[Senate Hearing 119-315]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




                                                        S. Hrg. 119-315

                        PROTECTING OUR CHILDREN
                  ONLINE AGAINST THE EVOLVING OFFENDER

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               before the

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________


                            DECEMBER 9, 2025

                               __________


                          Serial No. J-119-52

                               __________


         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary






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                        www.judiciary.senate.gov
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                               ______
                                 

                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE

62-972                    WASHINGTON : 2026











                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                  CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa, Chairman

LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina    RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois,       
JOHN CORNYN, Texas                       Ranking Member
MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah                 SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island
TED CRUZ, Texas                      AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota
JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri                CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware
THOM TILLIS, North Carolina          RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut
JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana              MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii
MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee          CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey
ERIC SCHMITT, Missouri               ALEX PADILLA, California
KATIE BOYD BRITT, Alabama            PETER WELCH, Vermont
ASHLEY MOODY, Florida                ADAM B. SCHIFF, California

             Kolan Davis, Chief Counsel and Staff Director
         Joe Zogby, Democratic Chief Counsel and Staff Director










                            C O N T E N T S

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Grassley, Hon. Charles E.........................................     1
Durbin, Hon. Richard J...........................................     2

                               WITNESSES

Coffren, Lauren..................................................     8
    Prepared statement...........................................    31
Smolar, Jessica Lieber...........................................     6
    Prepared statement...........................................    51
Woods, Tamia.....................................................     5
    Prepared statement...........................................    53

                                APPENDIX

Items submitted for the record...................................    59










 
                        PROTECTING OUR CHILDREN
                  ONLINE AGAINST THE EVOLVING OFFENDER

                              ----------                              


                       TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2025

                              United States Senate,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:18 a.m., in 
Room 216, Hart Senate Office Building, Hon. Charles E. 
Grassley, Chairman of the Committee, presiding.
    Present: Senators Grassley [presiding], Graham, Cornyn, 
Hawley, Tillis, Blackburn, Britt, Moody, Durbin, Whitehouse, 
Klobuchar, Blumenthal, Hirono, Booker and Padilla.

        OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, 
             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF IOWA

    Chairman Grassley. Good morning, everybody.
    Today's hearing will examine what we call the emerging 
issues involving child online exploitation and the evolving 
offenders that seem to keep up to date on everything they can 
do to harm these young people. As technology changes and 
evolves, so do bad actors who use it to commit all types of 
crime. This is especially true in the child exploitation space. 
Gone are the days of ordering child exploitation material from 
overseas by mail. Now, child exploitation material is readily 
available online through various file-sharing platforms, 
through direct access to victims and domestic and international 
websites, and groups such as ``764''.
    Not only has technology changed, but today's online child 
offenders have changed as well. Today's online offender is more 
violent, more cruel, and more shocking than offenders just 20 
years ago. Offenders will manipulate, pressure, harass, and 
seek to control vulnerable children through extortion, 
blackmail, and shame. That conduct is commonly called 
sextortion. Offenders extort children for money or other things 
of value, or to manipulate them to commit harmful acts, to live 
stream, or record for others to watch.
    Today's offenders target younger children, many between the 
ages of 12 and 15, but some as young as 5 and 6, and maybe in 
some cases even younger. Offenders exploit multiple victims, 
causing more pain, causing humiliation and degradation to more 
people than ever before. They leave families of victims in 
insufferable pain and despair and cause a lifetime of recovery 
for many victims. Offenders feel emboldened to carry out their 
illegal conduct on our children because of access to private, 
hidden, online groups of like-minded people who share their 
sick desire to harm and exploit children.
    Sadly, offenders often operate under the cover of secrecy, 
making it even more difficult for law enforcement to identify 
them and bring them to justice. They often focus on vulnerable 
populations, such as those with mental health issues, lack of 
strong family or community ties, or other insecurities. 
Offenders will often disguise their true identity and pretend 
to be of similar age or background to their targeted victims in 
order to gain their trust. Offenders seek an online 
relationship with a child to exploit them for money, for sexual 
images, or to cause them to commit harm to themselves or to 
others.
    When offenders are eventually caught by law enforcement, 
prosecutors charge them with the most appropriate charges. 
However, there are no specific laws to address the terrible and 
shocking acts conducted by gore groups such as 764 and those 
engaged in sextortion.
    Two of the three bills that I introduced today will address 
these offenders. My first bill called Ending Coercion of 
Children and Harm Online, ECCHO for short, will address the 
horrific conduct that these gore groups do when they target 
children to commit violent acts like injuries to animals, self-
harm, and suicide. The second bill, called the Stop Sextortion 
Act, will hold these people who engage in online threatening 
acts of sextortion toward children accountable under the same 
law which addresses child sexual abuse material.
    Finally, when offenders are convicted of child sex abuse 
material offenses, less than one-third of the cases are 
sentenced within the current sentencing guidelines. Simply put 
then, the current sentencing guidelines are outdated and 
disregarded by most Federal judges because they do not 
adequately account for common offenders' characteristics that 
differentiate the bad from the worst online child exploiters. 
That bill has the title Sentencing Accountability for 
Exploitation, or the SAFE Act. It will require the Sentencing 
Commission to draft and revise the child sexual abuse material 
guidelines to include many of the aggravating factors we now 
see with today's online offenders. Those factors include 
encryption or other masking techniques were used or whether the 
offender was part of an online group to commit the offense, 
just to name a few. This bill will provide the much-needed 
guidance to the Sentencing Commission of our Government to 
overhaul the child sexual abuse material guidelines in a 
meaningful way to distinguish offender behavior.
    Now to Senator Durbin, Ranking Member.

         OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. RICHARD J. DURBIN, 
           A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

    Senator Durbin. Thanks, Mr. Chairman, and glad you are 
holding this hearing. And the fact that you have held this 
hearing and we had similar hearings when I Chaired the 
Committee I think is a message to all who are following us this 
is bipartisan, and it should be, start to finish.
    And we have a real task ahead of us. As Senator Grassley 
describes the legislation that is pending, I can recall the 
hearing for Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court, and one 
of the big issues brought up over and over again were the use 
of sentencing guidelines for abuses in this area that were 
written so long ago they didn't reflect the reality of the 
extortion which is going on today.
    And judges of the most conservative political stripe and 
the most liberal political stripe were reaching the same 
conclusion, that those guidelines just don't work anymore. They 
were counting offenses by the number of images. Well, that 
might have made sense when we were talking about 8X10 
photographs. It makes no sense when we are talking about 
technology of today and the videos that are involved. So we 
have got to update that and show the reality of the situation, 
and I think that is something we can all work on together.
    I learned something else. We would get unanimous votes in 
this Committee, if you remember, right? Republicans and 
Democrats would both be voting for the legislation that we 
think would change things for the better. And then it 
disappeared, disappeared between the Committee and the floor. 
And the same is happening now. We make great speeches here. We 
sometimes enact great laws in the Committee.
    But when it comes to taking them to the floor, to enact 
them on the floor and eventually send them over to the House, 
we drop them all completely. That has got to end. There is no 
reason for that. To invite these witnesses, as compelling as 
they are, and then to ignore their testimony when it comes to 
executing on the floor is unacceptable. Let's kind of decide at 
this point that if you are going to have the nerve to give a 
speech here on the subject, you ought to have the nerve to do 
it on the floor and do it repeatedly. So let's have a sense of 
urgency in what we are setting out to do.
    I work with Senator Hawley, in fact, many others, too--
survivors, law enforcement, advocates--to put together the STOP 
CSAM Act. The bill takes a comprehensive approach to stemming 
the tide of online child exploitation. I have repeatedly said 
we must bring the same sense of urgency to protecting kids in 
the virtual world that we do in the real world.
    But the landscape of online child exploitation is changing 
dramatically by the day. Two trends in particular demand our 
attention, financially motivated sextortion and sadistic online 
exploitation. What once was rare is now epidemic. In 2021, 
NCMEC, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 
received a total of 139 cyber tips involving financially 
motivated sextortion, 2021, 139 tips. In the first 6 months of 
this year alone, they have already received 23,000 of these 
tips, plus. Offenders often operated in coordinated criminal 
networks overseas, targeting teenagers in the United States, 
and we will hear specific cases about that. They coerce them 
into sending a sexually explicit image and then threaten to 
release it unless money is paid.
    For too many families, this crime ends in tragedy. NCMEC 
has identified more than 36 young men in the United States who 
have died by suicide after being sextorted. We are joined by 
one of those families. I said hello to Mrs. Woods and thanked 
her for being here. But she lost her son, James, at 17 years 
old when he was targeted. She is here in a courageous capacity, 
and thank you for being here, transforming unbearable loss into 
call for action. That photograph of your son in his track 
outfit in front of the hurdles tells the story. I am sure he 
was a wonderful young man and you cherish his memory by being 
here today.
    Another disturbing trend is a rise in offenders who do not 
just view or trade images of abuse but direct real-time 
torture, encourage escalating violence, groom children to 
produce CSAM and self-harm videos. NCMEC has identified this 
behavior as sadistic online exploitation. The threat is 
accelerating. The numbers tell the story.
    This is an unacceptable systemic failure, and what are we 
going to do about it? We are going to have a hearing. We are 
going to call witnesses. We are going to lament the situation. 
What are we going to do about it? Is there going to be a bill 
in the new session to say that we are so overwhelmed with 
legislation on the floor we don't have time is a joke. Watch 
the Senate and tell me that we don't have the time to take this 
up. We have more than enough time to do it right.
    This Committee has a history of tackling the tough issues. 
Mr. Chairman, it is up to you and me and those Senators on both 
sides of the aisle to make it happen. Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you.
    Now, I am going to introduce our witnesses. We will hear 
from them, and then we will have questions. Ms. Tamia Woods and 
her husband Tim are parents of James Woods. James was a good 
student, year-round track and field athlete. At 17, James 
tragically took his own life November 2022 after being extorted 
by someone online for $300. James had sent the online abuser a 
compromising video of himself and was threatened with being 
exposed by the person if James didn't pay the $300 ransom.
    Mrs. Woods and her husband are the founders of the Do It 
for James Foundation. The mission of the foundation is to 
create awareness for kids and their families to prevent similar 
tragedies. We thank you, Mrs. Woods, for being here to share a 
heartbreaking story.
    Jessica Smolar is a former assistant U.S. attorney in the 
Western District of Pennsylvania. With 30 years' experience 
there, Ms. Smolar handled a variety of criminal cases, 
including cases involving child sexual abuse material, child 
exploitation, and cybercrime and national security. Ms. Smolar 
has received several Department of Justice and law enforcement 
awards for her work as an assistant U.S. attorney, including 
2022 Attorney General's Distinguished Service Award and the 
United States Attorney's Victim's Advocate Award for dedication 
and extraordinary contributions in the service of victims.
    Lauren Coffren is executive director of the Exploited 
Children's Division of the National Center for Missing and 
Exploited Children. She has been employed for over 20 years 
with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 
serving in various roles. Ms. Coffren oversees the Exploited 
Children's Division, which operates several programs, including 
the CyberTipline and Child Victim Identification Program. In 
addition, Ms. Coffren started the CSAM Survivors Services 
Program, working to improve the responses to survivors of child 
sexual abuse material.
    We welcome all of you here today, and it is our tradition 
to ask you to stand and swear to this oath.
    [Witnesses are sworn in.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you all very much. They all 
affirmatively responded.
    Now, we will start with Mrs. Woods. And don't forget to 
push the button on your----
    Ms. Woods. Yes, sir.
    Chairman Grassley. Proceed.

