Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Cell phone spying and Signal App


TECHNOLOGY
INNOVATION, THE INTERNET, GADGETS, AND MORE.
MARCH 7 2007 6:53 PM
How Do You Intercept a Text Message?
Turn your cell phone into a spy gadget.

By Christopher Beam
Text messaging.
A person text messaging
Retail giant Wal-Mart fired an employee Monday for eavesdropping on phone calls and intercepting text messages between the company's media-relations staff and a New York Times reporter. How do you intercept a text message?

Turn your own cell phone into a surveillance gadget. There are a few ways to do this. One method, phone cloning, lets you intercept incoming messages and send outgoing ones as if your phone were the original. If both phones are near the same broadcast tower, you can also listen in on calls. To clone a phone, you have to make a copy of its SIM card, which stores the phone's identifying information. This requires a SIM reader that can read the card's unique cryptographic key and transfer it to another phone. (Warning: This is super illegal, but there are still sites that show you how.) The problem with cloning is that it only lets you intercept messages sent to one phone number. Plus, you need physical access to the target phone to make it work—something Wal-Mart's technician probably didn't have.

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It's also possible to intercept unencrypted or poorly encrypted messages directly as they're broadcast over cellular channels. (If the network uses sophisticated encryption, you might be out of luck.) To steal messages with your phone, you would need to upload illegal  " firmware" onto your phone. This essentially turns your phone into a radio and allows it to pick up all the texts broadcast on a given channel—instead of limiting you to the ones addressed to you. You'd also need to know the network for the target phone—Verizon, Cingular, T-Mobile, etc.—and you'd have to make sure that both your phone and the target are within range of the same base station. This method isn't too expensive since you don't need much more than a computer, a phone, and some firmware that any serious techie could find online for free.

Wal-Mart isn't discussing details of the method its employee used, but a spokesperson did say he was able to intercept messages that included certain keywords. Companies like Global Security Solutions and Homeland Security Strategies develop interceptors for law-enforcement purposes. (Prices reportedly run as high as nearly $1 million.) These fancy devices essentially work the same way as the firmware method outlined above, but they have antennas for longer range and may run more smoothly.

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Got a question about today's news? Ask the Explainer.

Explainer thanks Patrick Traynor of Pennsylvania State University.

Christopher Beam is a writer living in Beijing.

FUTURE TENSE
THE CITIZEN’S GUIDE TO THE FUTURE.
FEB. 9 2017 9:30 AM
How to Set Up Signal Private Messenger
And why you need it.

By Jennifer Golbeck
170207_FUT_signal
Signal will encrypt your messages for you.
Holly Allen for Slate

170207_FUT_signalScale
Encrypted texts and calls: not just for movie spies and paranoid hackers! The app Signal has seen a huge surge in popularity since the 2016 presidential election, when it became a go-to recommendation for people who might not want outsiders (like the government) reading their messages. It’s is a super-easy-to-use messaging application that works like any other texting program—but it has some extra benefits. All messages are encrypted, including when they go through Signal’s servers, so if anyone intercepts them in transit or at Signal, they can’t read them. The same goes for voice calls (also free), which you can make with the app.

Friday, February 3, 2017

Smart devices spying on you

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Trevor Timm column
The government just admitted it will use smart home devices for spying
Trevor Timm
Trevor Timm
Many consumers are wholly unaware that the smart devices making their home more custom and responsive are making data that can be hacked or collected

This product image provided by Amazon shows the Amazon Echo speaker. The biggest feature in Amazon’s Echo speaker is a voice-recognition system called Alexa that is designed to control Pandora, Amazon Music and Prime Music services as well as give information on news, weather and traffic. (Amazon via AP)

Amazon Echo sees when you’re sleeping. It knows when you’re awake. Photograph: Uncredited/AP
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Tuesday 9 February 2016 15.29 EST Last modified on Tuesday 9 February 2016 15.39 EST

If you want evidence that US intelligence agencies aren’t losing surveillance abilities because of the rising use of encryption by tech companies, look no further than the testimony on Tuesday by the director of national intelligence, James Clapper.

As the Guardian reported, Clapper made clear that the internet of things – the many devices like thermostats, cameras and other appliances that are increasingly connected to the internet – are providing ample opportunity for intelligence agencies to spy on targets, and possibly the masses. And it’s a danger that many consumers who buy these products may be wholly unaware of.

