[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 5538 Introduced in House (IH)]

<DOC>






119th CONGRESS
  1st Session
                                H. R. 5538

 To direct the Attorney General to convene a national working group to 
study proactive strategies and needed resources for the identification 
  and rescue of children from sexual exploitation and abuse, and for 
                            other purposes.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                           September 19, 2025

Mr. Vindman (for himself and Mr. Fitzpatrick) introduced the following 
       bill; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
 To direct the Attorney General to convene a national working group to 
study proactive strategies and needed resources for the identification 
  and rescue of children from sexual exploitation and abuse, and for 
                            other purposes.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

    This Act may be cited as the ``Child Rescue Act''.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) The growing international trade in child sexual abuse 
        material creates demand and incentive for the sexual assault of 
        children throughout the United States.
            (2) United States law enforcement efforts to combat child 
        sexual exploitation have the potential to help multiple 
        distinct groups of victims, including--
                    (A) children depicted in child sexual abuse 
                material (CSAM) who are still being abused;
                    (B) children and adults whose victimization as a 
                child continues to be viewed and shared online; and
                    (C) children who are being sexually abused or 
                exploited by adults who could be interdicted while 
                accessing or sharing CSAM online.
            (3) In 2021, law enforcement investigative systems detected 
        more than 325,000 unique Internet Protocol addresses in the 
        United States seen distributing child sexual abuse material 
        across peer-to-peer file sharing networks.
            (4) A growing body of research, including academic studies, 
        analysis by the United States Sentencing Commission, and 
        findings by law enforcement polygraphers, indicates that a 
        significant percentage of majority of individuals possessing 
        and sharing CSAM are ``dual offenders'' who possess illegal 
        imagery and also commit contact offenses. In 2021, the United 
        States Sentencing Commission found that in fiscal year 2019, 48 
        percent of ``non-production child pornography offenders engaged 
        in aggravating sexual conduct prior to, or concurrently with'', 
        their current offense. Studies including Seto et al, the Butner 
        Redux, the OJJDP study, and Bourke et al Tactical Polygraph 
        study have found that between 50 and 80 percent of offenders 
        who possess CSAM are also committing contact sexual offenses 
        against children.
            (5) According to a 2018 study by the National Center for 
        Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), ``in cases involving a 
        single victim and single offender, actively traded cases were 
        associated with having prepubescent victims. Actively traded 
        cases were also associated with more egregious content in terms 
        of sexual activity, and more likely to involve familial 
        offenders, particularly nuclear family members''.
            (6) CyberTipline reports often lead to the rescue of 
        children through the successful investigation of offenders who 
        are not only exploiting children by circulating CSAM, but who 
        are also committing contact offenses. In 2020, 21,700,000 
        CyberTipline reports were submitted to NCMEC and approximately 
        288,000 CyberTipline reports were made available to the 61 
        Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) units across the 
        country.
            (7) United States law enforcement's ability to detect and 
        interdict online traffic in CSAM provides an opportunity to 
        locate sexual predators and rescue children through victim-
        centric investigations.
            (8) With inadequate resources, United States law 
        enforcement agencies are increasingly unable to adequately 
        respond to this rapidly growing number of CyberTips and other 
        investigative leads, a problem which also reduces the number of 
        proactive undercover investigations and education activities 
        they can conduct.
            (9) Investigations of these crimes are complicated by the 
        increasing prevalence of encryption and anonymizing services 
        available to offenders.

