Pedophile Suspect Nabbed In Thailand
High-Tech Help Led Cops To Canadian Schoolteacher After 3-Year Manhunt
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Play CBS Video Video Chasing Pedophile Suspect Authorities seem to be closing in on a Canadian man accused of molesting hundreds of boys. Charlie D'Agata reports.
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Video Suspected Pedophile In Custody Police in Thailand have arrested alleged Canadian pedophile Christopher Neil, whose alleged abuse of up to a dozen young boys was posted online. Mark Phillips reports.
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Christopher Paul Neil, a Canadian schoolteacher, is led out of a news conference room in Bangkok, Thailand Friday, Oct. 19, 2007. Neil, 32, of New Westminster was arrested in the northeastern province of Nakhon Ratchasima, where he was hiding with a Thai friend who had arranged his sexual liaisons with young boys. (AP)
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Suspected pedophile Christopher Paul Neil is seen in a picture taken by Thai immigration authorities following his arrival at Bangkok International airport, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2007. (AP/Interpol/Thai Immigration)
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Thai police Maj. Gen. Wimol Powintara, commander of the Crime against Children and Women Division, shows photos of suspected Canadian pedophile Christopher Paul Neil during a news conference at his office in Bangkok, Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007. (AP)
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With the reach of the Internet, an unprecedented worldwide appeal by Interpol brought hundreds of responses via e-mail to the French-based police agency.
And with the aid of traced cell phone calls, Thai police tracked the suspect to a house well off the usual tourist trail, in northeastern Thailand.
The high-tech police work resulted in the arrest Friday of Canadian schoolteacher Christopher Paul Neil, suspected of sexually abusing Asian boys, after a three-year global manhunt.
Neil, 32, was detained at a house that he had rented with a Thai transvestite friend in the rural province of Nakhon Ratchasima.
“I think he knew we were coming,” said police Col. Paisal Luesomboon, who was on the five-member police team that made the arrest. “He knew that there was an arrest warrant issued and that his face was posted everywhere.”
He said Neil acknowledged being the man they were seeking, but didn't comment on whether he was the person depicted in about 200 Internet photos having sex with a dozen different boys between the ages of 6 and 12.
Only 10 days earlier, Interpol had issued the appeal to identify the man whose face had been digitally obscured by swirling part of the original photos.
After German police computer experts were able to reverse the process, making the face recognizable, some photos of the man were publicly circulated, and hundreds of people responded with tips on his identity, leading to Neil's arrest.
“Let all international criminals and fugitives be put on notice that Interpol, its police partners in 186 member countries, the public and the Internet present new and powerful possibilities for hunting them down wherever they might try to hide,” Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said in a statement.
Thai police made a big show of Neil's arrest, perhaps trying to counter their country's image as a center of the sex-tourism trade, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips.
Taken to the Thai capital Bangkok, Neil - in handcuffs and with a blue shirt draped over his head - was led into national police headquarters. He made no comments to waiting reporters.
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