ADVISORY/National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to Celebrate Twenty-Year Anniversary by Honoring Outstanding Law Enforcement.Assignment Desks ADVISORY...for Wednesday Wednesday: see week. (May 19) --(BUSINESS WIRE)
WHO: John Walsh, host of "America's Most Wanted: America Fights
Back," and Reve Walsh, co-founders of NCMEC
Bryan Cranston, actor who plays the father "Hal" on "Malcolm
in the Middle"
The Honorable Dennis DeConcini, Retired U.S. Senator,
Chairman, NCMEC Board of Directors, Master of Ceremonies
The Honorable Jim Lightfoot, Retired U.S. Congressman, Vice
Chair, NCMEC Board of Directors, Master of Ceremonies
Deborah Daniels, Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department
of Justice
Ernie Allen, NCMEC President and CEO
WHEN: 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., Wednesday, May 19, 2004
WHERE: Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room G-50, Washington, D.C.
WHY: NCMEC is committed to assisting law enforcement personnel in
finding missing children and preventing child sexual
exploitation. NCMEC works with federal, state, and local law
enforcement on a daily basis and recognizes their efforts
through a special annual awards ceremony held in partnership
with the Fraternal Order of Police and U.S. Department of
Justice's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention. Established in 1984, this year marks NCMEC's
twentieth anniversary, which will be recognized at the event
in addition to National Missing Children's Day, May 25.
WHAT: NCMEC's Courage Award will be presented to Elizabeth Smart,
whose March 2003 recovery brought joy to the nation and has
helped keep hope alive for other searching parents. Senator
Orrin Hatch (UT) will present the award.
National Missing Children's Awards will be presented to the
following.
Special Agent Colleen Maher of the U.S. Department of
Education's Office of Inspector General in Long Beach,
California, will be presented with an award on behalf of her
exceptional work in a fraud investigation that led to the
recovery of Aric Austin, who was abducted from Vancouver,
Washington, twenty years earlier by his noncustodial father
when he was six months old. Special Agent Maher will be
recognized along with Aric's mother. Aric is a Corporal in the
U.S. Army and currently stationed in Afghanistan.
Officer Elizabeth M. Butler of the Manlius Police Department
in Manlius, New York, and Sergeant Richard Woolley of the
Onondaga County Sheriff's Office in Syracuse, New York, will
be presented with awards for the swift recovery of a
16-year-old girl who was abducted and held captive by
68-year-old John Jamelske. Jamelske's arrest gained national
attention for having held six females in captivity spanning
14 years. Senator Hillary Clinton (NY) will recognize Officer
Butler and Sergeant Woolley.
Captain Lyndon Parrish of the Cass County Sheriff's Office in
Cassopolis, Michigan, Special Agent Roy Johnson of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in St. Joseph, Michigan, and Assistant
U.S. Attorney Joan E. Meyer in Grand Rapids, Michigan, will be
presented with awards for the successful recovery of Lindsey
Ryan, a 14-year-old girl who was abducted by 57-year-old Terry
Drake in Jones, Michigan. Congressman Fred Upton (MI) will
honor the officers for their collaboration, along with Lindsey
and her family.
National Exploited Children's Awards will be presented to the
following.
Detective James E. Smith of the Connecticut State Police in
Meriden, Connecticut, and Postal Inspector Martin Vega, Jr. of
the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Wallingford,
Connecticut, will be honored for their resourcefulness and
tenacity in dismantling a child pornography ring and
apprehending several child sex predators. Senator Chris Dodd
(CT) will recognize Detective Smith and Postal Inspector Vega.
Special Agent Supervisor Jeff Mackanin of the California
Department of Justice in Rancho Cordova, California, Special
Agent Reginald K. Ogata of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
in Sacramento, California, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Laurel
White in Sacramento, California will be accepting awards on
behalf of their agencies efforts and cooperation in resolving
a nationwide Internet child pornography ring. Senator Barbara
Boxer (CA) will recognize the representatives of the three
agencies.
Postal Inspector Steven Sadowitz of the U.S. Postal Inspection
Service in Indianapolis, Indiana, and Senior Special Agent
Perry Woo of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in
Fairfax, Virginia, will be honored for their extraordinary
investigative skills in exposing a child sex tourism and
prostitution ring and rescuing numerous child victims.
Congresswoman Julia Carson (IN) will recognize Postal
Inspector Sadowitz and Senior Special Agent Woo.
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