SEC. 3. UNITED STATES WORKING GROUP ON CHILDREN IN IMMINENT DANGER OF 
              SEXUAL ABUSE AND EXPLOITATION.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Attorney General shall establish a national 
working group, to be known as the ``United States Working Group on 
Children in Imminent Danger of Sexual Abuse and Exploitation'' 
(hereinafter referred to as the ``Working Group''), to study victim-
centric policing strategies and resource needs to identify and rescue--
            (1) children in the United States who are visually depicted 
        in child sexual abuse material;
            (2) children in the United States who are victims of sexual 
        abuse by individuals who are engaged in an offense relating to 
        child sexual abuse materials; and
            (3) children located outside the United States who are 
        visually depicted in child sexual abuse materials where the 
        perpetrators are in the United States.
    (b) Duties of the Working Group.--
            (1) Information request.--Not later than 30 days after the 
        establishment of the Working Group under subsection (a), the 
        Working Group shall solicit from each State, Tribal, or local 
        law enforcement agency the information necessary to develop the 
        estimates under paragraph (2).
            (2) Development of estimates.--The Working Group shall:
                    (A) Develop estimates of the total number of 
                individuals suspected with respect to child sexual 
                abuse material or other crimes involving sexual contact 
                with children in the United States, including those who 
                are--
                            (i) known to a law enforcement agency;
                            (ii) identified by law enforcement through 
                        proactive policing; or
                            (iii) reported to the CyberTipline of NCMEC 
                        (or any successor to the CyberTipline operated 
                        by NCMEC).
                    (B) Develop estimates of the total number of child 
                victims of child sexual abuse in the United States who 
                could be located and protected from further abuse 
                through the apprehension of suspects described under 
                subparagraph (A).
                    (C) Develop recommendations of the funding, 
                resources, and proactive and reactive strategies 
                necessary for law enforcement agencies to successfully 
                identify, locate, and protect child victims--
                            (i) described in subparagraph (B); and
                            (ii) who appear in child sexual abuse 
                        material known to a law enforcement agency or 
                        NCMEC.
                    (D) Develop or obtain estimates of the number of 
                child sexual abuse reports made annually to law 
                enforcement agencies and to State, Tribal, and local 
                child protective services, broken out by locality and 
                relationship between victim and offender, including 
                adults in a position of trust or authority.
                    (E) Develop recommendations for strategies, best 
                practices, and resources that could be used by law 
                enforcement agencies to determine whether offenders 
                alleged to have committed a crime involving sexual 
                contact should also be investigated for potential child 
                sexual abuse material crimes.
                    (F) Develop recommendations of victim-centric and 
                proactive policing strategies, international 
                collaboration, and resource needs to apprehend 
                offenders in the United States who are engaged in 
                offenses related to children as described in subsection 
                (a)(3).
                    (G) Develop estimates of, or compile data solicited 
                under paragraph (1)--
                            (i) the number of adults who were arrested 
                        by law enforcement agencies during the 5-year 
                        period preceding the date of enactment of this 
                        Act, by year, for offenses or violations 
                        described in subparagraphs (A) through (D);
                            (ii) the number of adults who were 
                        prosecuted at the State, Tribal, or Federal 
                        level during the 5-year period preceding the 
                        date of the enactment of the Act, by year, for 
                        offenses described in subparagraphs (A) through 
                        (D); and
                            (iii) the number of children who are 
                        unidentified victims of child sexual abuse 
                        material described in subparagraph (C)(ii).
                    (H) Analyze and summarize common reasons why 
                investigations of reports of child sexual abuse or 
                exploitation do not go forward.
                    (I) Develop guidance for Internet Crimes Against 
                Children Task Forces to adopt a prioritization 
                framework with respect to the investigation and 
                prosecution of all child sexual abuse and exploitation, 
                including prioritizing investigating individuals using 
                encryption or anonymization.
                    (J) Develop guidance on the Attorney General's 
                response to technology companies that refuse to comply 
                with lawful requests for information related to 
                offenders who use virtual private networks.
                    (K) Evaluate the current duties and 
                responsibilities of ICAC Task Forces pursuant to 
                section 21114 of title 34, United States Code, 
                including on--
                            (i) workloads; and
                            (ii) their ability to pursue investigations 
                        which are most likely to result in the 
                        identification of offenders described in 
                        subparagraph (A) and children described in 
                        subparagraph (B).
            (3) Report.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than 365 days after the 
                date of enactment of this Act, the Working Group shall 
                submit to the Attorney General, the Committee on the 
                Judiciary of the Senate, the Committee on 
                Appropriations of the Senate, the Committee on the 
                Judiciary of the House of Representatives, and the 
                Committee on Appropriations of the House of 
                Representatives, a report that contains--
                            (i) a detailed statement of the findings 
                        and conclusions of the Working Group, together 
                        with recommendations for legislation; and
                            (ii) a summary of the support, documents, 
                        and witnesses provided by the Attorney General 
