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tv   Justice With Judge Jeanine  FOX News  April 22, 2012 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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>> judge jeanine: tonight on "justice," george zimmerman attempts to make bail and the attorney for the family of trayvon martin speaks out. plus -- breaking news in the secret service sex scandal. more resignations and a congressional investigation. plus -- >> he was the poster child for missing kids. new clues in the disappearance may finally crack the case. and courts gone wild. ratu dent sues her college -- a student sues her college over her roommate's sex life and a
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woman sues the repo man for the gas she left in the tank. coming up tonight, on "justice." hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. george zimmerman is still behind bars tonight, unable to make bail, for now. today zimmerman's attorney spoke to reporters. >> this is a lot of money to come up with and $150,000 is a lot of collateral. this is not a family of much means, i think we all know that from the bond hearing itself so it is tough. >> yesterday, during his bond hearing a stunned courtroom watched as george zimmerman took the stand. >> i wanted to say i am sorry for the loss of your son. i did not know how old he was. i thought he was a little bit younger than i am and i did not know if he was armed or not. >> that was george zimmerman in court on friday apologizing. bail was set in the amount of $150,000. joining us now is the attorney for the trayvon martin family
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benjamin crum. thank you for being with us this evening. >> thank you, judge. >> that was is trayvon's family's reaction to that apology? >> it was an emotional day for them all around. tracy martin wept throughout the hearing and they believed zimmerman's apology was very insincere, very self-serving and it was one of those things it is 50 day 50 days later on t that he never apologized before this. he had the website that he said he authored and that everything that was important and relevant that he had to say he was going to say it and no where on that website did he ever say i'm sorry or ever show remorse for killing trayvon martin. >> judge jeanine: and, of course, you are saying it is
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really is fornd reelectionly his own benefit with the court and with the public. >> yes, ma'am, we really feel he had ultratearor motives and to do this at the bond hearing, first of all, you take the stand and you don't present any evidence and you are supposed to be addressing the court but then try to sneak an apology in to the family it seemed very insincere. >> judge jeanine: and what was interesting is when the prosecutor get up to cross examine zimmerman which is every prosecutor's dream to get a defendant in a murder cates on the stand before the jury actually get there's but it was limited by the judge's sustaining the objections by the defense. kind of an interesting approach by the defense, don't you think. in. >> yes, it was surprising that the judge would limit the prosecutor because zimmerman
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voluntarily took the stand and once you do that all holds are barred, you put yourself in that situation and for the judge to limit it, it just didn't make sense that he gets to get up and do a self-serving statement and the prosecutor doesn't get to attack his credibility. his credibility is always at issue of the defendant. >> judge jeanine: no question about, it benjamin. as someone who as a litigator tried many homicide cases the first thing i would have gone for is are you are offering an apology. are you telling us that you are sorry you did it. are are you telling us that you made a mistake. are you telling us that you did something wrong. if not, what are you apologizing for. that is a tremendous opportunity for the defense to go after -- for the prosecution to go after the defendant in a murder case. zimmerman arrested in 2005 for resisting arrest, required to go into anger management.