             STATEMENT OF TAMIA WOODS, CO-FOUNDER, 
          DO IT FOR JAMES FOUNDATION, STREETSBORO, OH

    Ms. Woods. Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member Durbin, and 
Committee Members, thank you for allowing me to speak today. My 
name is Tamia Woods, and I speak on the behalf of myself, my 
husband, Tim, and for our beautiful child, James Timothy Woods, 
forever age 17. I stand before you as a mother whose only child 
was taken by something so preventable, so cruel, and so ignored 
that it should shake every person in this room to their core.
    One of the messages sent to my son, ``I am more determined 
to rot your life than to make it a waste, a trash can, a shame, 
a dishonor, a hell, a real disaster, a hell on earth, and I 
remind you that I am heartless. I have no pity to rot a life as 
well as yours.'' This was one of almost 200 messages sent to my 
child over the span of 19\1/2\ hours between November 18 and 
19, 2022.
    James was the victim of financial sextortion, and though he 
died by suicide, let me be clear, he was murdered.
    James was a beautiful young man with a soul like gold and a 
smile that would light up any room. He would give you the shirt 
off his back. He could figure out anything. He was witty, 
thoughtful, kind, and loved chess.
    James was a high school senior. He wanted to major in pre-
law, and he was months away from breaking a 40-year-old school 
record in the 110 hurdles. Every time I speak of him, I smile 
because I am grateful God let me borrow his angel for 17\1/2\ 
years, but every day I am angry. A woman online befriended 
James on Instagram. She created what every predator knows how 
to build, a safe space. She made him feel comfortable, seen, 
liked. She groomed him. Then she asked if he wanted to see her 
unclothed and exposed herself. She asked him to do the same, 
and like any innocent 17-year-old boy who liked a girl and saw 
no danger, he did. That moment she created became their weapon.
    The attackers came, not one person, but what we believe, at 
least four. For nearly 20 hours, they attacked, threatened, 
terrorized, dismantled my child. Every time he tried to fight 
back and ask, why are you doing this to me, please leave me 
alone, they escalated, sending his image to friends and family, 
telling him he would be labeled a pedophile, telling him his 
future was over, telling him you should just kill yourself. And 
in those last moments, my son, who had everything to live for, 
felt like he had no other choice.
    A day that started with laughter, college friends, and joy 
ended with my husband finding our child unalive in our home in 
the middle of the day. No parent should ever enter a room and 
see that. I stand here because 19\1/2\ hours is not a short 
time in the digital world. It is a lifetime. It is enough time 
for someone to intervene, to flag an account, to cancel 
messages, to report this behavior. Yet no one stepped in, no 
system protecting him, no platform stopped it.
    So my husband and I created the Do It For James Foundation, 
and since the day that James has died, we dedicated our lives 
to speaking out, teaching, and fighting so that no other parent 
feels the pain that sits in our heart every single moment of 
every single day.
    Large corporations continue to argue for rights while 
refusing to take responsibility. We are asking you to put laws 
in place that give us multiple avenues to protect our kids 
because parental controls alone are not enough. Click here to 
opt out at age 13 is not protection. Predators thrive when the 
risk is low but reward is high. Criminals are making billions 
by exploiting our children because we tell our parents, monitor 
your kids better, while platforms refuse to monitor predators 
at all. How dare we lay blame on the victims while criminals 
walk free.
    Today, instead of checking on James' homework, instead of 
mailing him care packages to his college dorm, instead of 
cheering him on for track meets, I hold a picture, a picture of 
my son's photos that he never had a chance to see because that 
is all I have left, 17\1/2\ memories--17\1/2\ years of memories 
but no new ones.
    So I am begging you to stand with us, stand up, do 
something, help us save lives. We may not be able to save them 
all, but with the right laws, with accountability, with real 
consequences, we can make it harder for predators to win. We 
can make it harder for another parent to bury their child. 
Please do it for James. Do it for every child whose name we 
never got a chance to learn.
    Thank you. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Woods appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley [off mic]. God bless you. Thank you. Mrs. 
Smolar.

STATEMENT OF JESSICA LIEBER SMOLAR, ESQ., FORMER ASSISTANT U.S. 
   ATTORNEY, WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, PITTSBURGH, PA

    Ms. Smolar. Good morning, Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member 
Durbin, and Members of the Committee. Thank you for inviting me 
to testify here today. My name is Jessica Lieber Smolar, and I 
had the honor of serving as an assistant United States attorney 
in the Western District of Pennsylvania for three decades. 
During my career as a Federal prosecutor, I personally handled 
and oversaw hundreds of child exploitation and human 
trafficking investigations and prosecutions. When I first began 
prosecuting these offenses, investigations often centered 
around physical evidence and traditional mail-based exchanges.
    Over time, I witnessed a monumental shift in the types of 
child sexual abuse material, also referred to as CSAM, that 
offenders collected, as well as their methods of collection. 
This shift was not limited to the sheer volume and disturbing 
nature of the material. It also encompassed the tools offenders 
used to acquire, share, and conceal CSAM.
    Today, every child exploitation case involves the criminal 
use of cellular phones and computers. Offenders use these tools 
to stockpile massive quantities of sexually explicit videos and 
images of children, frequently targeting prepubescent children. 
Violent depictions of infants and toddlers being sexually 
exploited were routinely collected by the defendants whom I 
prosecuted.
    Offenders also increasingly used advanced technology and 
platforms for CSAM trafficking. They congregate in online 
communities and darknet forums solely devoted to child 
exploitation. They can now more easily conceal their crimes and 
their identities through encryption, VPNs, the darknet, and 
remote erasure software.
    The law has not kept pace with the rapid technological 
advances or evolving sex offender behavior. United States 
Sentencing Guidelines, Section 2G2.2, was designed when CSAM 
was distributed by mail, so it adds offense enhancements for 
actions common to all CSAM offenders today, like using a 
computer, possessing images of prepubescent minors, or amassing 
many images. The guideline enhancements apply broadly and no 
longer reflect varying levels of offender culpability or risk. 
Legislation is needed to amend the CSAM guidelines.
    The Sentencing Commission's June 2021 report found that 
Section 2G2 is outdated, leading judges to exercise their 
discretion to reduce sentences for child sexual offenders. The 
commission's data for Fiscal Year 2019 showed that less than 30 
percent of non-production child pornography offenders were 
sentenced within the recommended guidelines. This statistic 
reflects broad judicial dissatisfaction and leads to 
inconsistent sentencing nationwide. As Federal prosecutors, my 
colleagues and I often considered plea offers to binding 
sentences to avoid the application of the insufficient 
sentencing guidelines and sentencing disparities.
    There are also emerging crimes that are not fully covered 
by existing criminal statutes, such as those committed by 
members of the violent online network 764. The 764 members 
befriend children sometimes as young as 9 years old through 
popular online platforms and then coerce them into escalating 
sexual, self-destructive, and violent behavior, compelling 
victims to document sex acts, harm siblings and family pets, 
cut and mutilate themselves, or attempt suicide.
    There are no Federal statutes that adequately criminalize 
the coercive conduct of 764 and similar groups. As Federal 
prosecutors, we focused on proving more conventional statutory 
violations, like CSAM possession or production, or distribution 
of obscenity to minors to effectively prosecute these horrific 
crimes.
    Similarly, law enforcement agencies have reported an 
alarming increase in sextortion cases, children being coerced 
into sending sexually explicit images online, like James that 
we just heard about. Perpetrators engage victims in flirtatious 
conversations on social media and gaming platforms where they 
feel comfortable to obtain explicit images. The offenders then 
use the sexually compromising images to blackmail victims for 
more images, or in the case of financial extortion, for money 
or gift cards. They threaten to widely publicize the image to 
the child's friends and family. Children suffer severe 
emotional distress as a result of such sexual extortion, and 
too many have engaged in self-harm or suicide. As Federal 
prosecutors, we found it challenging to effectively charge 
sextortion and financial sextortion. Existing statutes do not 
adequately address the full scope or severe harm of these 
crimes.
    Increasing public understanding of the evolving and 
destructive risk to children online is crucial. Legislation is 
needed to strengthen the legal framework and better support 
those responsible for protecting children.
    I welcome your questions. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Smolar appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley [off mic]. Thank you, Ms. Smolar.
    Now, Ms. Coffren.

