May 12, 2025 – Tim Tebow reveals a map of 111,000 unique IP addresses in America that are downloading child porn of kids under 12

In Email/Dossier/Govt Corruption Investigations, Featured Timeline Entries by Katie Weddington

Tim Tebow reveals to Shawn Ryan a map of 111,000 IPs downloading child porn of kids under 12 in 30 days, and urges Congress to act:

I’m sitting down today with Tim Tebow, a man whose platform spans from football fields to global humanitarian efforts, as he shares his mission to fight human trafficking and rescue the world’s most vulnerable. In this powerful conversation, Tim opens up about the harrowing realities of child sex exploitation, the moment his father’s bold rescue of four trafficked girls changed their lives forever, and the urgent need for legislative action through the Renewed Hope Act. He urges listeners to stand up, speak out, and contact their representatives to help pass this crucial bill, aimed at rescuing and restoring tens of thousands of unidentified and exploited children.

Via RealClearPolitics, 5/13/2025:

TIM TEBOW: Specifically, our heart is to get to as many and leverage anything and everything we can so that they can get out of this evil.

As I mentioned earlier, you think so much is done by all these groups and gangs, and yes, that does take place in a lot of areas. But man, it’s overwhelming when you think how much is done by families, by friends, by those in the trusted circle. Especially when we talk about the fight against child exploitation and child sexual abuse, it’s off the charts what is being done in families.

Do you know what’s—I want to say most disappointing, but maybe one of the most heartbreaking? Do you know the number one offender? Biological fathers. Man, it’s not going to make your day.

I brought a map to share with you. This is the map—every red dot on that. First of all, that is a DOJ law enforcement map; it’s called the Red Dot Map. Every red dot on that map is at least one unique IP address of individuals downloading, sharing, distributing child abuse and rape images under the age of 12. There’s over 111,000 of them just in the U.S. in the last 30 days. Wow. I wanted to bring that because I think it brings to life so much of the evil that we’re trying to face.

People will say, “Well, that’s just over there, and it’s in those countries and all of those places.” And it’s not, Sean. It’s right here in our backyard. It is right here. Out of everyone, some people will say, “Okay, well, they’re just downloading and sharing it and distributing it.” But 55 to 85% are also hands-on offenders, and your average offender has 13 victims in their lifetime—13 victims. Every one of those red dots, there’s a boy or girl that is suffering on the other end of what they’re sharing, downloading, or distributing.

I wanted to share that with you because I know that your heart breaks for them, and I think that map brings to life the evil that we’re trying to fight. It’s why one of our hearts is to get the Renewed Hope Act passed through Congress. It takes the law enforcement officers right now and victim identification officers at C3—they’re amazing, some of my favorite people in the world—but there’s seven of them right now at C3. Seven people. Also, ICAC is working on that; we love ICAC, and we need to enhance their funding because they desperately need it. Internet Crimes Against Children—they’re awesome, 62 locations around the country, but primarily the ones that are also working on this are at C3.

We want to get the Renewed Hope Act passed because it would take it from 7 to 200. Now we have a much greater chance if we have all of those officers that are trained and equipped to be fighting against this evil. Again, that’s the last 30 days, and that’s not getting into livestreaming or extortion or grooming or so many of the other issues we’re fighting. That is just in peer-to-peer networks of them sharing and distributing child rape images under the age of 12.

SHAWN RYAN: 12 and under. 111,423 unique IP addresses.

TIM TEBOW: Some people will say, “Well, that’s just, you know, they’re just downloading it and they’re just sharing it.” No, it’s not just that easy. You have to go in, you have to download it, a peer-to-peer, and then you have to be able to download all of these images, and then you’re sharing them. It’s not like this just happens by accident. It’s not like, “Oh, I just looked at a bad picture,” and it’s not like this is a photo of a baby in a bathtub. No, so many of these are brutal, brutal abuse of children.

When we go back to those 50,000 boys and girls that are unknown in the ICAC database that we were talking about before, out of those 57,000, over 3,000 of them were infants or toddlers. If you say what’s on our heart—man, these are boys and girls that can’t fight for themselves. They can’t defend themselves, and yet so many of us, myself for so long, did nothing to defend or stand up for them. It is our heart that we would rally an army, and maybe we would even declare a national emergency to fight this evil. This is happening in our backyard.

Out of all those that have been rescued or safeguarded from Renewed Hope 1, 2, and 3, more than half of those boys and girls have been right here in the U.S. So, we think it’s over there, it’s over there, it’s over there—no. Yes, it is happening in other places, but it is happening in our country, right here in our neighborhoods, in our backyards, in our families.

Then we get into the fight against livestreaming. Do you know the number one payer of livestream rape of boys and girls around the world? Us. Us—not close. In peer-to-peer sharing, we’re third: China, Russia, America. Man, sorry, I do get fired up about it.

SHAWN RYAN: How are we combating this?

TIM TEBOW: Well, we’re trying to do it in every area and every way possible, whether that’s with partnerships and nonprofits and law enforcement, rallying task forces, legislation, and lobbying—trying to get them to enhance the army, per se, in fighting this. That’s really what the Renewed Hope Act is for, but it’s also getting the Renewed Hope operations more and more. We’re having more and more every day.

It’s also creating awareness, and I hate to use “awareness” because people say it all the time, and I don’t want awareness for awareness’s sake. I want people to be aware so we act to do something. I think we really have to change laws and legislation. I believe there’s a lot of people in Congress and in D.C. that want to change it, but we have to get it done. We have to protect these boys and girls. I know we have to figure out budgets and balances and all these important things, but what does it matter if we figure out a budget but our boys and girls in our backyard are being raped and abused? Let’s make the main thing the main thing. This should be a main thing. This has to be a main thing.

Here’s the full conversation: