To report suspicious activity, call the
Beech Grove Police Department at 782-4949
.

Welcome to Beech Grove Crime Watch

Thanks for your interest in the Beech Grove Crime Watch program. We are a group of citizens that want to protect and enhance Beech Grove from unscrupulous activities. This will be a place for you to voice your concerns and leave anonymous tips about issues in your neighborhood. It will also be a place to keep you informed of information regarding meetings and other items that may be of interest.

Get involved, and help make Beech Grove a safer place to live and work. Started by a group of Beech Grove citizens, the Beech Grove Crime Watch exists to help educate and organize residents and business owners on how they can do their part in making a safe Beech Grove possible.

We have monthly meetings that are a wonderful tool for communication with your community leaders.

All are welcome.

If you would like to request additional information or would like to sign up for our electronic mailing list, please send an email to bgcrimewatch@yahoo.com




Comment Moderation

Comment Moderation will always be on this blog. If you want to leave an anonymous tip, please feel comfortable knowing that I will be the only person to see that tip. I will pass the information on to whoever is best to address the issue. By the same token, if you want everyone to read your comment, please note that somewhere in your post.

This is not a place for arguments, debates or insults. It is a place where we, as Beech Grove residents, can communicate with each other in a positive matter.

Thanks!!

Friday, January 4, 2008

Attorney General Pushes Sex Offender Web Ban

Convicted sex offenders' access to certain types of Web sites would be regulated under a plan brought forth Friday by Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter.

Legislators and Carter are crafting legislation that would ban sex offenders from using social networking sites, chat rooms or instant messaging programs that also allow minors on their sites.Proactive enforcement of such a regulation would likely be difficult, given the relative anonymity of the Internet, but if the proposal becomes law, it could be used to mount additional charges against anyone arrested in an Internet-related child sex crime.

"The Internet is a powerful communication tool that is being exploited by convicted sex offenders who have found cyberspace a convenient avenue for hiding their identity from young people," Carter said in a release. "Indiana must be proactive in establishing laws that address this type of deceitful behavior by convicted felons." The proposal would make it a Class D felony for a convicted sex offender to use social networking sites, chat rooms or instant messaging programs frequented by minors. The offense would be a Class C felony if the offender contacted a child or was previously convicted. A survey conducted by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children indicated that as many as one in seven people between the ages of 10 and 17 has gotten unwanted sexual solicitations online in which contact was attempted in person, over the phone or through the mail. As many as a third of children with Internet access has been exposed to unwanted sexual material on the Web, the survey concluded. Carter's office said four states already have laws regulating sex offenders' access to social networking sites.

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