  STATEMENT OF LAUREN COFFREN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, EXPLOITED 
  CHILDREN DIVISION, NATIONAL CENTER FOR MISSING & EXPLOITED 
                    CHILDREN, ALEXANDRIA, VA

    Ms. Coffren. Good morning, Chairman Grassley, Ranking 
Member Durbin, and Members of the Committee. My name is Lauren 
Coffren, and I am the executive director of the Exploited 
Children Division at the National Center for Missing and 
Exploited Children, or NCMEC. NCMEC is a nonprofit organization 
created in 1984 by child advocates to help find missing 
children, reduce child exploitation, and prevent child 
victimization, and I'm honored to be here today in order to 
share NCMEC's perspective on evolving online child sexual 
exploitation crimes.
    NCMEC is congressionally designated to operate 16 programs 
related to missing and exploited children's issues. One of 
NCMEC's core programs is the CyberTipline, the centralized 
mechanism for the public and online platforms to report 
incidents of child sexual exploitation. Through its work with 
the CyberTipline, NCMEC has seen children sexually exploited 
online for decades.
    Today, we are confronting alarming rates of emerging crimes 
where sexually exploiting a child is not the final objective 
but a means of achieving a larger goal of financial gain or 
incitement of chaos. NCMEC shares this Committee's deep concern 
that offenders will continue to evolve and escalate their 
exploitation of children online unless we act now to hold 
online platforms accountable when they facilitate a child's 
exploitation to ensure safety by design is incorporated into 
development of new technology.
    Today, I'd like to share NCMEC's insights about three 
especially alarming new trends on how children are being 
sexually exploited online. One of the newest trends I'd like to 
highlight is related to online enticement where reports grew by 
192 percent last year. Specifically, we continue to see a rise 
in financial sextortion, where an offender blackmails a child 
for money or gift cards in exchange for not distributing nude 
or sexual images of the child. Unlike offenders who are 
normally sexually motivated, these offenders are driven by 
financial gain.
    As we heard from Tamia Woods just a few moments ago, this 
crime targets teenage boys, and too often, the outcomes are 
tragic. High-performing boys with large social circles like 
James are becoming victims of coerced suicide as a result of 
this crime. Offenders use incessant aggressive threats of 
public exposure, shame, arrest, as if the target--if the 
targeted boys fail to comply with the escalating demands for 
money.
    The second trend NCMEC has identified in the past year is 
sadistic online exploitation. This trend has led to the most 
egregious exploitation that NCMEC has ever seen. Violent online 
offenders work in groups, targeting and manipulating vulnerable 
children, some as young as 12 years old, on popular online 
platforms and gaming sites to create and share sexually 
explicit content, to cut themselves, carving offenders' names 
into their bodies, to harm, to kill animals, to physically or 
sexually abuse other children, including their younger 
siblings, and even to commit suicide. These offenders lure 
children into online relationships, then terrorize them with 
rapid-fire threats to kill the child's family or disclose 
personal information if they don't comply with their demands. 
Reports of these brutal victimizations grew by 200 percent last 
year and continue rising.
    The third trend I'd like to note today is the use of 
generative artificial intelligence, or GAI, to sexually exploit 
children. NCMEC believes we are just beginning to see the true 
impact of GAI on child sexual exploitation. Offenders use GAI 
to create new sexually abusive content, to alter known child 
sexual abuse images, to nudify images of children, and to chat 
about how to entice and exploit children. In the first half of 
this year, NCMEC received over 440,000 reports connected to 
GAI, and we expect to have over 1 million reports by the end of 
this year.
    These three trends tragically affirm that online offenders 
are using evolving technology to exploit children in new and 
more extreme ways. This exploitation will not stop until 
Congress passes laws that close legal gaps, incentivizes 
companies to adopt safety by design, and provide essential 
tools to better protect children. NCMEC appreciates that 
Congress acted decisively to pass laws like the REPORT Act and 
the TAKE IT DOWN Act, and supporting newly introduced bills 
like STOP CSAM Act, ENFORCE Act, the Safe Cloud Storage Act, 
and the GUARD Act. We need to ensure that these pending bills 
are passed, and our laws to protect children keep pace with the 
technological advances.
    Thank you for allowing NCMEC to share our insights with you 
today. We look forward to continuing our work with this 
Committee to share information, to craft legislative solutions, 
and to keep children safer online.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Coffren appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Before I start my line of questions, I 
would like to enter into the record these [off mic] children 
have committed suicide and were also people that were severely 
harmed because of sextortion in online groups like 764. Is 
there any objection?
    [No response.]
    Chairman Grassley. I hear none, so that will be done.
    [The information appears as a submission for the record.]
    Mrs. Woods, I am going to start with you. Recently, there 
have been several news reports of increased sextortion cases 
and how quickly bad actors can manipulate children into sending 
sexual images and then engage in a campaign to threaten toward 
the children, placing them in impossible situations. Many of 
those children think that suicide is the answer. You have 
promoted changes in various State laws to make sextortion 
illegal after the tragedy of your son. From a parent's point of 
view, why is it important to make these sextortion illegal 
under Federal law?
    Ms. Woods. Well, a number of things. First of all, we have 
to look at sextortion like what it is. It is our children are 
being sexually exploited. They are a sexually assaulted victim. 
And most people in general never speak out. Less than 30 
percent actually speak out about being victimized. We have to 
make sure that not only our children see that we have their 
backs on these issues, but we have to make sure that they know 
that there are resources and laws that back them up as well. 
Our kids need to know that.
    And James never spoke to anyone. He had a wonderful, 
wonderful community that had his back, but yet he never spoke 
up. And so it's laws like this that would back our children and 
influence them to speak up and let them know that they're being 
victimized.
    And people need to be held accountable on top of that. They 
need to know that they're--they shouldn't be comfortable with 
doing the things that they're doing. Right now, they're 
comfortable, and you see more and more people being victimized 
because of that.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you.
    Ms. Coffren, you have been with the center for 20 years in 
a variety of positions involving online child safety. Describe 
the recent trends involving these violent gore groups like 764 
and how they operate and target children online.
    Ms. Coffren. Thank you so much for your question. These 
sadistic online exploitation, violent online groups, they go by 
various names here that we've heard them referenced as, but 
most often, they're motivated purely by chaos. Their goal is to 
be able to take the--weaponizing our Nation's children to be 
able to create terror, to be able to show just how harmful they 
can be. And they do that oftentimes by seeking out to target 
the most vulnerable, children who may already be demonstrating 
mental health issues, who may be indicating that they have 
thoughts of self-harm, perhaps eating disorders.
    Those children may be looking for solace, for comfort, for 
advice in online platforms and spaces where they can find a 
community. And unfortunately, these offenders are infiltrating 
and targeting those communities to be able to create 
relationships with those children and then to be able to push 
boundaries, to test them, to see if they can hold up a sign 
with their name on it, maybe hold up a sign with a signal or a 
logo. And by doing this, they're testing those boundaries to 
see how far they can push that child. Can they get them to put 
their name on their body? Can they get them to carve the name 
into the body?
    And unfortunately, that incrementalization can often lead 
to really tragic results. Each step along the way can be 
weaponized against that child. And what we often see is a 
swarming kind of effect where multiple offenders will go after 
the same child at one point in time.
    The imagery, the videos, the chats that we are seeing and 
reading are the most graphic that I have ever seen in my 20-
year history. We are hearing from law enforcement out in the 
field who have said that this is the most disturbing content as 
well. So you're talking about seasoned professionals who are 
really meeting their match with the new and evolving types of 
exploitation that we are seeing.
    Chairman Grassley. Yes. Ms. Smolar, I am going to forget my 
lead in. I want to get to the question because my time is 
running out. Could you share why we need Federal legislation 
specifically to address these gore groups and other individuals 
who engage in sextortion? Share your experiences with us in 
working with investigations involving these groups.
    Ms. Smolar. Thank you, Senator.
    Senator Durbin. Your microphone.
    Ms. Smolar. I apologize.
    Congress has already provided so many important tools to 
those of us in the field like mandatory minimums for crimes 
like receipt and distribution of child pornography or 
production. We need those tools in order to properly hold these 
type of defendants accountable. Right now, when we charge 
crimes like sextortion or 764, across the country, we all 
charge them differently. Sometimes we charge them as online 
threats. Sometimes if we are lucky, we find CSAM and we charge 
them that way. There's no consistency that allows us to 
properly address the specific harm that these actors are 
committing.
    In addition, a lot of these actors are overseas, and it 
would be extremely helpful for those of us who want to 
extradite people here to the United States to hold them 
accountable to have a felony statute that specifically speaks 
to this harm.
    I'm familiar with a case where a defendant was in Germany, 
and Germany had a coercion to harm statute, but we did not. 
They were able to charge that 764 offender there. We could not 
charge him here. That's--that shouldn't happen. We should be 
able to charge these offenders, hold them accountable, and 
deter them from continuing to hurt our children.
    Chairman Grassley. Thanks, all three of you. Senator 
Durbin.
    Senator Durbin. Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
    Ms. Smolar, we have considered the issue you raised in your 
testimony so many times, so many different ways because it can 
be characterized by some that if you don't follow the strict 
sentencing guidelines, that you are soft on crime, that you 
really don't care enough to impose the adequate sentence. What 
you tell us is less than 30 percent of non-production child 
pornography offenders were sentenced within the recommended 
guidelines, reflecting broad judicial satisfaction, 70 percent, 
and inconsistent sentencing nationwide.
    You say, ``As Federal prosecutors, my colleagues and I 
often considered plea offers to binding sentences to avoid the 