US intelligence chief: we might use the internet of things to spy on you
“In the future, intelligence services might use the [internet of things] for identification, surveillance, monitoring, location tracking, and targeting for recruitment, or to gain access to networks or user credentials,” Clapper told a Senate panel as part of his annual “assessment of threats” against the US.

Clapper is actually saying something very similar to a major study done at Harvard’s Berkman Center released last week. It concluded that the FBI’s recent claim that they are “going dark” – losing the ability to spy on suspects because of encryption – is largely overblown, mainly because federal agencies have so many more avenues for spying. This echoes comments by many surveillance experts, who have made clear that, rather than “going dark”, we are actually in the “golden age of surveillance”.

Privacy advocates have known about the potential for government to exploit the internet of things for years. Law enforcement agencies have taken notice too, increasingly serving court orders on companies for data they keep that citizens might not even know they are transmitting. Police have already been asking Google-owned company Dropcam for footage from cameras inside people’s homes meant to keep an eye on their kids. Fitbit data has already been used in court against defendants multiple times.

But the potential for these privacy violations has only recently started reaching millions of homes: Samsung sparked controversy last year after announcing a television that would listen to everything said in the room it’s in and in the fine print literally warned people not to talk about sensitive information in front of it.

While Samsung took a bunch of heat, a wide array of devices now act as all-seeing or all-listening devices, including other television models, Xbox Kinect, Amazon Echo and GM’s OnStar program that tracks car owners’ driving patterns. Even a new Barbie has the ability to spy on you – it listens to Barbie owners to respond but also sends what it hears back to the mothership at Mattel.

Then there are the rampant security issues with the internet of things that allow hackers – whether they are criminal, government or something in between – to access loads of data without any court order, like the creeps who were eavesdropping on baby monitors of new parents. Just a few weeks ago, a security researcher found that Google’s Nest thermostats were leaking users’ zipcodes over the internet. There’s even an entire search engine for the internet of things called Shodan that allows users to easily search for unsecured webcams that are broadcasting from inside people’s houses without their knowledge.

While people voluntarily use all these devices, the chances are close to zero that they fully understand that a lot of their data is being sent back to various companies to be stored on servers that can either be accessed by governments or hackers.

While Clapper’s comments are generating new publicity for this privacy worry, the government has known about the potential to exploit these devices for a long time. The then CIA director David Petraeus made clear that intelligence agencies would use theinternet of things to spy on people back in 2012, saying:

Items of interest will be located, identified, monitored and remotely controlled through technologies such as radio-frequency identification, sensor networks, tiny embedded servers, and energy harvesters – all connected to the next-generation internet using abundant, low-cost, and high-power computing.

As Wired put it, Petraeus was expressing excitement the CIA would soon be able spy on you through your dishwasher.

Author and persistent Silicon Valley critic Evgeny Morozov summed up the entire problem with the internet of things and “smart” technology in a tweet last week:

While internet-connected devices are not going away – it’s a certainty they will only get more prevalent – it’s important that companies make them as secure as the end-to-end encryption the FBI director loves to complain about, and that we press the government to enact strict new rules to prevent our privacy from being invaded thanks to the weakest link among televisions or dolls or thermostats that line billions of homes around the world.

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474 Arrested, 28 Sexually Exploited Children Rescued During Statewide Human Trafficking Operation

474 Arrested, 28 Sexually Exploited Children Rescued During Statewide Human Trafficking Operation: LASD
POSTED 9:06 AM, FEBRUARY 1, 2017, BY TRACY BLOOM, UPDATED AT 05:52PM, FEBRUARY 1, 2017
la-county-sheriff
A Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department patrol car is seen in this file photo. (Credit: KTLA)
Hundreds of people were arrested and dozens of sexually exploited children and adult victims were rescued across California during a statewide operation to combat human trafficking, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department announced Tuesday.

More than 30 federal, state and local law enforcement agencies and task forces, including the Los Angeles Regional Human Trafficking Task Force, participated in the third annual “Operation Reclaim and Rebuild” enforcement operation, according to a sheriff’s news release.

The statewide operation took place over the three-day period between last Thursday and Saturday.

In total, 474 arrests were made, including 142 males on solicitation charges, and 36 males on suspicion of pimping, according to figures provided by the Sheriff’s Department.

Additionally, 28 commercially and sexually exploited children and 27 adult victims were rescued.

“You are worthy of more. And we will work tirelessly with our partners … to provide you services and help you rebuild your life,” Sheriff Jim McDonnell said, addressing the victims during a news conference on Tuesday.