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they out and out dismiss the felony charges. then we find out that zipman's ex-girlfriend got a protective order against him because she says that he apparently slapped her around and threw her down. was trayvon's family upset about the fact that this alleged violent history where they issued an injunction against him assaulting the ex-girlfriend where he was arrested for felonies wasn't enough to keep h him in jail? >> it was interesting that the judge seemed to i guess accept zimmerman's position that the police were liars. you know, that he didn't assault them and that he didn't obstruct justice and that that was okay and that was troubling to the family. it was one of those things you say why does everybody try to protect him? it seems like everything he does he gets a pass on it in as much as what happened on
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february 26 they were saying is he going to get a pass on this, too? >> judge jeanine: and speak of february 26 we are just now seeing the photograph of the back of george zimmerman's head and i'm sure that as you can see on the screen right now does the family question the authenticity of this photo given the fact that zimmerman's head in the video within apparently an hour or so of the actual assault showed none of the blood and do they question the blood and the pattern of hitting a cement or your head is being banged against cement would the blood not splatter up a little bit into th? why would it go to either side of the h head as opposed to down the middle of the head? are they questioning this at all. >> you hit the hammer on the nail. it is clear that it doesn't seem to be consistent with what
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zimmerman told the police about him, trayvon martin beating his head repeatedly into the pavement. in fact, when you look at it, and say they didn't need to stitch it up or need bandages and didn't go to the hospital for it. how badded could it have been and it is a situation where there is only one photo apparently and if it was that bad wouldn't a trained professional police department take multiple photographs so we can see the extend of these injuries. >> now, benjamin was that photo taken at the scene? who released that photo? who took the photo? >> as far as we know, it is a photograph taken on a cell phone and so we do question the authenticity of it. it is a situation where the police, good police work would have done a lot more than that to document an injury if it really was something that he
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was building this self-defense argument on you would want to know everything to either support or defeat his theory of self-defense but that is not what was done here. all we have is just one photograph. >> i have to tell you as i look at that photograph the -- you know, the flow of the blood is very unusual. i mean if the assault was as he described it, the blood wouldn't just go straight down, it would have slattered up a little bit, it wouldn't have gone down the middle and the color itself. but that is something i guess we will have to look at at the trial. benjamin, finally, the next big step here is the hearing that will be conduct regarding the stand your ground theory and as you well know a judge in hearing that evidenced that will be presented by the defense has the opportunity and the ability, the power to actually dismiss the charges. and, of course, you know, you talk about trayvon's familiar le being a little disappointed in all of the benefits that
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zimmerman has gotten. how confident are they in the system right now? >> well, as the special prosecutor has said, judge pirro, they wouldn't have charge him with second-degree murder if they did not think they could get a conviction. they had a chance to look at all of the evidence. they feel confident about their case. it is concerning about the stand your ground law. what the family wanted most was to have a judge and jury listen to all of the evidence and have a jury of his peers render a verdict after listening to the evidence and they said they could live with and accept the rule of law but to stop it before it gets to a jury would be disheartening to tracy and sabrina, trayvon's parents. >> judge jeanine: the evidence is by a bullpen of the evidence, not a reasonable -- by a preponderance of the evidence, not a reasonable
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doubt. we'll see what happens. but thank you so much for being with us this evening. thank you, judge and the family conveys their thoughts to you as well. >> and vice versa. thank you. up next, police and the fbi dig up a basement floor in the search for ayton. and one of the fired secret service agents in that prostitution scandal plans to sue. sue who?
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>> judge jeanine: new york city police and the fbi continue to hunt for clues in the case of missing ayton pate who vanished 33 years ago. may 25, 1979. 6-year-old ayton pates a first grader begs his parents to let
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him walk to his school bus stop alone. for the first time they do. he leaves his building around 8:00 a.m. heading west on prince street. a mailman and a neighbor are the last known people to see etan at the corner of worcester and prince. his bus stop is located only two blocks away at west broadway but when the bus comes at 8:10 a.m., etan does not get on. the boy's parents discover he is missing that afternoon. and a massive police search is launched. the investigation is focused on suspect jose ramos a pedophile who was dating etan's babysitter but this week police searched the basement of a building on that corner of worcester and prince. back in 1979 the basement was
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used by a neighborhood handyman who was friendly with the patz family. >> dr. michael baden was chief medical examiner for new york city at the time of etan's disappearance. doctor baden, i will start with you. thanks for being with us this evening. >> good to see you. >> judge jeanine: 33 years later are. they are going at a cement floor with a jack hammer. what can they possibly find 33 years later? >> if the body were placed there 33 years ago there would still be he evidence of that. there would be clothing and bones and teeth. there would be the ability to get dna easily, the identity of the child, dna withstands all that. the cement tends to protect the body from water and oxygen that decomposes it. the problem will be if thed about body is there is to determine the cause of death
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but there should be no problem in identifying the remains if there are remains there. >> doctor, if there are remains are etan patz where they are degreing right now is it possible that they also could identify the killer from what they might find underneath the cement? >> probably not, the body and skeletal remains and teeth will remain for decades and decades. i have exhumed bodies that were 80 years old and edentfication without any problem. if the killer left hairs they may still be there. but blood would probably not withstand that length of time aanalysis.d of dna anal but there could still be trace evidenced we could discover 33 years later.
