Following numerous complaints received by the website
cybertip.ca about Azov Films, the investigation began in October 2010 when undercover police made online contact with Brian Way, a 42-year-old man from Toronto In May 2011, Way's home and office were raided, and he was arrested. The Canadian arm of the operation was "Project Spade"; in Australia, it was "Operation Thunderer". The nudity-only nature of the Azov material caused it to be classified in the UK as level 1 on the
COPINE scale for rating images of children,
i.e., generally beneath the threshold of legal interest. This standardized rating caused controversy, as politicians and members of the UK press later accused the
National Crime Agency of negligence. The investigation was officially made public in November 2013. Alternative news sources had disclosed its existence as early as December 2012.
Germany The German
Federal Criminal Police Office was informed in October 2011, but investigations only started in October 2012, with the list of customers being distributed to the German states' authorities in November 2012. During 13 months of holding back any investigations it should have been obvious for
Federal Criminal Police Office that within the list there were IP-numbers of Deutscher
Bundestag with at least several downloads of nude material of boys between the ages of 9 and 14 towards the German Bundestag IP-numbers range. Five hundred of the 800 listed persons had purchased unambiguous child pornography according to German legal standards; the rest had bought material not considered to be illegal. According to Jörg Fröhlich, public prosecutor in Hannover, Lower Saxony, the raid took place for reason of a higher count of other public prosecutor agencies handling similar cases this way against the account of agencies favoring not to do so when found material would need to be categorized as so-called "II" instead of "I". The passing of secret information regarding the investigation to the MP's party leader resulted in the resignation of the former German Interior Minister,
Hans-Peter Friedrich. The home raid on Edathy when he had only purchased materials classified as legal was criticized in a national newspaper,
Die Zeit, in a guest editorial by Thomas Fischer, Chief Judge of the German Federal Court. He stated, "Law exists in clear boundaries between permitted and forbidden behavior. Justice dares not follow he who does nothing illegal. In the Edathy case, this rule has been violated." In contrast, however, Mick Moran, head of Interpol's
Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation unit, issued a public warning on
Twitter to "MAPs" ("minor-attracted persons") that any sign they were acting upon their sexual orientations, whether the actions were legal or illegal, "demonstrates an escalation of activity by 'MAPs' that must be interpreted as an increased risk to children regardless of the illegality" and that "must result in action by public safety officials." Public discussion about nude pictures of children being legal in Germany, when not categorized as sexual in nature, led within hours to a published consent from all parliamentary parties, as well as from Germany's Minister of Justice
Heiko Maas, for a prompt change of the relevant law. On a 19 February 2014, a non-public meeting of the federal home affairs committee where BKA president
Jörg Ziercke was reporting on this affair—Ziercke admitted, according to MP
Bosbach—who leads that committee—towards reporters, that he had not seen any reason to publish the involved MP's name any earlier, since at that time
Sebastian Edathy was head of the
NSU-murderseries committee doing inquiries against the BKA and therefore himself, Ziercke, so to prevent the obviously wrong public image of a nonexisting act of revenge. == Children ==