The minors who were recovered during the operation were being cared for by various children and family services agencies across the state, according to sheriff’s officials. The Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking and the Saving Innocence organization were coordinating efforts to help victims in L.A. County.

“Operation Reclaim and Rebuild focused on rescuing victims of sexual slavery and human trafficking, providing victims with much-needed services, identifying and arresting their captors, seeking successful prosecutions, and disrupting the demand for vulnerable victims by targeting their customers,” the release stated.

“Police agencies and other trafficking task forces throughout our state joined in the enforcement operation to send the clear message that California law enforcement shares a unified mandate: Human trafficking must not be tolerated in our state!”

Correction: An earlier version of this story had an incorrect surname for the L.A. County sheriff. The story has been updated.

FILED IN: LOCAL NEWS
TOPICS: CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT
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Thursday, February 2, 2017

Washington state leads in child porn


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Washington’s not-so-little dirty secret
Police 'overwhelmed' as state leads the nation in child pornography
BY LEVI PULKKINEN, SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF Updated 1:34 pm, Wednesday, December 9, 2015
21





Seattle Police Department Detective Ian Polhemus sits with Bear, the department's electronics detecting dog. Bear, who joined the department's Internet Crimes Against Children team in August, hunts for hidden electronics during investigations into child pornography. Polhemus, a longtime investigator with the unit, is Bear's handler. Photo: GENNA MARTIN, SEATTLEPI.COM / SEATTLEPI.COM
Photo: GENNA MARTIN, SEATTLEPI.COM
IMAGE 1 OF 18 Seattle Police Department Detective Ian Polhemus sits with Bear, the department's electronics detecting dog. Bear, who joined the department's Internet Crimes Against Children team in August, hunts for hidden electronics during investigations into child pornography. Polhemus, a longtime investigator with the unit, is Bear's handler. less

Ronald Merideth had something to hide.
Detective Ian Polhemus knew where to find it.
Pieced together on Merideth's computer was a two-minute video. The one the Seattle detective was looking for showed the degradation of a little girl, a 9-year-old bound with rope and sexually assaulted on camera.
The computer in Merideth’s Kirkland office was one of thousands in Washington known to be housing child pornography. Merideth was exceptional in only one respect -- he got caught.
Today, Washington law enforcement agents can pick out more than 17,000 devices that appear to be trading child pornography in the state. They know how to find the traders. What they lack are the resources -- detectives, prosecutors -- to bring them down.
Beyond those traders, hundreds of leads pour into a small group detectives monitoring all of Washington, which by one key measure leads the nation in child pornography. Overwhelmed, investigators try to target offenders hurting children most directly.
The images are like autopsy photos. They’re evidence of a crime. And they’re horrific.
RELATED STORIES

How can we protect kids.

Stories of six Seattle-area offenders.