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you commander night homicide in new york city. to me, the answer is always in the evidence box. do you believe that the answer to solving the case is in that box? >> i do believe ness the evidence box but i also think that technology today is a good factor in this. i think when they went in there they had to get probable cause to get a search warrant and probably went in there and had a ground penetrating radar machine which they use now which checks the density of the concrete so see if there are voids in it. >> we know that the cadaver dogs h hit on it it. this is on etan's way to the bus. this is a no brainer. new cement. why didn't they dig it up back in 1979. they knew it was brand newly poored cement. >> that was a supervisor decision that had to be made and maybe they were penny wise and pound foolish. if that happened today that
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would basement would be done in the way that it is right now. >> in addition to the dog hitting on the floor which happened as a result of the opening of this case by the manhattan d. a. what else would they need to get a search warrant? >> the probable cause. maybe mr. miller made a statement that was able to get some probable cause. they might have had forensic crime scene equipment. as i mentioned the ground penetrating radar which if it shows density and shows a void they will be able to detect something is in there. >> and what is interesting according to some public reports etan patz's mother to go talk to miller and it was is after they talked to miller twice they went for search warrant. there are absorbing pads that capture the scent of human retains. how does that work? >> they can capture any remains, human or an animal
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remains. dog alerts are h helpful but not december positive. they can alert on many things, animals, urine and there has to be more than just a dog alert to have a confidence there might be a body underneath that cement. >> judge jeanine: we do hope at the very least there is some closure for the family of etan patz. thanks for being with us this evening. coming up next, our legal team and the secret service sex scandal. plus, a student sues her college over her roommate's sex life
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>> judge jeanine: three more secret service agents out of a job. that makes six so far in the colombian prostitution scandal and one agent is already
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planning a lawsuit. and just in, the hooker from colombia is now planning to sue. joey jackson and richard, both former prosecutors and criminal defense attorneys join us tonight. guys, we know this is not just about sex. this is about compromising the president, disabling a weapon, planting a bug, copying a laptop. has this thing happened before, this kind of thing, do you think? >> maybe not. we don't know. there is no evidence of that. >> you think it is the air in colombia that made these guys decide we want hookers tonight. not in italy, no where else. >> it is about dereliction of duty and breach of security. >> it is the first time they got caught. let's put this in perspective. the secret service takes bull bullets from president. they have been in existences since 1962. >> judge jeanine: here is the bottom line. you know what the risk is to
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the president. tell us. >> the risk is that the president, they are there as an advanced team to ensure his safety. no question about that but they were not on his specific presidential detail. they were there two days prior on their own time in colombia. prostitution is not a crime. >> the secret service own website talks about how comprehensive protecting the individual is and the advance team is part of that whether they are -- these guys are on metal detectors. >> no one was placed in danger. the president was safe and everyone else. >> how do you know that? what do you think these women are doing. they could blackmail the secret service agents and say i'm going to call your wife if you don't give me x and y. >> i think it was improper and inappropriate but i think the punishment needs to be proportionate to the offense committed. throw them away. resign from your duty. >> judge jeanine: do they have a right to do what they want on their own time? >> i would suggest to you they do. >> not before he lands.
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if he gets on a plane and safely returns to the united states i could care less what they do. he is on the way. >> they should be judged for the totality of their conduct and prior duty not one bad night. >> judge jeanine: no question these guys are pros. they take a bul bullet for thes in their charge. these are the same secret service agency that let the salahis into the white house party. these are the same group of bozos. are they kidding that the point? are they doing their job? are they focused. >> that is why the agency has to take drastic measures. >> there is cause. >> one of the agents says he is going to sue. what is he going to sue for? >> wrongful termination. suspend him for minute. >> judge jeanine: one of the prostitutes says she is going to sue the secret service. >> she should sue.
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she got the short end of the stick. >> come on. >> judge jeanine: one of the problems is now if the hooker is going to sue the secret service this thing is never going away, guys. >> judge jeanine: colombian authorities are now investigating whether or not any of the girls were under age. >> the age of consent is 14. >> judge jeanine: in co-loom bia. >> the age of consent is 14. i doubt it was younger than that. let's not make something criminal that is not a crime. >> judge jeanine: this is just beginning. there is questions now by senator grassley about the connections to the white house. up next, to cut or not to cut. can you sue because your mom had you, sir, sum sized and did it victim of the long island serial killer lose her life because of ads on the internet? w
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york.