application of the insufficient sentencing guidelines and 
disparities.'' Tell me a little more. What are you talking 
about here?
    Ms. Smolar. Especially in cases where you're talking about, 
for example, possession of CSAM where there's no mandatory 
minimum sentence, oftentimes, my colleagues and I--and not just 
in the Western District of Pennsylvania, but nationwide--would 
see sentences that we felt were insufficient. When you're 
talking about possession of CSAM, you are talking about a real 
child being harmed in the most serious way possible. And I 
personally believe that sentences for people who are collecting 
that type of material should be significant in order to protect 
victims and to deter others from collecting it. So it's 
important that the sentencing guidelines are useful to judges.
    Senator Durbin. I understand part of the problem was a 
numeric issue.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Senator Durbin. Initially, so many instances of objects 
that a person had led to a certain sentencing guideline, but 
now that they are being collected in video form or in different 
technology form----
    Ms. Smolar. Right.
    Senator Durbin [continuing]. The counting numbers really 
doesn't tell the story. Is that your impression?
    Ms. Smolar. It doesn't. All we were--we're talking about 
math. It's not about math. These are about real offenders and 
culpability and risk. For example, what you're referring to is 
one image--one video is 75 images under the sentencing 
guidelines. You start adding up videos to try to get to 600 
images, and you get a 5-point enhancement. Use of a computer is 
a 2-point enhancement. Pre-pubescent children, 2-point 
enhancement. That doesn't really tell the story of these 
offenders and how dangerous they potentially are.
    So legislation will be needed to address, are they on 
specific darknet forums talking about how to abuse children? 
Are they using multiple platforms to try to get to children or 
to share this material? Are they--how severe are the images and 
how many victims are in them? That is not necessarily 
encompassed by the sentencing guidelines right now, so 
legislation is needed to address offender risk.
    Senator Durbin. Ms. Coffren, I was interested with the 
Chairman's question that you responded that sometimes the 
object of this exploitation is chaos. It is not financial. Tell 
me a little more on that. What is the value of this perpetrator 
wasting all of these hours leading to the self-harm of a young 
person or worse?
    Ms. Coffren. Right. What we are--thank you so much for that 
question, Senator. What we are seeing is these loosely 
coordinated groups that you've been referencing like 764 and 
some of these other that we're referencing as sadistic online 
are fueled and motivated by being able to have clout notoriety 
for the impact of their actions. This means it extends much 
more beyond just CSAM. It is how can they use children to harm 
themselves or the others and then harm the community as well. 
So we also see children being coerced into planning school 
shootings or threatening their communities as well that are 
also offshoots of this type of work.
    So child sexual exploitation has actually been hijacked as 
one methodology for a larger way of trying to be able to use 
children against the community and for shock and for awe. The 
more that we talk about this, unfortunately, we feed their 
desire for that notoriety for the impact that they're having, 
and these sometimes called nihilistic violent groups as well is 
really fueled by something that we are just not that familiar 
with operating with, which is pure chaos.
    Senator Durbin. Ms. Woods, how long do you think your son 
was being exploited before he finally lost his life?
    Ms. Woods. It was 19\1/2\ hours. He received 200 messages 
in 19\1/2\ hours with what we believe four different people 
attacking him at one time.
    Senator Durbin. Do you have any idea where the source of 
these attacks goes?
    Ms. Woods. His murderers are in Ivory Coast. And we of 
course don't have--we--we're told we'll never receive justice 
for James.
    Senator Durbin. I am so sorry for that.
    Ms. Woods. Thank you.
    Senator Durbin. Thank you for being here, all three of you.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Senator Durbin. Senator 
Graham.
    Senator Graham. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for yet another 
very emotional hearing about a topic that we constantly talk 
about and do little about.
    I am perplexed. I can understand having differences on 
healthcare and taxes and you name it, we have a different--all 
of us agree on this pretty much. What is going on in the Senate 
and the House where no matter who is in charge, nothing really 
happens? I said this when I was Chairman.
    So here we are in 2025. This 764 group--how do you say your 
last name?
    Ms. Smolar. Smolar.
    Senator Graham. So I want to acknowledge the FBI and the 
District of Columbia U.S. Attorney's Office brought a case 
against two people. Are you all familiar with that? That is a 
good start, right? Kash Patel is focused on this group. Should 
they be domestic terrorists under U.S. law?
    Ms. Smolar. It's a good question, Senator. I can tell you 
even within the FBI, there are cross-programmatic focuses on 
this group because----
    Senator Graham. I mean, do you think they should be 
domestic terrorists? If these people are not domestic 
terrorists, who would be?
    Ms. Smolar. A lot of----
    Senator Graham. You all both just told us that they are 
trying to bring down society by harming our children and 
exploiting them. Why shouldn't they be domestic terrorists?
    Ms. Smolar. I do know that they have been charged in at 
least one case as domestic terrorists.
    Senator Graham. Well, I would like to put a list. Ms. 
Coffren, are you okay with making this group domestic 
terrorists?
    Ms. Coffren. I think when we're looking at how individuals 
are weaponizing our children, a lot more research needs to be 
done.
    Senator Graham. Not really. No, not really.
    Ms. Coffren. Certainly----
    Senator Graham. No. This phone, do you think it is a 
dangerous product for children, Ms. Woods?
    [Holds up cell phone.]
    Ms. Woods. Yes, I do. And to answer----
    Senator Graham. What is more dangerous, smoking or this?
    Ms. Woods. Oh, the phone, of course.
    Senator Graham. Do you agree with that?
    Ms. Smolar. I do.
    Senator Graham. Do you agree with that?
    Ms. Coffren. Without a doubt.
    Senator Graham. Okay. Well, I am not urging people to 
smoke. I don't think kids should smoke.
    Why don't we label this a dangerous product and at least 
inform consumers better? Do you agree that is a good idea?
    Ms. Woods. I agree.
    Senator Graham. Okay. There are so many good ideas, and I 
want to compliment this Committee, who is awfully divided, for 
coming up with one good idea after another from, you know, 
Senator Hawley, Blackburn, all of us, Cornyn, everybody is 
working together. Nobody has been better on this than Senator 
Durbin.
    So February is the 30th anniversary of Section 230. Are you 
familiar with Section 230? Ms. Woods, are you familiar with it?
    Ms. Woods. Yes, sir.
    Senator Graham. You really can't sue anybody that was 
involved in helping these people murder your son, can you?
    Ms. Woods. No.
    Senator Graham. Do you all agree that it is time to revisit 
Section 230?
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Do you believe it is time to open the 
courtrooms to people who have been harmed by this behavior?
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Do you agree that Section 230 gives a legal 
pass on the most bizarre, harmful behavior in the country, and 
30 years later, we should revisit Section 230?
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Okay. Me too. So what are we going to do? 
Here is what I am going to do. I am going to write a letter to 
Senator Thune and Senator Schumer, both good men, and in 
February, we should have like a social media week where we take 
all these good ideas and we dedicate a week or 2 weeks to doing 
nothing on the floor but this, to try to take these laws that 
everybody coming up with and put them in a big package and put 
us all on record as are we all talk, or are we willing to act? 
Do you all like that idea?
    Ms. Woods. I sure do.
    Ms. Coffren. Great idea.
    Senator Graham. We will have like a couple of months to let 
the country know, tune in in February, we are going to do some 
things to protect your children and see where the Senate is on 
this. Would you support that idea?
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Okay, good. So I would like my colleagues 
to think creatively what should be on that list, but come 
February on the 30th anniversary of Section 230, I would like 
to have an effort on the floor of the Senate to deal with the 
dark side of Section 230. So I think that would be very, very 
helpful.
    Now, the cost of doing business, do you agree with me the 
more likely you are to go to jail, a lot of people avoid that 
area?
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Do you agree with me that the more likely 
you are to get sued if you put out a bad product, the more 
likely you are to try to change that product?
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Do you all agree that we have, as a Nation, 
miserably failed our children, that we have hearings and we 
talk and we have done very little to protect them as of this 
date?
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Ms. Smolar. Yes.
    Ms. Coffren. Yes.
    Senator Graham. That is a damning indictment of all of us. 
Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. Senator Hirono.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Thank you to our panel for testifying.
    And Ms. Woods, our hearts go out to you for the tragic loss 
of your son.
    As I look at this issue, and as mentioned by my colleagues, 
that we have been wrestling with child exploitation, which is 
only getting worse. It is not getting any better. It is getting 
worse and acknowledged by all of us the sense of frustration 
because this is actually an issue that receives bipartisan 
focus and a desire on our part to do more than what we have 
done so far. And I am looking at this issue by way of focusing 
on, I think there is a prevention aspect to it. There is a 
prosecution aspect to it. And as Ms. Smolar says, you know, the 
laws have not kept up with all of the kinds of ways that these 
exploiters coming up to evade prosecution, so there is a 
prosecution part.
    And then I would say there is a civil remedies part, which 
is really looking at Section 230 and removing the kind of total 
immunity that Section 230 provides.
    So if I look at the prevention side, what can we do to 
prevent the kind of tragedy that overtook James?
    Ms. Woods. So it's a number of things. I will say from the 
Do It For James Foundation, over the last 3 years, we averaged 
less than $10,000 in grants. We're not getting approved to even 
do the prevention. It's all on the backs--my husband and I have 
given hundreds of thousands of dollars each year to make sure 
that we do so. That's one.
    Two, we have to make this a demand to talk about it in 
schools. My husband and I have talked to well over 200,000 
children. And because we made them aware of something they knew 
about but didn't know quite it was illegal, nor did they know 
what it was called, it led to four arrests and two being 
investigated and hundreds of kids being saved by dying by 
suicide.
    So we have to make sure that not only are you all educated, 
not only are law enforcement agents educated, but also our 
children need to be included in this education so that we know 
