Law enforcement authorities announced 42 arrests in Riverside County following a year-long child sexual exploitation investigation that identified more than 500 suspected distributors of child sexual abuse material, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Spanning from March 2025 through March 2026, the effort brought together the Riverside County District Attorney's Child Exploitation Team and O.U.R. Rescue, a nonprofit focused on combating child exploitation. The investigative approach centered on pinpointing IP addresses connected to the exchange of child sexual abuse material across peer-to-peer file-sharing systems. Over the course of the operation, authorities executed 46 residential search warrants.
Among those arrested were two corporate vice presidents, a child psychologist, a CTO at a Southern California hospital, a local government planning director, a retired law enforcement employee, a California prison IT employee, and three registered sex offenders, according to the CBS News Los Angeles report on the operation. The DA's office designated 14 of those arrested as high-risk offenders.
Liam Doyle, supervising investigator with the Riverside County District Attorney's Office, said the range of suspects surprised investigators. "We assumed that we were going to find people that were already known in the system, you know, registered sex offenders and things like that. But then to come across people that are vice presidents of companies or doctors, just people in the community that we would look at as positions of trust," Doyle told CBS News Los Angeles.
All 42 individuals resided within Riverside County, spread across 19 cities, with Menifee, Riverside, and Moreno Valley accounting for the greatest number of arrests. Despite sharing the same alleged conduct, none of the suspects appeared to have any connection to one another.
Feliciano Chavarria, 62, a Lake Elsinore resident facing a $2 million child sexual abuse warrant from Los Angeles County, was among the first people taken into custody.
Thirty-seven teenagers were rescued in connection with the investigation, with recoveries occurring throughout Southern California as well as in Arizona and Nevada. Assisting agencies included Homeland Security Investigations, the California Highway Patrol, and the Internet Crimes Against Children task forces in Los Angeles and San Diego.
San Bernardino County saw its own enforcement action during a similar period, with Operation Firewall yielding more than 100 arrests and freeing 16 children between April 19 and May 2, according to CBS News Los Angeles. The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's chapter of the Los Angeles Regional Internet Crimes Against Children task force ran the effort.