“There are some sections of the depictions world that are unimaginable, really, on any level,” said Cecelia Gregson, a state prosecutor who for two years has been hauling some of the Seattle area’s most egregious offenders into federal court.
“It’s not like you happen into it,” the King County senior deputy prosecutor continued. “You don’t happen into seeing a 6-year-old being raped by an adult man. And if you did happen into, and were as mortified as a normal person might be, you wouldn’t repeatedly click on it.”
But thousands do, many without even bothering to hide their crimes. And – despite desperate work of the handful of detectives and prosecutors who’ve taken on the heartbreaking burden – most aren’t paying a price.
A planned expansion of a Seattle Police Department-led unit tasked with policing child porn aims to change that. Gregson’s initiative, which has brought federal power to bear against two dozen King County suspects, is rolling forward.
‘These numbers have just overwhelmed us’
Crimes tend to find their moment. Methamphetamine gets the spotlight, then human trafficking, heroin, fraud.
All are undeniably deserving of prosecution. Each creates an injustice, a victim. Each might be cured if enough money, power and wisdom were brought to bear.
As a crime, child pornography’s moment has yet to arrive.
It occupies a space alongside other crimes that tend to prompt silence rather than outrage. Its victims are among the world’s weakest people – children – while its perpetrators can be anyone at all.
“We think about Seattle; it has myriad issues,” said Mike Edwards, the Seattle Police Department captain leading the state’s Internet Crimes Against Children unit. “What’s the flavor of the week, of the month? It is that rash of car prowls, that rash of burglaries. …
“Whatever it is, it becomes something that garners a lot of attention. And if it garners a lot of attention, it garners a lot of resources. That’s just how it works.”
Edwards is fired up after a recent win in the Washington Legislature that should deliver an additional $1.3 million to the effort.
Which is welcome, because, as an industry, child pornography is booming.
In recent months, coaches, teachers and one aspiring police officer have drawn child pornography charges in King County. Subway spokesman Jared Fogle’s child pornography-fueled fall made national news; Bear, the police dog who helped bring him down by searching his home, now works for the Seattle Police Department.
Edwards said his six detectives now sometimes receive more than 100 tips a week from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. The most concerning statistics relate to peer-to-peer file-sharing networks like BitTorrent, which allow users to directly exchange files.
Investigators say Washington ranks among the top five states when it comes to peer-to-peer network users who are trading child pornography. The other leading states are California, Florida, New York and Texas. Per capita, they say, Washington is No. 1.
At any given time, police in Washington have more than 17,000 potential leads on the most popular peer-to-peer networks. That number has been as high as 25,000, with each lead representing a device that appears to be moving child pornography. Currently, only eight investigators in the state are in a position to chase down those peer-to-peer leads.
“These numbers have just overwhelmed us, with the staffing levels that we have,” Edwards said.
“We need to do more,” the captain continued. “We just don’t have the resources.”
And those numbers under-represent the problem in several respects. They only account for child pornography offenders using peer-to-peer networks, and then only the most popular networks. They also miss child pornography that hasn’t been spotted by law enforcement.
Brian Levine, a University of Massachusetts-Amherst computer science professor, has been researching how child pornography moves through peer-to-peer networks for six years. He said the trading is basically done in public. Investigators who know where to look have no trouble finding hundreds of thousands of users moving child pornography.
“So many people do this, and they do it in public,” said Levine, part of a research group working closely with police to build investigatory tools for law enforcement. “The real challenge for police is figuring out who to arrest. … You want to save a child. That’s the real goal.”
There’s no consensus as to how common it is for child pornography collectors to commit other sex crimes. Recent studies indicate that anywhere from half to four-fifths of convicted child pornography offenders committed other sex offenses. About 10 percent have been convicted of other sex crimes.
What’s clear is that the children are often attacked by those they should be able to trust. That betrayal compounds the harm.
Speaking at her office at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, Gregson recalled a young boy abused by a parent.
“This little guy, I just felt so sorry for him,” Gregson said. “He really loved that parent, even though we know what happened from what’s on the tapes.”
Opinions differ on what drives the collectors. Some are child abusers trying to relive their crimes. Some were abused themselves. Some say they’re caught in something of an addiction.
“They purport that there’s a compulsion,” Gregson said, who added that she wasn't sure whether to believe this.
“I don’t know,” she said. “It’s a self-report, right? … How reliable is it? You’ll never really know.”
For their part, the suspects tend to talk once detectives come calling.
“Most of them, in their mind, they kinda know it is wrong but they don’t think it’s that wrong,” Edwards said. “They want to explain themselves to somebody. Because they figure if they can explain it, you’ll understand it and realize that it’s really not so bad.”
Survivors waiting on Congress
“Every day people are trading and sharing videos of me as a little girl being raped in the most sadistic ways. They don’t know me, but they have seen every part of me. They are being entertained by my shame and pain.”
That’s how “Vicky” described her life as a child pornography survivor.
Her father started raping her when she was 10. He recorded the assaults on video, taking requests from fans while terrorizing his daughter. He’s locked up now, but the recordings he made roam free.
“Vicky” was 17 when she learned that the videos her father made were circulating. In a letter to the court, she said her “world came crashing down that day.”
“They are trading my trauma around like treats at a party, but it is far from innocent,” she said in court papers. “It feels like I am being raped by each and every one of them.”
Child pornography collectors sometimes fixate on the boys and girls pictured in the horrific videos, said Carol Hepburn, a Seattle attorney representing several child pornography survivors. Some of the offenders catalog and organize their collections. Some chat online among themselves, casually discussing the abuse.
“It’s a very hurtful thing to know that the offenders are out there, and to know that there are people … getting pleasure from these exceedingly painful moments,” Hepburn said.
Hepburn, a former state deputy prosecutor, has been representing clients abused on camera since 2008. “Vicky” was one of them.
While they often need psychological and educational support, child pornography survivors aren’t easily able to collect from the men and women who trade images of their abuse.
In most criminal cases, defendants are ordered to repay their victims for the harm they’ve caused. But restitution remains an uncertain thing for child pornography survivors.
At present, courts have the impossible task of untangling the harm caused by the original abuse and hurt caused by those watching the recordings. The burden on survivors is tremendous.
“There are toddlers and infants that are abused and are the subjects of child porn,” Hepburn said. “How is that little one, when they grow up, ever going to disentangle … the distribution of the images from the fact that their father, their brother, their uncle abused them? So often the abuse is all about creating the videos so that the two issues are inseparable.”
Earlier this year, the U.S. Senate unanimously passed a bill that would make it easier for child pornography survivors to collect. The House of Representatives has failed to move on the bill, the Amy & Vicky Restitution Act.
“You’d think that they could all get behind helping child abuse victims and iron out their differences in approach,” Hepburn said.

