06/09/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/09/2026 17:38
Tuesday, June 09, 2026
WASHINGTON - Today, U.S. Senator Josh Hawley's (R-Mo.) provision to combat child exploitation passed the House of Representatives. Hawley's provision, as part of the broader reconciliation bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security that passed the Senate last week, will provide DHS with $108.5 million to hire 200 new child exploitation investigators and analysts. DHS currently employs only 7 full-time specialists to identify these victims.
"My legislation with Tim Tebow to rescue thousands of children trapped in sex trafficking just passed the House and is headed to the President's desk. That's two hundred new law enforcement officers to find and rescue kids trafficked by predators and a new initiative to coordinate local, state, and federal enforcement. This is the biggest surge against online child exploitation ever by the federal government. It's time to rescue these kids," said Senator Hawley.
"Right now, 89,000 unidentified image series of children being sexually abused have been seen by law enforcement - but these children have yet to be identified and are still waiting to be found due to resource and manpower shortages," said Tebow, Founder and Chairman of the Tim Tebow Foundation (TTF). "Every day we don't act is another day they're in harm's way. Today, we acted. I am grateful to our congressional leaders for getting this lifesaving legislation over the finish line, and to the law enforcement who never stop fighting for these kids. My prayer is that hope is renewed for many more boys and girls, and that their stories will be different because of this legislation. When we come together, real change can happen - and this is just the beginning."
DHS' Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) plays a critical role in combating child exploitation online, but currently lacks the resources to fully execute its mission. In a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing chaired by Senator Hawley in March, Tim Tebow-the Heisman Trophy winner who now leads the Tim Tebow Foundation and its work to end child exploitation-described how HSI's lack of staff for these cases hampers its ability to identify and find the exploited children who appear in child abuse images. Tebow told the subcommittee that 338,000 unique IP addresses have downloaded, shared, or distributed child rape images in the United States in just a matter of months, and as many as 89,000 unidentified child victims appear in these horrific materials. However, DHS currently employs only 7 full-time specialists to identify these victims.
Senator Hawley's provision, modeled on the Renewed Hope Act, will provide HSI with a generational investment to both identify and rescue these unidentified children. The provision would allow HSI to:
Read Senator Hawley's op-ed on the provision here.
Watch the Senator's floor speech here.