                        to the Working Group.
                    (B) Material included.--A majority vote of the 
                members of the Working Group shall determine the 
                findings, conclusions, and recommendations included in 
                the report submitted under subparagraph (A).
                    (C) Documentation of numerical edits.--If for any 
                reason the Working Group is unable to develop the 
                estimates under paragraph (2), the Working Group shall 
                in the report under this paragraph document the reasons 
                such estimates could not be developed and make 
                recommendations toward developing such estimates.
    (c) Members of the Working Group.--
            (1) In general.--
                    (A) Attorney general discretion.--The Working Group 
                shall be composed of representatives of Federal 
                departments and agencies, law enforcement agencies, 
                Tribal governmental agencies, nongovernmental 
                organizations, and other subject matter experts as the 
                Attorney General determines appropriate.
                    (B) Specified members.--The Attorney General shall 
                appoint representatives of the following agencies and 
                nongovernmental organizations to the Working Group:
                            (i) Three representatives from State or 
                        unit of local government who have received a 
                        grant from the Internet Crimes Against Children 
                        Task Force program with extensive, direct 
                        experience conducting both CyberTipline 
                        investigations and proactive, online undercover 
                        investigations, including the use of 
                        specialized tools for peer-to-peer 
                        investigations.
                            (ii) The Chief or Deputy Chief of the Child 
                        Exploitation and Obscenity Section of the 
                        Criminal Division of the Department of Justice.
                            (iii) The National Coordinator for Child 
                        Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction of the 
                        Department of Justice.
                            (iv) A representative of the Behavioral 
                        Analysis Unit of the United States Marshals 
                        Service with subject matter expertise in child 
                        exploitation offenders who also commit contact 
                        offenses.
                            (v) A special agent of Homeland Security 
                        Investigations with expertise in both 
                        CyberTipline investigations and proactive 
                        online investigations.
                            (vi) A subject matter expert within 
                        Homeland Security Investigations with expertise 
                        in child victim identification.
                            (vii) A special agent of the Federal Bureau 
                        of Investigation with expertise in both 
                        CyberTipline investigations and proactive 
                        online investigations and the use of polygraphs 
                        in child sexual abuse material investigations.
                            (viii) A representative from the National 
                        Children's Alliance with expertise in child 
                        exploitation and child victim forensic 
                        interviewing.
                            (ix) A special agent of the United States 
                        Secret Service with expertise in investigations 
                        of child sexual abuse material or polygraphs of 
                        child sexual exploitation suspects.
                            (x) A Postal Inspector at the United States 
                        Postal Inspection Service with expertise in 
                        child sexual abuse material investigations.
                            (xi) A representative from the National 
                        District Attorney's Association.
                            (xii) A representative from the academic 
                        community with expertise in developing 
                        technology that can proactively detect the 
                        distribution of child sexual abuse material 
                        online.
                            (xiii) A representative of the Office of 
                        Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention 
                        with expertise in available data sources and 
                        methods for developing prevalence estimates 
                        using direct and indirect methods of 
                        estimation.
                            (xiv) A representative of the Executive 
                        Office of the United States Attorney.
                            (xv) A recently retired Internet Crimes 
                        Against Children Task Force Commander.
                            (xvi) A representative from National Child 
                        Protection Task Force.
                            (xvii) Representatives from the Department 
                        of Justice Office of Tribal Justice and the 
                        Bureau of Indian Affairs Office of Justice 
                        Services.
                            (xviii) A representative of the Rape, Abuse 
                        & Incest National Network with subject matter 
                        expertise on child sexual exploitation and 
                        abuse.
                            (xix) A representative of the International 
                        Justice Mission with subject matter expertise 
                        on cross-border, live-streamed child sexual 
                        abuse.
                    (C) Technical assistance.--The Working Group shall 
                establish a Technical Assistance Board to provide 
                guidance and technical assistance to the Working Group, 
                composed of the following:
                            (i) A representative from the ICAC Child 
                        Online Protection System (ICACCOPS) at the 
                        National Criminal Justice Training Center with 
                        subject matter expertise on child sexual 
                        exploitation and abuse investigations.
                            (ii) A representative from the Child Rescue 
                        Coalition with subject matter expertise on the 
                        Child Protection System and other child sexual 
                        exploitation and abuse investigations.
                            (iii) A representative from the National 
                        Center for Missing and Exploited Children with 
                        subject matter expertise on child sexual 
                        exploitation and abuse and child victim 
                        identification.