Two Washington representatives – Republican Dave Reichert and Democrat Suzan DelBene – sit on the House committee that could act on the bill. Both are sponsors; their aides say they’re waiting for the committee chair to put it to a vote.
Levine said many companies are trying to address the problem. Industry leaders – Facebook, Yahoo, Google – all have people working to fight Internet-based child exploitation. Still, the images and videos persist online.
“There’s no tool that will protect victims,” the computer scientist said. “I can’t deploy a security patch and fix the problem.”
'Take these people off the street'
Police officers don’t join up to spend their days looking at child pornography. It’s not a job for the recruiting poster.
The work is draining and damaging. Detectives comb through the most disturbing images man has made. Then they meet the kids.
“We’re asking these people to do some pretty incredible stuff,” said Edwards, seated behind his desk at a Seattle Police Department office building near Georgetown.
“You never forget those images,” he continued. “Once you meet that child it brings a whole new level of reality. … These are real live people, and we end up meeting them.”
SPD spends $1.5 million annually to be the host of the state’s Internet Crimes Against Children unit. Additional state funding, won earlier in 2015 after a push by advocates in Olympia, will add another $1.3 million to the unit’s coffers during the next two years.
The SPD effort compliments investigations led or facilitated by the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S. Secret Service.
Until November, the Secret Service’s local leader on the issue was Special Agent Bryan Molnar. His work helped put away David McMillen, a teacher caught secretly recording a 14-year-old student.
Molnar and others with the Secret Service also made the case against Benjamin Franklin, an Algona child rapist who recorded his assaults on two young boys. A Secret Service review of Franklin’s electronics uncovered videos showing the abuse. Franklin, 39, pleaded guilty to child rape charges in state court after learning from Gregson that he might face federal charges.
Robert Kierstead, special agent-in-charge for the Secret Service’s Northwest office, praised Molnar as “a tremendous asset” during his five years in Seattle. Molnar was honored recently with the Homeland Security Department Secretary’s Exemplary Service Award before receiving a promotional transfer.
“The way Bryan Molnar sees it, he wants to take these people off the street,” Kierstead said. “That’s what his motivation is, and he has no issue doing it.”
Edwards said he and others are working to figure out how to select detectives who’ll best be able to police child pornography. Detectives usually last five to seven years before they need to move on to other investigations.
Their work is both delicate and urgent. Investigators fear for the child they could save but won’t reach in time.
“There unfortunately is the dark side. And that’s where we live,” Edwards said. “We’re there to protect and rescue kids.”
“Every one of the cases we look at, we have it in the back of our minds that this might be someone about to abuse, that we have to get on it,” the captain continued. “But we know we can’t. We’re overwhelmed.”
Make video –
Edwards envisions a robust cross-jurisdictional unit with offices around the state, funded in part by the new appropriation from Olympia. A Seattle office is slated to come online first, followed by one in the Tri-Cities. Others will follow.
The current head count at the unit is six full-time detectives, a sergeant, Edwards, Bear and Bear’s handler, Polhemus. Edwards wants to grow the operation to 20 dedicated detectives statewide and five forensic investigators.
Delving the darkness
For two years, Gregson has been splitting her time between the King County Prosecutor’s Office, where she prosecutes crimes against children, and federal court. There, as a special U.S. attorney, she’s able to elevate state investigations into the federal system, where resources are more plentiful and penalties are often more severe. The federal system is also better equipped to monitor offenders after they are released from prison.
Gregson became cross-designated in January 2014 after something of a child pornography boom in King County. On her watch, 23 men and one woman have been moved into federal jurisdiction or pleaded guilty to state charges knowing they could face federal prosecution. All are accused of making child pornography or are convicted sex offenders.
"We will always find a prison cell for this type of offender," King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg said Tuesday. "We are grateful to the police and prosecutors who have to delve into the darkness of this criminal subculture to bring these men to justice."
“Partnering with county prosecutors to battle those who sexually abuse and exploit children is key to broadening our collective reach and effectively using limited resources,” said Annette L. Hayes, U.S. Attorney for Western Washington.
Hayes said Gregson’s assignment to the U.S. Attorney’s Office ensures close coordination across all levels of law enforcement investigating Internet-enabled crimes against children.
Gregson’s future as a special federal prosecutor isn't entirely certain, as someone has to find the money to pay for her time working with federal authorities. Prosecutor's Office spokesman Dan Donohoe said he expects Gregson will continue her work.
Thanks to that work, Merideth’s future is all but assured.
Raiding Merideth’s Kirkland office earlier this year, investigators found the child rape video they knew was there and many more. Meredith, a film production technician, has since admitted to all of it.
Because Merideth was previously convicted of a sex crime, Gregson was able to move his case into U.S. District Court. He pleaded guilty to federal charges in late November and now faces a mandatory 10-year prison term.
Seattlepi.com reporter Levi Pulkkinen can be reached at 206-448-8348 or levipulkkinen@seattlepi.com. Follow Levi on Twitter at twitter.com/levipulk.