what to do if we were ever presented by these murderers out 
there, that we can let the kids know that they need to call 
NCMEC and make sure that they have references that they need 
and resources.
    Senator Hirono. I couldn't agree with you more because it 
is the children who are being targeted for exploitation. And if 
our children are not aware that if this happens to them and 
they are targeted, that there are places to go, that they ought 
to inform because I would think that if you are a child and you 
are the target, you don't want to talk about it. You are trying 
to hide it, whatever is happening.
    So would the three of you agree that we need to do a lot 
better to get the communities and the children much more able 
to call out what is happening to them? And what is it that we 
need to do? Do we provide grants to the Department of Justice 
and make sure that both DOJ and Homeland Security pay attention 
to these horrible crimes that are happening? And rather than 
focusing so much of their resources on immigration, that they 
ought to--DOJ and Homeless Security should have the resources 
to go after this kind of exploitation.
    But I just wanted to get the sense from all three of you, 
you know, what specifically should we be doing on the 
prevention side of the scale? And then for Ms. Smolar to tell 
us what we can do to provide law enforcement the better tools 
to prosecute these crimes. So do you want to share some of 
your--grants to organizations, yes. Any other ideas on the 
prevention side?
    Ms. Smolar. Sorry. Thank you, Senator. In addition--we 
can't prosecute our way out of this. That is clear. We do need 
the tools to be able to properly prosecute these crimes, but 
education is key. I can't tell you how many people I told I was 
coming here today to talk about 764 and they look at me 
blankly. They don't know what it is. We need more public 
education of children, teachers, coaches, clergy, people who 
interact with children who could maybe look at their arms, see 
if there are strange cuts, see if they look different, if 
they're acting differently.
    PSAs are important. FBI has issued a number of PSAs on this 
group, but I don't even think that's enough. We need more 
public education in the schools, in the places where children 
congregate so that they are not afraid to come forward and 
report these crimes.
    Senator Hirono. Ms. Coffren.
    Ms. Coffren. Prevention is also detection. So what we need 
to be able to see is companies able to detect some of these 
keywords that are happening in chats, flagging for that, making 
the kinds of reports, allowing law enforcement to investigate 
this before those offenders are able to go on, create new 
profiles, and blackmail, sextort, or coerce other children. So 
I think taking a look, too, as well as to updating some of the 
guidelines around what it takes to report. Are technology 
companies required to be transparent about what it is that 
they're doing behind the scenes as well? All of those efforts 
can actually help to save lives if we know what steps are being 
taken behind the scenes.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Senator Hirono.
    Now, Senator Cornyn.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you all for being here. This is the 
third hearing we have had on this topic, and I am appreciative 
of the Chairman and for scheduling it. But it strikes me we 
need to actually do something, do something more.
    The problem is, Ms. Smolar, you mentioned all the different 
sources of this information, CSAM and others, including the 
dark web. But as you just said, we can't prosecute ourselves 
out of this. Senator Graham said, well, maybe we ought to 
create an opportunity to sue. But could you just briefly 
describe the challenges, including international sources of 
this information and jurisdictional and other legal constraints 
that make that impractical?
    Ms. Smolar. There are a lot of challenges in handling these 
cases. The darknet, VPNs, the smarter, more sophisticated 
offenders are able to hide their identities through encryption 
and through VPNs. So it is a huge challenge for law enforcement 
to identify the perpetrators here.
    In addition, resources is always a problem. International 
offenders is an issue. You know, we had international offenders 
in a lot of the cybercrime cases that I handled, and we would 
get together with law enforcement in many, many countries and 
discuss these matters. That doesn't always happen in this area, 
and it's something that should because these crimes are 
international in scope. These offenders are coming from outside 
the U.S. a lot of----
    Senator Cornyn. Well, Ms. Woods, you said your son's 
murderer was from Africa?
    Ms. Woods. Yes, Ivory Coast. And we don't have an 
extradition treaty. They stated that they'll never hand over 
any of their natural born citizens.
    Senator Cornyn. Well, it seems to me like we are trying to 
play catchup, but the technology and the bad guys are outpacing 
us at almost every turn. And, of course, I know Senator Hawley 
has a bill to deal with chatbots, but just to folks who are not 
familiar with that name, these are--this is technology that 
simulates human interaction, so somebody actually thinks that 
they are talking, perhaps, to a human being. And we can only 
imagine the uses to which that technology could be put to 
damage our children or cause them to hurt themselves or take 
their lives.
    So Australia has passed a law that says that children under 
the age of 16 can't get access to social media accounts. What 
do you think about that, Ms. Woods?
    Ms. Woods. Well, I would like to say that we----
    Senator Cornyn. I know your son was 17, but----
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Senator Cornyn [continuing]. Do you think it would help?
    Ms. Woods. Oh, yes, yes. I think that we--first of all, Tim 
and I did an article for Australia in 2023 when our son passed, 
and they didn't have the actual law in place. Since then, they 
made sure that they had a law. Even though our son was 17 years 
of age, we have to look at the--we allowed him to be online 
before that age. And what if we would have had these laws in 
place? It would have still made a difference. And even though 
we lost our only child, that doesn't mean that I'm not going to 
stand here and stand up for anybody else's kids----
    Senator Cornyn. Of course.
    Ms. Woods [continuing]. Because you all's kids are my 
kids----
    Senator Cornyn. Of course.
    Ms. Woods [continuing]. So I'm going to make sure that 
things get done.
    Senator Cornyn. Well, God bless you for doing that.
    Ms. Woods. Thank you.
    Senator Cornyn. Ms. Coffren, NCMEC has been the leader in 
this area when it comes to child exploitation. Do you think 
that Congress should consider a law banning the use of social 
media for children 16 and younger?
    Ms. Coffren. Certainly, that is one tool that would be kind 
of in the arsenal of being able to address this. I think we 
have to look at the different types of age restrictions, age 
assurances, age gatings. There's an awful lot of complexity 
that goes around into that, and so we need to be able to look 
at ways of holding the social media companies and online 
platforms responsible, as well as the device or the app stores, 
as well as ensuring that there's better parental controls. We 
see----
    Senator Cornyn. Well, they have got technology that I just 
barely struggle to understand. And certainly, they would be in 
the best position, would they not, Ms. Smolar, to know what is 
happening on their own platforms?
    Ms. Smolar. Correct. Although I will state that in a lot of 
these crimes, the offenders will find a child, for example, on 
Snapchat or Instagram, but then they will move them to a 
different application like Signal where we have no control over 
that.
    Senator Cornyn. Ms. Coffren, if Senator Grassley will allow 
me, you mentioned something that intrigued me when you said 
some of these platforms--some of the information or some of 
these individuals are inciting to chaos. What did you mean by 
that?
    Ms. Coffren. So they're motivated purely by a goal, not 
sexual exploitation of a child. They are not the traditional, 
you know, pedophile that we might think about. Their goal is to 
cause disruption in our communities, to have us holding 
hearings today talking about just how difficult it is to think 
about our children being harmed for shock and for awe.
    And so when that is the new type of offender, we need new 
types of tools. Looking at the types of signals that exist on 
the social media platforms, the chats, how people are operating 
is going to be really essential to try to stay current to these 
kind of evolving statuses of new offenders and new motivations.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you. Senator Blackburn.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    And as I spoke with each of the three of you earlier, I am 
just so grateful for your work, for your commitment, and your 
willingness to talk about this. And it has been so interesting 
to me as someone who has worked to protect children and to 
really focus on what was happening with technology and in this 
virtual space. And it is astounding to me that there are laws 
in the physical space that protect children. You cannot 
endanger a child. You can't sell them alcohol. You can't sell 
them tobacco. You cannot expose them to pornography. If you 
were a liquor store and you were selling to kids, they would 
padlock your store and take away your license.
    But in the virtual space, our children are vulnerable 24/7, 
365. And I think during the COVID pandemic, many parents 
realized what was happening with the phone and their child. 
That is why you are seeing bell to bell, no phones in schools. 
That is why you are seeing other laws take place.
    And Ms. Woods, as I said to you, I am just heartbroken for 
you. As a mother and a grandmother and having teenage 
grandsons, this is a fear, an absolute fear that parents have 
because the sextortion schemes and the targeting of young boys, 
it's like something that happens within a matter of hours and 
days.
    And I appreciated your comment about your son being 
murdered. He was targeted, and then he was literally cyber 
bullied to death.
    And this is why we need to pass the Kids Online Safety Act. 
This is why my REPORT Act--and Ms. Coffren, you mentioned 
that--was signed into law. And more needs to be done to protect 
children in the virtual space.
    Ms. Woods, I want to come to you and just give you a minute 
to talk about why these platforms should be required to force 
safety by design and to put that burden on these social media 
platforms to root out these bad actors.
    Ms. Woods. Yes, so there is a number of things that I would 
like to say with that. First of all, social media and different 
applications actually, I say, save face. So they say that they 
have parental controls, but did anyone know that on Google, if 
your child is 12 years old and once they turn 13, Google 
directly messages your child and tells them that they no longer 
need parental control and they can click here to opt out. 
That's what I mean by parental controls are not enough. You--we 
are put at a--and made to have a responsibility as parents to 
protect our children in every way, and yet there's other 
obstacles involved that intervene in us parenting our child in 
the most appropriate way.
    The other thing too is that by social media actually making 
sure that we have laws in place like the social media act, 
parental act, is making sure that our--we can monitor our kids 
better, but when there is acronyms like--when my son said, 
``I'm going to kill myself,'' it would have alerted me. It 