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now, back to "justice" with judge jeanine. >> judge jeanine: we're back with courts gone wild, my favorite section. joey jack so jackson and richae with us. a new way to fight high gas prices. a woman is suing for $5 million. her car was reopposed and she wants her gas back. the repo man, guys, gets sued. and the question is can she wen if the repo man comes in and takes your car anded you have gas in the tank. is the gas your property? >> of course, it is your property. listen, i don't know what is more rich, is the car more or the gas more nowadays? it is outrageous. you offset it. split the difference and call it a day. >> are you entitled to be reimbursed for the gas in the car? >> she should be. h her attorney analo gazed it
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to the fuzzy dice. >> what if i left my jacket in the car. can i have that back? >> banks aren't nice. they he don't like us. >> and he don't blame her. are from my mother watches the repo man or whatever that show is, she loves it. but the truth is there is a lot of money in those cars. she is suing as a class action on behalf of all of the people in michigan. >> they better just give her her call back and call it a day and forget the class action. they could lose money. >> i think it is genius. >> it is absolutely brilliant. a college grad is suing her alma mater because of her roommate's sex life. lindsay blankmier says that stonehill college which is a self-described "selective catholic college" did nothing to help her. she says that her roommate is having sex right next to her and having live sex chats with her boyfriend. she goes to the college she says to them and goes to the r.a. and then goes and moves up
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the ladder and they don't do anything and she sues under the fair housing act. does she have a cause of action? >> when i was a resident assistant i wish i had stories as juicy as these. they didn't come to me for things like this. >> judge jeanine: well, you didn't go to a catholic college. >> she has attention deficit disorder. it was focused on that. people do things, other things happen, it is assumption of risk. >> does she have a lawsuit. >> she is depressed pause her roommate was having all the sex and she wasn't having any. she has a lawsuit. >> judge jeanine: the fact that she did suffer from depression and attention deficit but was increased by this. she did everything she could and under the fair housing act isn't she entitled to some kind of -- >> she doesn't have a disability. there is no severe and per vasive conduct on the part of the university. >> get another room.
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>> judge jeanine: they could have given her a single room. they didn't. >> she would have to prove an agency relationship between the roommate having the sex and the college. >> but the college is the one that rents out the dorms. >> they are not involved in severe and per vasive and unwanted discrimination against her. it is the roommate that is doing it. >> do you agree with that, joey? >> i agree with rich. and this is the one sided story for now. wait until we hear the other side of the story. i'm sure it is a lot different than she leads it to be in her complaint. >> why is it so bad that they are having sex right next to her. >> behave yourself. >> judge jeanine: a woman hires a cleaning service. the cleaning service lets the dog out and the dug gets kit by a car but comes back into the house and dies under the table. the woman sues the cleaning service and says you allowed my dog to die and you know what the cleaning service answer is.
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your dog growled at us to we left her to die. >> it was a $65,000 judgment that she got. here is the problem. not only were they negligentle in allowing the dog to go out and get hit. they didn't call h her and let her know what happened and get help for the dog. she deserves more than 60 todd for the cleaning service behavior. >> i think that is outrageous. richard, let me ask you this. wouldn't you normally sue for the cost of the dog. for her and by the way i'm an animal lover, i would sue for a million dollars. the fact that she won $65,000 it is apparently some landmark case is that for a dog and the emotional distress that you suffer for losing it. >> we don't think it is enough. she suffered emotional distress. they left the dog under the table and they walked out. they couldn't pick up the phone and call her or a vet? it is troubling. >> another issue, though, judge,. >> do yaw agree with me? >> i do. we get so emotionally attached
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to our animals. i have a cat, i have to follow this thing around the house all day. it's school you have a cat? >> i do. >> do you have a pet. >> i do. a pitbull. we love her. >> judge jeanine: it as landmark case, very interesting. anyway, let's move on. bodybuilding champion donates his sperm and moves on with his life and then gets sued for child support for twins. pay intereste to pea interest on the deposit that he made years ago. all right, richard. the woman comes back. they were dating. she moves to another date and she calls h him up years later and says i would like your sperm and he gives it to her but he moves on he got married. she sues. what should the court do? >> they were dating and they were very close and they went together. this is not an anonymous situation. the spirit of the slaw to protect anonymous donors and recipients. he decided he didn't want to be
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with her any more. he was dating another at the same time and a third woman that he married within the year. this is about ronnie coleman deciding he doesn't want to be with this woman, he wants to be with somebody else. if you look at the pleadings he claimed he he can't read, he has reading problems. he graduated from grand blanc. >> can we protect him, judge? let me protect this man. he donated the sperm. as a result shed that triplets and one died and they came to be twins and he moved on with his life and for donating sperm he gets sued and has to pay child support? a good thing the court of appeals said no. he was paying support, the court of appeals overturned it. this is outrageous. >> the court of said he has to pay and he paid it. but then the higher court said you don't have to pay. what do you think the message is from the higher court on
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this kind of thing? >> there is a statute anded it speaks to donors donating sperm and as a result of donating sperm they want the connection to be severed so there is no issues in the future as to cause of actions or people coming back to -- >> because they knew each other that is different. >> the spirit of that law is about anonymity and not having someone trying to find who -- >> that is the problem with this case. >> judge jeanine: for our last case. prison for kidnapping there is a defendant who ends up suing because he only recently realized he had a circumcision. his name is dean cochran. now, guys this is a real case. >> really? >> this is a real case. the guy is in prison in sioux city.
