended the constitutionality of the Ten Commandments display that adorns Texas Capitol grounds. By convincing the nation’s highest court to that the State’s monument was constitutional, General Abbott ensured that Texas will continue displaying the Ten Commandments for years to come.
General Abbott’s career in public service began in Houston, where he served as a highly rated state trial judge in the 129th District Court for three years. In 1995, then-Governor George W. Bush appointed General Abbott to the Texas Supreme Court, where he served with distinction. Twice elected to the State’s highest civil court, General Abbott received more votes than any other candidate for statewide office in 1996 and over 60 percent of the vote in 1998. His abilities as a legal scholar and outstanding jurist earned him numerous awards, including “Jurist of the Year” from the Texas Review of Law & Politics; “Trial Judge of the Year” from the Texas Association of Civil Trial and Appellate Specialists; and “Appellate Judge of the Year” from the Texas Chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates.
An active participant in his community, General Abbott has held leadership positions in numerous organizations, including the Central Texas Chapter of Goodwill Industries, the Governor's Committee to Promote Adoption, Justice for All, and the Texas Institute for Rehabilitation and Research Foundation. In 2004, General Abbott served as Honorary State Chairman of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Texas.
A native Texan, Attorney General Abbott was born in Wichita Falls and raised in Duncanville. After graduating from the University of Texas with a B.B.A. in Finance, he received his law degree from Vanderbilt University. Shortly after graduation, he was partially paralyzed by a falling tree while jogging. He and his wife, Cecilia, a former school teacher and principal, have been married for 24 years. They live in Austin with their nine-year-old daughter, Audrey. |
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Office of Texas Attorney General
WASHINGTON – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, a nationally recognized leader in the fight against online predators, testified at a congressional hearing of the House Energy & Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet in Washington today on federal legislation that would require publicly funded schools and libraries to limit access to commercial social networking sites like MySpace.com.
Attorney General Abbott also reiterated his call on MySpace.com and other social networking site operators to step up their efforts to protect young users of their sites from being subjected to sexually explicit images and unwanted solicitations. “The operators of social networking Web sites can no longer be allowed to turn a blind eye to the predators who lurk on the playground they created,” said Attorney General Abbott. “Site operators are part of the problem, and to be part of the solution they must do more than pay lip service to providing a safe environment for children. They must take affirmative, definitive action, such as verifying the age of their users, to ensure the protection of the millions of children and teenagers who use their networking sites and chat rooms.”
Noting the success his Cyber Crimes Unit has had in arresting over 80 sexual predators who were trolling Internet chat rooms for underage victims, Attorney General Abbott testified in support of H.R. 5319, introduced by Congressman Michael G. Fitzpatrick, R-PA.
The federal legislation, known as the “Deleting Online Predators Act of 2006,” would also require the Federal Trade Commission to publish a list of commercial social networking Web sites and Internet chat rooms that are shown to allow sexual predators "easy access" to children.
Attorney General Abbott had issued a letter to social networking Web site executives in May calling on them to strengthen safeguards against pornography and sexually explicit solicitations after his Cyber Crimes Unit arrested three men in Texas who used MySpace.com and other Internet chat rooms to solicit minors for sex.
In his testimony today, Attorney General Abbott again called on site operators to implement more stringent age verification measures to protect younger users on the networking site. He pressed operators to upgrade their resources and utilize filtering software that would also provide parents with the opportunity to block access to the sites at their discretion. “Social networking site operators have made several adjustments to their safety protocols in the last few months, but sexual predators have found ways to get around those limits,” added Attorney General Abbott. “Without meaningful safeguards in place, no child is safe from the unwanted advances of chat room predators.”
Attorney General Abbott appeared at the hearing at the invitation of House Energy & Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton, R-TX.
Attorney General Abbott has made pursuing sexual predators a top priority of his administration.
The Cyber Crimes Unit, launched by Attorney General Abbott in May 2003, targets online predators by assuming the identities of young teenagers in Internet chat rooms. Investigators have arrested 84 men who used teen chat rooms to arrange meetings with underage victims, with some predators driving hundreds of miles to meet children they met online. The office has also obtained convictions against 44 men on child pornography charges.
On May 18, the Cyber Crimes Unit was awarded a $300,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention to establish an Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. The grant will help the Unit expand its efforts to protect children and partner with law enforcement agencies across Texas to fight against online child exploitation.
In addition to the Cyber Crimes Unit, the Fugitive Unit, which locates convicted child sex offenders who have violated the terms of their parole and could be stalking children, has arrested more than 270 such offenders. |
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Attorney General Abbot's Cyber Crimes Unit Obtains Indictment Against Houston-Area Man for Child Pornography
Attorney General Abbott Takes Action Against Internet Predators
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| ****Centers for Decency is a
part of Alleluia Ministries, a not-for-profit organization, which
encourages, motivates, educates, and equips the family and community
in morality and decency, by battling the pornography. Donations can be sent to 5161 San Felipe,
Suite 320, Houston, Texas 77056, or call: 713.266.2715. |
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