would have alerted any parent that had lost their children's 
lives. And it would have told me something's wrong. I wish that 
even today, 3 years later, that I would have known half of the 
things that I would have had or even be put in a position where 
I could have taught my son to come to us in certain manners. He 
came to us for whatever, if there was a hole in his sack, 
whatever he needed. But yet our social media platforms took the 
time to not say anything.
    Senator Blackburn. So what advice would you give to parents 
right now, sitting there today, parents of teens?
    Ms. Woods. My advice that I would give to parents is to 
talk to your children about sextortion and any other child 
exploitation. I knew nothing about it. Every parent that lives 
here today that has a child has a privilege I did not have. It 
is free. Let's talk about it. Let's educate our children. And 
what I would say to children is be vulnerable one more time, 
one more time. Yes, you may not have made the best decision. We 
are all that way. We make mistakes. You matter enough through 
your mistakes. I don't care what it is. You speak up. You say 
something. You stand up for yourself because we can make sure 
that we have your back no matter what. I would give anything to 
have my son back. And if they have to learn, if they have to 
see James' face, if they have to see my tears, I'm going to 
make sure that it happens. If it means that I can save your 
grandchildren, I'm going to do it.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. Senator Blackburn, thank you. Senator 
Whitehouse.
    Senator Whitehouse. Thanks very much, Chairman. Thanks very 
much for doing this hearing. I think it is very useful. I want 
to welcome and thank all of the witnesses.
    Ms. Woods, I am sorry that this has become so personal for 
you. There is really not much that is worse than what you have 
been through, and I really admire that you have come here to 
talk about it because it can't be easy, and I am grateful to 
you.
    And Ms. Smolar, as a former United States attorney, I am 
always impressed by the assistant United States attorney who 
did the real work, and I am delighted that you are here.
    And Ms. Coffren, thank you for your wonderful advocacy.
    I want to pick up a little bit on where I understand 
Senator Graham was with respect to getting rid of Section 230. 
I strongly believe that Section 230 has long outlived its use, 
and it is now a real vessel for evil that needs to come to an 
end. The laws that Section 230 protects these big platforms 
from are very often laws that go back to the common law of 
England that we inherited when this country was initially 
founded. I mean, these are long-lasting, well-tested, important 
legal constraints that have met the test of time, not by the 
year or by the decade, but by the century. And yet because of 
this crazy Section 230, these ancient and highly respected 
doctrines just don't reach these people. And it really makes no 
sense that if your're an internet platform, you get treated one 
way. You do the exact same thing, and you are a publisher, you 
get treated a completely different way.
    And so I think that the time has come. I think it is pretty 
widely known that there were a core four of us ready to proceed 
with a bipartisan bill, two and two. And a lot of work, 
important work, good work, valuable work, has gone into making 
sure that other Members of the Committee and other Members of 
the Senate have a chance to look at that and decide whether 
they want to join or not. And I am at the stage right now where 
I think we just need to go. We just need to file that bill and 
start moving, and everybody else can make up their decision 
whether they want to join or not. But continuing to delay while 
people deliberate whether to join or not, you know, everybody 
has had plenty of time. I think this is fish-or-cut-bait time. 
So I hope very much that we can proceed. I hope it is more than 
core four. I hope it is core 8 or core 10 or core 12 or perhaps 
even unanimous on the Committee.
    But it really makes no sense. And stories like Ms. Woods 
and like the story of the Rhode Island family that was affected 
show how alone and stranded people are when they don't have the 
chance to even get justice. You know, it is bad enough to have 
to live through the tragedy. It is bad enough to have to bear 
for the rest of your life that loss. But to be told by a law of 
Congress you can't get justice because of the platform, not 
because the law is wrong, not because the rule is wrong, not 
because this is anything new, simply because the wrong type of 
entity created this harm.
    And, you know, I look at what was done with the lawsuit by 
the Connecticut families whose children were killed in grade 
school and the accountability of a loudmouth for having whipped 
up the false theory that that whole thing was a fake, was 
staged, that they were props, that their children weren't 
actually killed, you know, you are never going to make that get 
better for those parents, but at least they know that the world 
listened. They at least know that they got the chance in an 
honest courtroom, and they at least know that they got a 
victory out of it. They got a win, and the person responsible 
for that really vile misconduct had to face an enormous, 
enormous civil judgment that he is still being pursued over. 
And that is not nothing.
    So that is my statement, and let's hope that we can 
finally, finally get this 230 thing moving in this Committee. 
Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you. Now, Senator Hawley.
    Senator Hawley. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Thank 
you to the witnesses for being here.
    And Ms. Woods, I want to start with you. And I just want to 
say to you and to your husband, thank you for your courage and 
your advocacy. And thank you for sharing with us just a little 
piece of the life of your beautiful son. I am a father of three 
myself, two boys and a little girl, and my oldest boy is now a 
teenager. He just turned 13. And so as I look out at the 
landscape that he is coming into in social media, I am 
terrified by it.
    But I just know, parent to parent, your son's life is 
changing the world. He is changing the world. And you giving 
him voice, as you and your husband are doing, that is the only 
thing that is going to make change here in Washington, DC, I 
can tell you, because who currently has a hammer hold on the 
U.S. Senate are the big technology companies who spend endless 
amounts of money to control the Senate. And let's just be 
honest, we may as well put a sign on the floor of the Senate 
that says ``property of Big Tech'' because nothing moves across 
that floor, in my observation, nothing that they don't want. 
They spend money to control and to buy access and influence.
    And the only thing that will break that, I believe, is the 
truth of experiences like yours and the voice of your sons to 
confront lawmakers with the fact that unless we act and do 
something, unless we stand up to these corporate interests, 
more and more children like yours will lose their lives, will 
lose their futures, will lose their hope. So I just want to say 
thank you because you are the tip of the spear. I mean, you are 
what is making the change.
    I noticed in your testimony, your written testimony--I was 
reading it just a second ago--I noticed you pointed out that, 
as to your boy, no system protected him, and no platform 
stopped it. And then you pointed out Meta, for example, has 
features that flag all inappropriate language that we use when 
making posts, and all that happens almost instantaneously. But 
as you said a moment ago, nobody flagged anything for you. None 
of those systems were deployed to help your son. And I think 
the reality of that is is that Meta didn't care about deploying 
systems to help your son because it didn't make them any money. 
If it makes them money, they are happy to do it.
    Ms. Woods. Right.
    Senator Hawley. But it didn't make any money for them to 
help your son, and so they just stood by.
    And I just want to point out something that Meta is doing 
right now. Let's take a look at the Meta chatbot policy. Not 
only is Meta not protecting kids like your boy, Meta actually 
is looking to make money by targeting children who are your 
son's age and younger. This is a document that was leaked by a 
Meta whistleblower that is their policies when it comes to 
chatbots with children. And if you look here, the first line, 
it says, ``It is acceptable''--this is Meta's own words. ``It 
is acceptable to engage a child in conversations that are 
romantic or sensual.'' So here Meta is with a deliberate policy 
to target children, teenagers your boy's age and younger, for 
the purposes of exploiting them. Why? So they can make money.
    [Poster is displayed.]
    What are the consequences of that? Well, let's look at 
another young man who is just a few years younger than your 
boy. Sewell Setzer was his name. Sewell was 14. He is a 
handsome kid. This was a great kid. I have gotten to know his 
parents. And much like your son, Ms. Woods, I mean, this is 
just a fantastic kid. He also was the victim of sextortion. The 
difference with your son was is that his sextortion was pursued 
by a chatbot. It wasn't even human. You know, your son's 
killers are beyond the reach. They are in a different country. 
They are hiding behind all of the various laws and treaties 
and, of course, the platforms themselves.
    This young man's killer, an AI chatbot, can't be held 
accountable because they have got special protections that no 
other corporation in the country or in the world gets. The 
chatbot that engaged with young Sewell engaged him in sexting 
activities and then urged him to commit suicide, told him how 
to commit suicide, and tragically, he did it.
    And his parents, much like you now, are giving voice to 
him, to his legacy. But the true justice that will come for 
boys like Sewell, for young men like Sewell, for young men like 
your son, James, and for other young Americans out there is we 
have to be able to hold these technology companies accountable. 
And that is why I have introduced legislation that will prevent 
the AI companies from targeting minors with chatbots.
    [Poster is displayed.]
    It is time for this Committee to mark up this bill. Senator 
Britt is a cosponsor. Senator Blumenthal is a cosponsor. 
Senator Murphy is a cosponsor. My point is it is bipartisan. 
This Committee needs to mark that bill up, and we need to 
protect our kids from the profiteering of these corporations.
    And we need to do something else. This Committee passed 
unanimously, unanimously legislation that would allow the 
parents of victims of child sex abuse material, allow them to 
sue companies that put that child sex abuse material online, 
that host it, knowingly or recklessly. We passed it 
unanimously. It is languishing on the Senate floor, unanimously 
out of the Judiciary Committee months ago, and it is sitting on 
the floor of the Senate. Why? Because Big Tech fears it. They 
don't want it to move.
    I call now today on Senate leadership, which is controlled 
by my party, I call on them to put that bill on the floor. 
Listen to the testimony of Ms. Woods. Heed, heed the witness of 
her son. Heed the witness of Sewell Setzer. Listen to the young 
Americans whose lives have been lost and destroyed by 
predators. Put this bill on the floor. There is no excuse for 
further delay. No amount of money from Big Tech can ever 
sanction or make right our inability to act, our failure to do 
so.
    This Committee has acted. It is time for the Senate to act. 
And it would be a travesty, inexcusable for this Congress to 
close out this year without taking action to protect our 
children.