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FBI: Washington sex tourist paid hungry kids for child porn
‘If you want me to send you money for food you better get online’
By LEVI PULKKINEN, SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF Published 12:25 pm, Tuesday, August 2, 2016
5






FBI agents recently raided the rural Snohomish County home of Joe Grubbs. Grubbs, most recently of Camano Island, now faces federal child pornography charges. 
FBI agents recently raided the rural Snohomish County home of Joe Grubbs. Grubbs, most recently of Camano Island, now faces federal child pornography charges.

A Washington state man accused of paying impoverished Filipino women to sexually abuse their children on camera now faces federal charges.
Federal prosecutors in Seattle claim Joseph Grubbs spent years exchanging sexually explicit messages with mothers abroad and arranging to rape their children. Grubbs, 67, was targeted by the FBI in December after a tip from Yahoo.
Company security flagged an exchange between an email belonging to Grubbs and a woman in the Philippines, an Everett-based FBI agent said in charging papers. Investigators claim the woman sent Grubbs sexually explicit photos of a 10- to 12-year-old girl. Investigators claim to have tracked the exchange to Grubbs’ Stanwood home.
As it turned out, Stanwood police had received a tip five years before that Grubbs had child pornography at his home. According to charging papers, the tipster told police Grubbs had traveled to the Philippines in November 2009, and that he had child pornography on his computer.
Writing the court, the FBI special agent said images recovered during the investigation appear to have been made in the Philippines. The agent claimed Grubbs was involved in an extensive online chat with other Yahoo users interested in child abuse and child pornography.

As early as May 2012, Grubbs praised in graphic terms sexually explicit photos of an infant, the FBI agent said in charging papers. Grubbs is alleged to have arranged to meet one girl, who described herself as 13, during a visit to the Philippines.
During their text exchange, the girl asked Grubbs to “pay for me … just for foods for my family,” according to charging documents.
“I want to see you on cam first honey,” Grubbs replied, according to charging papers.

“If you want me to send you money for food,” he is alleged to have continued, “you better get online.”
Investigators claim the girl went on to offer a 9-year-old family member to Grubbs.
In another chat exchange months later, Grubbs discussed the 13-year-old’s genitals and asked her to send him pornographic photos of herself, the FBI agent continued.
Other chat exchanges recovered during the investigation follow a similar line. In one, a woman who appears to be arranging a child sex show for Grubbs explains she pays girls about $6 to have sex on camera. Grubbs is alleged to have offered to pay the woman $27 to have sex with a girl during a visit to the Philippines.
Travel records show Grubbs regularly visited the Philippines between 1995 and March 2016.
On July 14, FBI agents looking for Grubbs found him living in an RV on Camano Island. According to charging papers, Grubbs claimed he had a second home in the Philippines.
Investigators searched Grubb’s home on July 26. He was arrested and has since been charged with child pornography offenses in U.S. District Court at Seattle. He remains jailed and is expected to return to court Aug. 10 for a preliminary hearing.
MORE FROM SEATTLEPI.COM: Child pornography: Washington's not-so-little direty secret
Seattlepi.com reporter Levi Pulkkinen can be reached at 206-448-8348 or levipulkkinen@seattlepi.com.
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