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does he have a lawsuit against the doctors that he says misled his mother? >> first, he is 28 years old. how did he just recently find out that -- >> because he has never been in a men's prison before. >> i question that. number two, his claim is lack of sexual prowess. he is in prison. those are my two problems. >> i have a lot more than two. i will be kind. i will be generous. what we do know is that he does not have an attorney to that allows me to believe that attorneys take cases that are meritorious and that they can prevail on. the fact that he doesn't speaks volumes as to the lack of merit for the case and the fact that it will be he dismissed. how does he know the distinction what it is to have activity with foreskin and without? case dismissed. goodbye. >> i will not say another word. thanks for being with us. >> thanks for having us. >> go to twitter. take on these cases and tag me
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at judge jeanine. up next, is there a link between the long island serial killer and online ads?
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>> judge jeanine: the rehe mains of 22-year-old megan waterman were found among many at the site now known as the dumping ground for the long island serial killer. megan was trafficked through the internet sites craigslist
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and backpage. megan's aunt is with us this evening. first of all, thank you so much for being with us and we are so sorry for your loss. >> thank you. and thank you for having me here. >> judge jeanine: let's start with the fact that you believe that your niece megan was the victim of sex trafficking. how did that come to pass? >> i guess they call that term romeo pimp came in i will be your boy friend. the first one abused her a lot and then the next one which was his friend said i will never treat you hike that, was nice to her for about a month, month and a half and then he started coercing here into prostituting as well. he put ads out with her so he prostituted her on backpage and then moved her to craigslist. >> judge jeanine: can is interesting. you use the term romeo pimp. that means they get involved with them emotionally and then start to pimp her out. >> and families. her little girl that she left
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behind called her pimp her boyfriend. her street name was vibe. she said vibe is mommy's boyfriend. sometimes he is mean, sometimes he is nice. he did these abusive things to my niece in front of her child and also abused her in kind of the way to keep her in line and make her do what he wanted her to do. >> judge jeanine: you mentioned craigslist and backpage. how do they factor into this? >> they facilitate this. while my niece was being gutted, dismembered by the serial killer they are making money off the ad that he called to contact her. >> judge jeanine: you know, so then your niece was advertised on craigslist and then backpage by the romeo pimp and they the pimp then brought her to meet the serial murderer. >> from maine and they took a bus here to new york and that happened every couple of weeks. and backpage was first, by the
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way. first they used backpage. so i know that backpage is saying now that craigslist shut down everyone is coming here. she was on their site first. >> judge jeanine: to backpage preceded craigslist on this. >> yes, yes. >> judge jeanine: and your niece, do you know if she had been brought to this individual more than once? >> i don't -- we don't know who the individual was. >> judge jeanine: all right. but she was is brought. >> judge jeanine: from maine to new york. >> more than one time. >> and her body was found on the beach. craigslist was pressured into taking down their ads but backpage still allows these kinds of ads. what do you think about that? >> craigslist were pressured to take down the american. they didn't take down the international. they don't care about human beings being trafficked. nobody overseas is making them do that. and backpage, all they care about it money, they don't care
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about the human factor. >> judge jeanine: are you surprised that given the connection between backpage and craigslist has taken down in the states but is still running internationally are you surprised that the places are not closed down and not being forced to close down? >> yes, i'm very surprised there aren't any laws protecting these women and these children. i'm very surprised by that. >> judge jeanine: and megan has a daughter and you are raising here. >> my mother and i are raising her. >> judge jeanine: how old is she? >> she is five. >> judge jeanine: thank you very much for being here this evening. god bless you. >> thank you. >> judge jeanine: it is not just women, hundreds of thousands of children are sold into slavery. many through one particular website which makes millions of dollars from these operations.