    Thank you again all for being here. Thank you, Ms. Woods, 
especially for you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Grassley. Senator Klobuchar.
    Senator Klobuchar. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
    I think that sentiment that Senator Hawley expressed that 
many of us feel about the bills that have come through the 
Committee and the work that we have done. We know that one bill 
that did pass that you noted, Ms. Coffren--thank you--was the 
TAKE IT DOWN Act that I authored with Senator Cruz, signed into 
law by President Trump. And as you know, that criminalizes the 
distribution of and threats to distribute nonconsensual 
intimate images, whether they are AI created or real.
    And I would also add, to echo some of my colleagues, 
particularly Senator Graham, that it is long past time to 
repeal Section 230. At the beginning of his efforts on that 
front, I had thought, well, no, maybe we can put in these rules 
in place and the tech companies will work with us, and that 
just hasn't happened. The opposite has happened. And as we 
approach this 30-year anniversary, maybe it is time to do a 
major assessment, which takes for any parent about 1 minute to 
realize the harm that has been caused by all of this.
    I would start with you, Ms. Woods. Thank you for your 
moving testimony. Can you talk about why even the threat of 
nonconsensual distribution of explicit images can be tragic, 
and why it is so vital that the law covers threats, as the TAKE 
IT DOWN Act does, as well as the reality?
    Ms. Woods. So it's a number of things. First of all, our 
children aren't just handing out the nudes. They are being 
coerced into providing them with--in regards to creating safe 
spaces and different things of that sort. Once the threat 
behind the nude comes, it's not just the nude being in 
existence. It's all of the threats behind it to where they're 
questioning what they're actually doing, and they're becoming 
desperate and willing to do whatever they can to get rid of 
that image. It is embarrassing to them.
    They--we tell kids all the time, if you put it on the 
internet, it won't go away. You--my son, in particular, was 
threatened. He was actually slated to be No. 1 in the State of 
Ohio in 110 hurdles, and they told him he would never run track 
again. They told him he would be labeled a pedophile because he 
was under 18, and they did have a nude photo of him. It becomes 
far more than the embarrassment of the actual picture but the 
actual torture that comes after the picture.
    And so by them being able to have TAKE IT DOWN as an 
option, it takes a weight off of them, and they are able to 
address all the other issues that come after it. But once we 
take that photo away, then we can battle everything else, and I 
think that helps them with that.
    Senator Klobuchar. Thank you. Thank you. As you know, Ms. 
Coffren, the TAKE IT DOWN Act gives victims not only their 
rights with regard to the people doing this, but the rights to 
demand that the social media platforms take these images down. 
I just wrote a piece today in The New York Times about AI and 
just how important it is to allow the States to keep doing 
their work while we are waiting on the leadership to bring up 
these bills for a vote.
    And I just believe that if you are not going to do anything 
federally, you better do something in the States, but also that 
you have got to hold these platforms liable. And could you talk 
about that?
    Ms. Coffren. Sure. The biggest threat that children face is 
not necessarily a criminal justice proceeding or the fear of 
what is going to be happening next. They just want their images 
down. So the threats that these bad actors are using against 
them is actually a recirculation of the same diatribes that 
we've been telling children for years in a prevention-type 
method. Don't do this action, or once it's out there, it's 
always out there, and you'll never get it back. That has to 
change.
    The TAKE IT DOWN Act changes that significantly by 
requiring that company to, within 48 hours, to be able to be 
removing that. Children need to know that they have that right 
for that content to come down so that the threat to 
recirculate, there's power taken away from that, and the child 
gets that power back. So that act is really revolutionary 
because historically what we've seen is companies taking, you 
know, a week, 2 weeks, sometimes not remove this at all.
    And the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children 
publishes our data about the companies that we send notices 
for, those companies that take it down, how long it takes them 
to take it down, and which companies choose not to. All that 
information is public, and we're trying to make sure that 
people can find that and are aware.
    Senator Klobuchar. That will be very, very helpful for all 
of us.
    Ms. Smolar, last short question here, a little related, but 
different topic. Senator Blackburn and I introduced the 
National Human Trafficking Data base Act to establish a 
National Human Trafficking Data base at the DOJ's Office for 
Victims of Crime to incentivize States to report data, a little 
bit along the lines of what we are hearing from Ms. Coffer on 
the TAKE IT DOWN bill. Can you talk about the data sharing in 
this area and how it can empower law enforcement to protect 
victims of human trafficking?
    Ms. Smolar. Yes, thank you, Senator. Human traffickers move 
victims across State lines all the time. That's how they make 
money. That is how they get more victims, by crossing State 
lines. So having nationwide data for law enforcement is 
invaluable to be able to talk to their colleagues in different 
States to get information on different traffickers, on victims. 
We try to rescue victims all the time. So without that data, 
you can't do that.
    Chairman Grassley. Senator Moody.
    Senator Moody. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for holding this 
hearing. I really appreciate it.
    Ms. Woods, Ms. Smolar, Ms. Coffer, I cannot thank you 
enough for being here today. My name is Ashley Moody. I became 
the first mom of a school kid ever on Florida's cabinet when I 
became the attorney general. My kid was still in school, and I 
debated how that was going to be a challenge. But ultimately, 
that challenge of balancing that and making that work became my 
biggest driver.
    And I am listening to you guys talk this morning and I am 
so grateful we have people like you willing to speak up and 
stay focused on this and not let up because I am telling you, 
the focus of large corporations on profit, that never lets up, 
and that is a fight all in and of itself. In fact, if you are a 
representative of a large tech platform or any of the 
associations or represent them in government affairs, could you 
please stand up?
    I just would like the Chairman to note, not one person is 
here for this testimony to listen to a mother who lost her only 
child. Thank you for showing up.
    Let me tell you when they do show up. In 2004 because 
Congress has done nothing. Oh, and you know what we did get 
passed this last year? It was because of a mom showed up in 
Congress and said, you have to get this done. Melania Trump 
said, show up, we have to pass this, the TAKE IT DOWN Act. We 
have got to pass it. And it did because a mom showed up and 
didn't let up.
    You have heard from multiple people say, Congress is doing 
nothing, that Congress is under the thumb of Big Tech because 
of financial influence. Lindsey Graham said, ``How is this 
happening? Maybe we do something next year.'' In fact, he said, 
``Nothing really happens.''
    So because Congress hasn't done anything, what have we had 
to do in the States? When I was the only mom on the Florida 
cabinet of a school-aged kid, we passed legislation in Florida. 
We were one of the very first States to protect kids online in 
2024. We protected young kids. We got it done. We were one of 
the first States. Now other States have had to follow suit 
because what happens in Congress? Nothing really happens. And 
we did it.
    But you know where these Big Tech companies show up? Their 
lawyers, their lobbyists, their government representatives, you 
know where they do show up? In court to fight us when we get 
something done. So when we passed it in Florida, and I showed 
up in court when they sued us to overturn the law and spent all 
of that money to sue when the State actually did something to 
stand up for their kids, we fought it. And I am proud to tell 
you--they showed up there to fight us. I am proud to tell you 
fighting hard, staying focused, staying persistent, showing up, 
we just got to win. We just got to win in court.
    In fact, I am proud to tell you that that piece of 
legislation got upheld in the 11th Circuit, and I think we are 
going to win it. It just goes to show you, you can do 
something. We looked at all those other States that had tried 
something that got blocked, and we took that into account when 
we passed our law, and now we are winning in court, and we are 
winning against those companies.
    And I am telling you what, I am watching you. You have 
blended everything from being a mother--I was a former Federal 
prosecutor. I have worked on human trafficking, constantly led 
the human trafficking group within our statewide Human 
Trafficking Council. I won't give up. And we are making 
progress in this fight. And now I just got appointed United 
States Senator, and we are going to do that here. I would like 
them to show up so I could fight them in person right here in 
this hearing because that is what has got to happen. If we are 
going to move anything, as Lindsey Graham says, if we are going 
to have anything really happen, we have got to have people 
speaking out.
    Thank you, ma'am, for making it known that this is 
happening under our noses. Stranger danger doesn't work 
anymore. Don't get into the van doesn't work anymore. It is 
happening in our kids' bedrooms, and we need to be vocal about 
it and say, if they are not your friend in real life, they 
can't be your friend online. Let's get that message out, and I 
appreciate you speaking out. And I hope other kids will not be 
embarrassed enough to share this with their friends, and we are 
going to work on that. Please come to my office so we can come 
up with a plan.
    I will say as a former Federal prosecutor, having a 
specific crime, outlawing and providing penalties for 
sextortion as a prosecutor, I know that would have been 
helpful. I appreciate you, Ms. Smolar. Have you seen a specific 
piece of legislation yet presented on outlining the elements of 
sextortion federally and what criminal penalty would be tied to 
that?
    Ms. Smolar. Other than proposed legislation----
    Senator Moody. Have you seen it filed, a piece of proposed 
legislation?
    Ms. Smolar. Not yet.
    Senator Moody. So we need to get that done.
    As a former Federal prosecutor, one to another, I will 
pledge to you we will make that happen. We also need to see 
that in the States. Do you think that would be helpful in the 
States?
    Ms. Smolar. Absolutely.
    Senator Moody. To see a specific sextortion crime defined 
with penalties attached in the States.
    Ms. Smolar. We work with States all the time on these 
cases----
    Senator Moody. As a former Florida attorney general, I 
created a cyber unit that worked specifically on these crimes 
that was incredibly helpful. They could go out, immediately 
recover evidence, begin work on investigations. Do you think 
having those specialty units in each State working with Federal 
partners would be helpful?
    Ms. Smolar. Absolutely. We do that all the time on these 
type of cases. In addition, a lot of the defendants, some--the 
perpetrators of some of these crimes are juveniles. And the 
