at the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children's headquarters in
Alexandria, Virginia (2015) The Center was founded in 1984, spurred by notable abductions such as the 1981 abduction and murder of six-year-old
Adam Walsh from a shopping mall in
Hollywood, Florida, and the 1979 abduction of six-year-old
Etan Patz from New York City. Because police had the ability to record and track information about stolen cars, guns, and even horses with the FBI's national crime computer, it was believed that the same should be done to find victims and the procurers. In 1984, the U.S. Congress passed the Missing Children's Assistance Act, which established a National Resource Center and Clearinghouse on Missing & Exploited Children. On June 13, 1984, the center, formed by Adam Walsh's parents, Revé and
John Walsh, alongside other children's advocates, was officially opened by
President Ronald Reagan in a
White House ceremony. The national 24-hour toll-free missing children's hotline, 1-800-THE-LOST, was also established. During the mid-to-late 1980s, the toy
Teddy Ruxpin became the "Official Spokesbear" for the center at the height of his popularity. Due to this partnership, some stories featured extra information for kids to stay safe from situations such as abductions and sexual predation. This also caused his animated series to feature a clip titled "Protect Yourself" in which safety information for kids would be given by then-popular child actors. In September 2013, the
United States House of Representatives,
United States Senate, and the
President of the United States voted to reauthorize $40 million in funding for the organization as part of
Missing Children's Assistance Reauthorization Act of 2013 (H.R. 3092; 113th Congress). From 2011 to 2015, 45 percent of children reported missing in America were found after being missing between six and 11 months; 27 percent were found after missing from one to two years; 19 percent when missing two to five years; five percent after six to 10 years; three percent when missing from 11 to 20 years; and only one percent of missing children are found when missing for over 20 years. On average, 49 percent of child abductions are by family members, 27 percent by acquaintances, and 24 percent by individuals unknown to the victim. Each category is dissected into areas such as victim profiling; relationship (if existent) between offender and abductee; the time and location of abduction; and degree of violence utilized to facilitate the abduction. In instances where a child has been abducted by a stranger with homicidal intent, the abduction is most likely to occur in the evening, with death most probable within three hours of the abduction. On April 6, 2018, it was announced in
Forbes magazine that the Department of Justice had seized and shut down the website of frequent nemesis of NCMEC,
Backpage.com, on the grounds that it had frequently facilitated
human trafficking. NCMEC released a statement: "The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children just learned that Backpage.com was seized by the FBI, IRS, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service with analytical assistance from the Joint Regional Intelligence Center. This is another step in the years-long fight against the exploitation of victims who were bought and sold for sex on Backpage.com. #NCMEC is waiting alongside the rest of the world to see what will come next. We stand by the victims and their families as they process this news and continue to fight for justice against those who profited from their abuse. #EndSexTrafficking." In the 2020s, center staff supported the
PROTECT Our Children Act of 2022, which passed the United States Senate on November 15, 2022, as well as
Congress on December 6, 2022. The act reauthorized funding for the
Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC) and provides support to investigate and arrest perpetrators of sex offenses against children.
Applications to the US seeking return of children Effective September 5, 1995, applications seeking the return of or access to children in the US under the
Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction were processed through the NCMEC for the
US Department of State, Office of Children's Issues under contract with the US Department of State and the
US Department of Justice. On April 1, 2008, the US Office of Children's Issues re-assumed U.S. Central Authority duties for processing incoming cases under the Hague Abduction Convention. As a result of its status as a government contractor as well as funding provided under the Missing Children Act and Missing Children's Assistance Act, the NCMEC received ()
US$40-million funding each year from the US Government.
International and
Eve Branson in April 2014 In 1998, the NCMEC Board of Directors approved the creation of a separate international organization, the
International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC); the two now act as sister organizations. ICMEC combats
child sexual exploitation,
child sexual abuse, and
child abduction. ICMEC held its first Board of Directors meeting in 1998. It was officially launched in April 1999. ICMEC runs a global missing children's network of 30 countries. ICMEC has trained law enforcement personnel from 121 countries, works with law enforcement in over 100 countries, and has worked with legislatures in 100 countries to adopt new laws combating child sexual abuse. ICMEC also encourages the creation of national operational centers built on a
public-private partnership model, and leads global financial and industry coalitions to eradicate child sexual exploitation and child sexual abuse. The Koons Family Institute on International Law and Policy is the International Centre's research arm. In August 2008, ICMEC was granted "Special Consultative Status" by the
United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), to assist the UN with its expertise regarding child sexual exploitation and child abduction. ICMEC also works with the
intergovernmental organization INTERPOL, the inter-continental organization the
Organization of American States (OAS), and the
Hague Conference on Private International Law. NCMEC is an associate of PACT
Parents and Abducted Children Together in the United Kingdom.
iOS 15 partnership and community response In 2021, the group faced criticism over a partnership with
Apple to produce and implement monitoring software for
iOS 15, intended to continuously monitor all users'
iCloud photos uploaded as part of iCloud Photo Library "to confirm whether it contains child pornography"; the software would send any image to human reviewers that "matches one in the database of the [NCMEC]", and user data would be forwarded to NCMEC for law enforcement review. Users were not to be given an opportunity to opt out of the service, which was described as an unreasonable encroachment on privacy.
Edward Snowden described the updated devices as "iNarcs", while the
Electronic Frontier Foundation argued that such a
backdoor would require little adaptation to monitor for other types of content, enabling political censorship by governments (who could potentially require Apple to enable such features once available). An editorial in
The New York Times by
Matthew D. Green and
Alex Stamos said that, while many platforms (like
Facebook,
Google, and
Microsoft) have screened public user uploads for a long time, Apple's promise to only evaluate photos which use its iCloud service was a policy decision, not a technological requirement limiting access to users' personal devices. In a company-wide internal letter to Apple employees in response to public opposition to the system, NCMEC’s executive director of strategic partnerships Marita Rodriguez described criticism as the "screeching voices of the minority." For several years, Synchronoss Technologies has provided leads to NCMEC which have resulted in prosecutions. ==Controversy==