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>> judge jeanine: sex trafficking is a huge problem in this country. an estimated 300,000 children are trafficked each year. much of that business is done online through ads placed by pimps on websites like backpage .com. these websites are making millions of dollars. take a look at how they do it. putting up an ad only takes a few clicks and it can be done by any one including someone interested in trafficking young women. here is how it goes. you go to the web site and you click on the adult section, escorts in particular. then after that you just hit post an ad. and from there they have posting rules. it says that you are not supposed to post anything that exploits a minor and that you agree that nothing you are posting constitutes human trafficking and they say any posting that exploits a minor or trafficking will be subject
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to criminal prosecution and reported to the cyber tip hotline and then you create the ad. the cost of an ad is $15. but you can upgrade and pay more money for multiple days. pay more money for a more prominent position all of which means they can make even more money off of this operation. liz mcdougal is general counsel for village voice media which runs backpage .com and the son of norman mailer who founded the victim lajeuness village v. 48 attorneys general have asked you to take down your adult services ad seaing they facilitate the sex trafficking of young children? why haven't you? >> we agree human trafficking is a social atrocity that has to be addressed but to fight
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human trafficking online you have to be online. as an online service provider we are one of the most effective tools that law enforcement has to fight these heinous crimes because there are digital foot prints that criminals use and leave whenever they use the internet. that is a fact that this is a broad scale problem recognized by congressman blackburn and we fully agree the industry has to take the lead in fighting this problem and that is what we are doing. >> judge jeanine: down, do you buy that? >> no, the problem is you can't have your cake and eat it, too. you can't tell me that you are are trying to stop horrific crimes against children when you are lining your pockets with money from the pimps that are selling them. >> we don't want to make a single profit from exploiting anybody, man, woman or a child. let's remember the attorneys general asked craigslist to
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impose a free after they allowed the ads for free because the financial trail is one of the most valuable and reliable trails for law enforcement to find the perpetrators. the money that comes in from adult services is what we use to fund the moderation that we are doing and we are doing more than anybody else in the industry currently. let me say we can and we he will do more. >> judge jeanine: that is wonderful except you are making millions of dollars every year. as i understand it, it sounds like what you are saying is you are one of the most effective tools but what you have to explain to me is how your being the middle man between a pimp and a child is effectively fighting child sex trafficking. are you kidding? you are making a millions of dollars a year. >> the point is that the internet exists and regrettably child sexual exploitation exists. if we had a silver bullet to eradicate child sexual
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exploitation we would do it in a heart beat. >> judge jeanine: i don't believe you? >> let me finish and maybe you will believe me. >> judge jeanine: you're dancing. >> i'm not dancing because -- >> judge jeanine: take down the ads and we will not be able to find these guys. how many people have you reported to law enforcement to the cyber tip hot line? give me one that has been prosecuted? can you give me any numbers. >> if you told me in advance you wanted numbers i would give you more precise -- >> if i could finish we report over 400 tips per month using a standard of 21 well over the age of majority so we can be sure we are not missing any. >> judge jeanine: how many have been prosecute. >> we reported dozens that have not just been prosecuted, we have rescued over two dozen
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children. because of reports made we rescued over two dozen children. >> judge jeanine: does that mean you went and got them or paid somebody a few bucks. >> the point it you are going to drive, excuse me, judge pirro. >> judge jeanine: shut her mike down. your father founded the victim lajeunesse voice. village voice, how would he feel about the fact that backpage .com is the facilitator between the ads for trafficking children and connecting the two of them? >> my father would be appalled by what is going on with this. the fact is when started this paper it was there to be the people's paper. it was supposed to protect those who are abuse and could now have a forum to hold people accountable. for the village voice to be rationalizing this process. they are not doing enough. >> judge jeanine: then i want to thank you both for being with us this evening. and that is it for us tonight, folks.
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thanks for joining us. please e-mail us your comments "justice" at fox news .com. see you next week.
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