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Landslide provided payment systems for adult webmasters. These systems were automated, webmasters could sign up to the system online and people accessing the websites would go through the payment or login system before being granted access. The principle systems were AVS for Adult Verification System and Keyz because it operated via the keyz.com domain name owned by Landslide.
Landslide provided payment systems for adult webmasters. These systems were automated, webmasters could sign up to the system online and people accessing the websites would go through the payment or login system before being granted access. The principle systems were AVS for Adult Verification System and Keyz because it operated via the keyz.com domain name owned by Landslide.


Out of some 5,700 sites that used Landslide's services over time, US LEA's determined a small number of these contained material which was underage according to the laws in the United States. Most of what was of questionable age was old imagery scooped up from the huge volumes of material sweeping through the Internet newsgroups, a minority of which could be described as constituting child abuse. The suggestion that every image was a crime scene was part of the marketing hype for Operation Ore, but it wasn't actually true.
The operation led to the seizure of user information of thousands of persons who were alleged to have accessed child pornography websites with their credit cards. It also resulted in the arrests of several prominent individuals, ranging from police officers and judges to [[The Who]]'s guitarist [[Pete Townshend]] (who admitted accessing child porn images and consequently accepted a police caution). Currently, 35 people are known to have committed [[suicide]] after being arrested in connection with Operation Ore.


The operation led to the seizure of user information of thousands of persons who were alleged to have accessed a child pornography website with their credit cards. It also resulted in the arrests of several prominent individuals, ranging from police officers and judges to [[The Who]]'s guitarist [[Pete Townshend]] (who admitted accessing child porn images purely for research purposes, and consequently accepted a police caution). Currently, 35 people are known to have committed [[suicide]] after being arrested in connection with Operation Ore.
David Stanley aka "OBU Investigators UK" is currently trying to rewrite this page with a bit of "pervert propoganda" assisted by the "online sex offender community"

== Controversies and Injustices ==

Operation Ore has also been called a modern day [[witch-hunt]] (labelled as such by [[Pete Townshend]] himself), a 21st century [[inquisition]] and the 'largest miscarriage of justice in UK history'. Detractors of the course of justice taken in regard to Operation Ore cite incidents of faulty intelligence, identity theft, accidental click-through caches, and unsolicited spam as major factors that lead to some people being falsely accused.

On [[June 21]] [[2005]] an article appeared in ''[[PC Pro]]'' which revealed that many of the alleged offenders were innocent.

“The most critical computer evidence produced in Operation Ore, I have found, was flawed,” says [[Duncan Campbell (investigative journalist)|Duncan Campbell]], an expert witness in the defence of Operation Ore suspects. “The mistakes meant huge quantities of police, technical and social work resources were misdirected to some futile and ill-founded investigations. But the worse result was damage to innocent lives, and the welfare of families and children.”

The article also claimed that prosecutions have centred on what's been claimed in court to be the front page of an adult website, which prosecutors said was dominated by a direct link to child pornography. New evidence revealed in the PC Pro article shows that many subscribers could not have accessed the alleged child porn page, while US officials had only seen a link to a child porn site on one occasion.

On 31/08/2005, two complaints containing serious criminal allegations against the conduct of senior operatives of the National Crime Squad in relation to Operation Ore were upheld on appeal at the Independant Police Complaints Commission.

As this web page includes references to material based on evidential research, it would be in the public interest if the National Crime Squad did not interfere further by attempting to cover up exposure of the truth. We therefore politely request this entry is not edited further by the National Crime Squad until due process is complete.

==External links==
*[http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/74690/operation-ore-exposed/page1.html "PC Pro - A flaw in the child porn witch hunt"]
*[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,176-1669131_1,00.html "Sunday Times 26/06/2005 A flaw in the child porn witch-hunt"]
*[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-523-1678810-523,00.html "Sunday Times 03/06/2005 Child porn suspects set to e cleared in evidence shambles"]
*[http://www.xuk.biz "The Real Story"]
*[http://obu.tz4.com OBU, An investigation into Operation Ore]
*[http://www.inquisition21.com Inquisition 21, a web-site operated by several world wide contributors that criticize Operation Ore]
*[http://ore.witchtrials.org Operation Ore exposed]

[[Category:Child pornography crackdowns]]
[[Category:Police operations in the United Kingdom|Ore]]
[[Category:Wrongful convictions]]

Revision as of 22:09, 5 September 2005

Operation Ore followed the closure of Landslide Inc, a credit clearance intermediary based in Fort Worth, Texas. In April 1999, USPIS (United States Postal Inspection Service) in Texas had received an internal complaint after Robert Adams, a postal inspector, received a tip from an acquaintance in St Paul, Minnesota. The man, who has never been named, stumbled on a website advertising child pornography via graphic thumbnails and blatant banners. Adams contacted nearby Dallas police department and Steve Nelson, a Dallas police officer accessed various child pornography sites using his credit card. An adult classified section of the website allegedly included postings offering to trade Keyz passwords. USPIS and Dallas Police brought their investigation to the attention of Terri Moore, an assistant district attorney with a tough reputation.

Landslide provided payment systems for adult webmasters. These systems were automated, webmasters could sign up to the system online and people accessing the websites would go through the payment or login system before being granted access. The principle systems were AVS for Adult Verification System and Keyz because it operated via the keyz.com domain name owned by Landslide.

Out of some 5,700 sites that used Landslide's services over time, US LEA's determined a small number of these contained material which was underage according to the laws in the United States. Most of what was of questionable age was old imagery scooped up from the huge volumes of material sweeping through the Internet newsgroups, a minority of which could be described as constituting child abuse. The suggestion that every image was a crime scene was part of the marketing hype for Operation Ore, but it wasn't actually true.

The operation led to the seizure of user information of thousands of persons who were alleged to have accessed a child pornography website with their credit cards. It also resulted in the arrests of several prominent individuals, ranging from police officers and judges to The Who's guitarist Pete Townshend (who admitted accessing child porn images purely for research purposes, and consequently accepted a police caution). Currently, 35 people are known to have committed suicide after being arrested in connection with Operation Ore.

Controversies and Injustices

Operation Ore has also been called a modern day witch-hunt (labelled as such by Pete Townshend himself), a 21st century inquisition and the 'largest miscarriage of justice in UK history'. Detractors of the course of justice taken in regard to Operation Ore cite incidents of faulty intelligence, identity theft, accidental click-through caches, and unsolicited spam as major factors that lead to some people being falsely accused.

On June 21 2005 an article appeared in PC Pro which revealed that many of the alleged offenders were innocent.

“The most critical computer evidence produced in Operation Ore, I have found, was flawed,” says Duncan Campbell, an expert witness in the defence of Operation Ore suspects. “The mistakes meant huge quantities of police, technical and social work resources were misdirected to some futile and ill-founded investigations. But the worse result was damage to innocent lives, and the welfare of families and children.”

The article also claimed that prosecutions have centred on what's been claimed in court to be the front page of an adult website, which prosecutors said was dominated by a direct link to child pornography. New evidence revealed in the PC Pro article shows that many subscribers could not have accessed the alleged child porn page, while US officials had only seen a link to a child porn site on one occasion.

On 31/08/2005, two complaints containing serious criminal allegations against the conduct of senior operatives of the National Crime Squad in relation to Operation Ore were upheld on appeal at the Independant Police Complaints Commission.

As this web page includes references to material based on evidential research, it would be in the public interest if the National Crime Squad did not interfere further by attempting to cover up exposure of the truth. We therefore politely request this entry is not edited further by the National Crime Squad until due process is complete.