Dublin Teen Charged With 17 CSAM Offences, Banned From Internet Access Over 392 Files
Updated
Updated · Dublin Live · May 30
Dublin Teen Charged With 17 CSAM Offences, Banned From Internet Access Over 392 Files
1 articles · Updated · Dublin Live · May 30
A 17-year-old Dublin boy was granted bail with an internet ban after appearing in the Children's Court on 17 charges tied to 392 CSAM images and videos.
Eight seized devices tested positive for abuse material, including 65 sexual images, 44 sexual videos, 222 child exposure images and 60 child exposure videos involving children as young as two.
Detective Garda Carol Corrigan opposed bail, citing messages with a 12-year-old girl, references to clearing his phone to avoid detection, dark-web comments and fears his offending could escalate.
Judge Brendan Toale called it a serious case but imposed strict conditions including no internet-enabled devices, counselling and a curfew; the teen has not yet entered a plea.
The Director of Public Prosecutions wants the case sent to the Circuit Court for wider sentencing powers, and a June hearing will decide the trial venue.
With internet bans and growing digital safeguards, can law enforcement keep pace with evolving, encrypted CSAM networks and AI-generated abuse imagery?
How do failures in Ireland’s foster care and child protection systems contribute to the risks posed by young offenders targeting vulnerable children?