Unit Information

ICAC stands for Internet Crimes Against Children. The Central California ICAC Task Force was formed in 2007 and is one of 61 ICAC task forces in the United States. The ICAC system was created in order to combat the growing threat to children by use of the Internet. The federal government oversees this project with the Department of Justice. Specifically, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP). The Fresno County Sheriff's Office (FSO) applied for grant monies to start the task force in 2007. FSO became the lead agency to administer the grant and reports results back to the Federal Government. Several other agencies joined shortly thereafter. In 2008, the Central California ICAC Task Force has since extended to 68 affiliated law enforcement and prosecutorial agencies. The Central California ICAC is currently housed in downtown Fresno at the Fresno Homeland Security Investigations Office.

The Task Force conducts investigations within the Eastern District of California as well as working with federal agencies and ICAC Task Forces throughout the United States. The Central California ICAC Task Force investigates persons using the Internet to attempt to engage in sexual contact with underage children, persons who send children web camera feeds of, or files displaying sexual acts, and persons who download or distribute CSAM files using email or file-sharing networks. The Task Force also conducts education for children, adults, and community groups to help them learn to be safer on the Internet and thereby reducing online victimization.

The Central California ICAC Task Force provides agencies with the training and resources to conduct proactive and reactive investigations of Internet crimes involving children. These proactive investigations allow investigators to arrest child predators before they have the opportunity to hurt a child.

The Central California ICAC Task Force is dedicated to locating, identifying, and arresting those who prey upon our children, or those who sexually exploit our children through the use of technology.

History of ICAC

In 1998, the United States Department of Justice began an Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, tasked with the ever-growing problem involving the sexual exploitation of children via the internet. The ICAC Task Force laid the foundation for what would become a nationwide partnership of law enforcement agencies with the mission of protecting children online. Currently there are 61 ICAC Task Forces located across the United States representing over 3,000 federal, state, and local law enforcement, and prosecutorial agencies. Since its inception, the ICAC Task Force program has investigated over 280,000 complaints of alleged child sexual exploitation and arrested over 30,000 individuals.

The Fresno County Sheriff’s Office serves as the lead agency for the Central California Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. Central California ICAC is comprised of sixty eight (68) affiliated Federal, State, and Local law enforcement agencies serving over three (3) million citizens in a nine (9) county area of Central California. The nine (9) counties include Kern, Tulare, Kings, Fresno, Madera, Merced, Mariposa, Inyo, and San Luis Obispo. Central California ICAC is responsible for conducting both reactive and proactive investigations.

One of the primary missions of each ICAC Task Force involves reaching out to other agencies in our respective parts of the country to help establish an internet presence and to build capacity and expertise in this area. In so doing, we create an even larger network of law enforcement agencies capable of dealing with online threats and exploitation. The lead agency for each Task Force works in conjunction with the law enforcement agencies within its own jurisdiction, but also works cooperatively with the other task forces across the country when a particular offense, such as the transmission of CSAM for example, crosses traditional jurisdictional boundaries.

Because each Task Force is permanently established and task force members meet regularly at national working group conferences, we are able to combine resources quickly when a case demands it.

National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) interacts regularly with ICAC offices, and provides assistance during investigations where the suspect has solicited young victims from throughout the United States and other countries. The partnership between NCMEC and all ICAC Task Forces nationwide is essential to protecting society’s most innocent victims, our children. Anyone having information regarding online sexual exploitation of children should report this information to NCMEC via the CyberTipline at report.cybertip.org. For more information regarding NCMEC, please visit www.missingkids.com

What We Investigate

We conduct a myriad of investigations. We conduct investigations by referral from parents, children, other agencies and Cybertips from The National Center For Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).

The list below shows some of the investigations we conduct:

  • Child Exploitation or Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) (possession, manufacture, distribution)
  • Enticement of a Child
  • Trafficking in Children
  • Child Prostitution
  • Promotion of Obscenity to a Minor
  • Sexual Assault on a Child
  • Child Sex Tourism
  • Internet Luring of a Child
  • Internet Sexual Exploitation of a Child
  • Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor
  • Harassment and Bullying for Sexual Purposes
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Fresno County

California BFS: Fresno
CDCR: State Parole: Fresno
Clovis Police Department
Clovis Unified School District Police Department
Coalinga Police Department
Coalinga State Hospital Police Services
Firebaugh Police Department
Fowler Police Department
Fresno County District Attorney’s Office
Fresno County Probation Department
Fresno County Sheriff’s Office
Fresno Police Department
Kerman Police Department
Kingsburg Police Department
Mendota Police Deparment
Parlier Police Department
Reedley Police Department

Inyo County

Bishop Police Department
Inyo County Sheriff’s Office

Kern County

Bakersfield Police Department
Bear Valley Police Department
CDCR: State Parole: Bakersfield
Kern County District Attorney’s Office
Kern County Sheriff’s Office
Ridgecrest Police Department
Shafter Police Department
Tehachapi Police Department

Kings County

Avenal Police Department
Corcoran Police Department
Hanford Police Department
Kings County District Attorney’s Office
Kings County Sheriff’s Office
Lemoore Police Department

Madera County

Chowchilla Police Department
Madera County District Attorney’s Office
Madera County Sheriff’s Office
Madera Police Department

Mariposa County

Mariposa County Sheriff’s Office

Merced County

Atwater Police Department
Los Banos Police Department
Dos Palos Police Department
Gustine Police Department
Merced County District Attorney’s Office
Merced County Sheriff’s Office
Merced Police Department

San Luis Obispo County

Arroyo Grande Police Department
Atascadero Police Department
Grover Beach Police Department
Paso Robles Police Department
Pismo Beach Police Department
San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s Office
San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Office
San Luis Obispo Police Department
University of California Police Department: Poly Tech

Tulare County

CDCR: State Parole: Visalia
Dinuba Police Department
Exeter Police Department
Farmersville Police Department
Lindsay Police Department
Porterville Police Department
Tulare County Bureau of Investigations
Tulare County District Attorney’s Office
Tulare County Sheriff’s Office
Tulare Police Department
Visalia Police Department
Woodlake Police Department

National ICAC Program

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The National ICAC Task Force Program was created to help State and local enforcement agencies enhance their investigative response to offenders who use the Internet, online communications systems, or other computer technology to sexually exploit children. The program is currently composed of 61 regional Task Force agencies and is funded by the United States Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.

If you suspect a child is being targeted online, report it to the CyberTipline.

This Web site is funded in part through a grant from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor any of its components operate, control, are responsible for, or necessarily endorse, this Web site (including, without limitation, its content, technical infrastructure, and policies, and any services or tools provided)

© 2026 Central California Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. All Rights Reserved.