States can prosecute juveniles and place juveniles. The Federal 
Government, it's much harder to do that.
    Senator Moody. Well, I have run out of time, but let me 
just again say thank you for not losing focus. Thank you for 
not losing passion on behalf of the kids of this Nation. They 
are going to be the ones that carry this message to their 
peers, and we need to continue pushing this message until it 
seeps into their vocabulary and this is commonplace for them to 
talk through these things.
    Thank you so much.
    Chairman Grassley. Senator Blumenthal.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you to 
all of you for being here today. And I know about the work that 
you have done and deeply respect your advocacy and your 
steadfastness on behalf of this cause, and also my colleagues 
for their passion and eloquence.
    But it is really pretty simple so far as Federal 
legislation is concerned. What we need is votes. You know, we 
need votes. We voted on the Kids Online Safety
    Act in the U.S. Senate and passed it by a margin of 91 to 3 
in the last session. And I would invite my colleagues to speak 
as passionately to the House leadership, which failed last 
session to give the Kids Online Safety Act a vote, not a vote. 
And this session, we have more than 60 cosponsors again in the 
U.S. Senate for the Kids Online Safety Act, and we undoubtedly 
will for other measures as well. But Big Tech is exercising its 
sway using its armies of lawyers and lobbyists.
    You have spoken powerfully today. My colleagues are on the 
right side of this issue. No one is in favor of child 
exploitation. But the fact is, Ms. Woods, as you wrote in your 
remarks about abuse and exploitation of your son, ``No system 
protected him, no platform stopped it.'' And I have met 
countless parents who feel the same way. The common factor in 
all their stories is the one gatekeeper that makes this abuse 
possible is, in fact, Big Tech. It is Meta and others who are 
allowing predators from around the world to use their platforms 
and make our kids prey to exploiters who are sometimes beyond 
our borders.
    So I guess I would invite you, Ms. Woods, and perhaps 
others, to talk directly to Speaker Johnson in the House of 
Representatives and tell him what you think he should do.
    Ms. Woods. You have my commitment on that.
    Senator Blumenthal. And perhaps others of you, witnesses, 
maybe you can tell me what impact or influence you can have in 
the House of Representatives. Have you been asked to testify at 
a hearing there?
    Ms. Smolar. I have not.
    Ms. Coffren. Certainly, we would love to work together to 
be able to get legislation passed. We see so many bills coming 
forward. We've seen the success of bills like the REPORT Act, 
like the TAKE IT DOWN Act, when they're nuanced, when they are 
focused, and when they can be introduced and passed very 
quickly, we have been able to see huge success in that. The 
REPORT Act is a great example. We saw increases in the amount 
and types of both child sex trafficking and online enticement 
that came. When we see those acts passed, we see progress, we 
see movement because we're holding companies accountable. If we 
don't, the rest of that reporting is voluntary. Those two 
reporting requirements were permitted to be received prior to 
them, and we certainly know that the prevalence didn't 
increase, just the responsibility to report.
    Senator Blumenthal. And I just want to close by saying, you 
know, we want a bill, we want a law. We don't just want 
speeches, but we want a bill that is effective. And right now, 
the House has weakened the Kids Online Safety Act bill, in 
effect decimating the duty of care, which prevents the kinds of 
abuses and holds the platforms accountable. It imposes a legal 
responsibility on Big Tech when it knows or should know about 
exactly the harms that you have come here to highlight. 
Decimating that duty of care is a disservice to all the parents 
and all the children who have become victims. And when you talk 
to Members of the House, I would urge you to insist on real 
protection for kids.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you. Senator Britt.
    Senator Britt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    I really appreciate you all being here today.
    Mrs. Woods, thank you for continuing to tell your story. 
Thank you for continuing to honor James, to make sure that we 
all learn as parents. I have said this quite frequently, as 
parents, we are all just doing the best we can. And I am 
grateful to my colleagues on both sides of the aisle who have 
come together, you know, not as Democrats or Republicans, but 
as concerned parents and grandparents, knowing that what we are 
facing right now is just beyond comprehension.
    As a mom, you know, you work so diligently to keep your 
children safe. And used to, you would get them home at night, 
and you would lock the doors and you would be able to kind of 
exhale. And now the enemy is inside our home. The people who 
want to do our children harm are in the palm of their hand. And 
if we can't do this as Congress, I mean, what are we here for? 
We are here to protect the most vulnerable. We are here to 
protect our greatest asset. And to me, that is the next 
generation. And so thank you for continuing to raise your voice 
and ensure that you push this body to do what it needs to.
    I would love to know from your perspective, you know, Mrs. 
Woods, in particular, in your written testimony, you said large 
corporations continue to argue for rights while refusing to 
actually take responsibility. I think that sums it up. Tell me 
what you want us to know as we continue to push these various 
pieces of legislation to the floor. I am a proud cosponsor of 
probably every single one of them. And to your point, we are 
looking for, you know, how do we get something through? You 
know, I think we heard Ms. Coffren say, the faster we get it 
done, the more narrowly tailored it is, the greater chance for 
success.
    But we know we need sweeping and overarching reform because 
Big Tech is always going to care about one thing, and that is 
their profits. And we know they know what they are doing. I 
mean, I think it was just said in Reuters that Big Tech has 
said--Meta said about $16 billion of their actual profits are 
really directly related to scams and to ads on banned goods. It 
is insane.
    So tell me from your perspective what you think we need to 
do. What are the simple fixes that would ultimately have been 
able to save your son's life?
    Ms. Woods. Well, one, I definitely think education and for 
us to pass the education law. I'm really, really big on 
education. That's----
    Senator Britt. Ms. Woods, I love that you said that because 
every school group that I get a chance to talk to, I say, hold 
on, here is my mom moment, and then we go directly into the 
things that you are talking about, so education, one.
    Ms. Woods. Education is No. 1 because the crime will never 
go away. Even if we set laws, we still have to educate our 
kids, our community to make sure that we know when this 
happens, we can fight against it.
    But two, I guess I'm coming from a mom in a naive stance. I 
don't understand why it's so hard to pass laws.
    Senator Britt. Amen.
    Ms. Woods. Why--the money will always be there. I mean, we 
have people wasting money every day on all kinds of things. Why 
can we not take our children off of the marketing factor, the 
prey? I just don't understand how hard that is to take--to 
protect our children. We won't have a world without them.
    Senator Britt. That is right. And thank you for what you 
are doing and pursuing the litigation and saying, no, we need 
age verification. We need these guardrails to protect our kids. 
And the fact that they continue to prey, and that is exactly 
what social media companies are doing, are preying on our 
children because they know having our kids on their platform is 
how they make more money. And they are unwilling to do the 
right thing and help us ensure that these kids are protected. 
And it is moms like you, it is people like you, that are 
stepping up and saying, we must do more, that will ultimately 
force people in this body, force people in the House to 
actually do the right thing, so thank you.
    Ms. Woods. Yes. You're very welcome.
    Senator Britt. It should be simple. And this is common 
sense.
    Ms. Woods. Yes.
    Senator Britt. I would love in my remaining minute here--I 
would love, Mrs. Coffren, for you to tell me--I know NCMEC 
works closely with many of the social media companies to 
address this issue, but you also face challenges. And what are 
some of the biggest challenges facing NCMEC both from 
technology and actually, you know, the criminality continuing 
to evolve?
    Ms. Coffren. Thank you. Thank you so much for that 
question. Both quality and volume are our biggest challenges. 
It is not enough for a company to make massive reports that are 
not of good quality that law enforcement can investigate, nor 
is it appropriate for companies to look the other way and say, 
if I don't have actual knowledge of what's going on, I'll make 
no reports.
    We need to be--have diligent, robust reporting, especially 
seen in the legislation for the STOP CSAM Act. That would 
require companies to provide detailed reporting that would make 
these reports far more actionable. Right now, a company is only 
required to report two fields, the date and time, as well as 
what type of thing they're reporting. But if they don't provide 
the valuable information to get that report to the appropriate 
law enforcement so they can investigate, the report is 
effectively worthless.
    Senator Britt. Thank you. And Mr. Chairman, if you will 
allow me, Ms. Smolar, do you have anything to add to that, 
anything you would like to make sure that we know or that you 
see in law?
    Ms. Smolar. We could use these statutes. We could use the 
additional tools to prosecute these crimes. Our law enforcement 
agencies could use the resources to have agents being able to 
spend the time.
    With regard to sextortion, for example, you now have two 
different types of offenders. You have the traditional offender 
seeking sexual content, but now you have financial scammers who 
used to go after the elderly or romance scams. Now, they're 
targeting our children, and that is a lot for our law 
enforcement agents to be able to put their arms around and to 
be able to handle.
    Senator Britt. Well, I commit to you to working on this, 
and let's get something done.
    Chairman Grassley. I thank all of you for your testimony 
today. Your work for today is done, but I am going to announce 
that usually Members submit questions for answer in writing. 
Our Members on this Committee have until December 16 at 5 p.m. 
to submit questions for answer in writing. And I would ask each 
of you to answer and return the questions to the Committees as 
soon as possible.
    Thank you very much. Meeting adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 12 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
    [Additional material submitted for the record follows.]


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                            A P P E N D I X

The following submissions are available at:

  https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-119shrg62972/pdf/CHRG-
    119shrg
    62972-add1.pdf


Submitted by Chairman Grassley:

 Grueser, Dana, letter............................................     2

 Montgomery, Brian and Courtney, letter...........................     7

 Tricia, Levi's Mother, letter....................................     4

 Zimmer, Amanda, letter...........................................     9

                                 [all]