Systematic Abuse and Rental of Son
Between 2015 and 2017, 37-year-old Ursula R. subjected her son, born in 2008, to severe sexual abuse in the family's apartment in the German town of Staufen im Breisgau. Together with her then-partner, 42-year-old Mario S., she committed repeated assaults against the boy, including rape, humiliation and the recording of videos of the crimes. The material was distributed via the darknet platform "BoysTown".
The particularly insidious aspect of the case was that the mother systematically rented out her son to other men. Through the darknet, she arranged meetings where at least 37 men from Germany, Austria and Switzerland sexually abused the boy. The assaults took place in the family home, while social services failed to intervene despite 30 documented warnings since 2015. Physical injuries to the child were recorded but never properly followed up.
Organized crime
Darknet Investigation Exposed the Crimes
The case came to light in April 2017 when police in Koblenz, during an investigation of the darknet platform "BoysTown", gained access to the server and secured IP addresses. One of these addresses led to Ursula R. in Staufen. On April 27, 2017, police raided the apartment and seized 2,500 files containing abuse material, including numerous videos of the boy.
The public prosecutor's office in Freiburg took over the investigation and collaborated with Europol and the FBI to identify international recipients of the material. On May 3, 2017, social services in Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald finally took custody of the boy. The investigation expanded as it became clear that 37 men had directly participated in the assaults.
Darknet
Lengthy Prison Sentences for Perpetrators
On February 7, 2019, the court in Freiburg imposed harsh sentences on the primary perpetrators. Ursula R. received 12 years and 6 months in prison for severe sexual abuse of children in multiple cases, abuse under particularly aggravating circumstances, rape of children and distribution of child pornography. Mario S. was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Both sentences became final after appeals were rejected by the Federal Court of Justice on November 15, 2019.
Of the 37 identified "clients", 30 were convicted. Sentences ranged from 1 year and 10 months to 11 years in prison. Michael W. from Freiburg, for example, received a sentence of 8 years and 6 months in 2021. International cooperation between law enforcement agencies also enabled convictions in Austria and Switzerland.
Child abuse
Massive Systemic Failure: 30 Warnings Ignored
The case triggered an intense debate about authorities' failures. A special investigation conducted by the Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald district, whose results were published in June 2020, documented serious communication failures. Social services had the boy on their radar since 2015 but failed to respond appropriately to the obvious danger to the child's wellbeing despite 30 warnings.
Injuries to the child were documented but never consistently followed up. Different agencies communicated inadequately with each other. Baden-Württemberg's Interior Minister Thomas Strobl (CDU) spoke in a state parliament debate on February 18, 2019, of "systemic failure" and demanded immediate reforms.
Comprehensive Reforms of Child Protection
The Staufen case became the starting point for far-reaching legislative changes. On December 15, 2020, the reformed federal child protection law came into force, introducing mandatory immediate reporting of danger situations, establishing central reporting portals and tightening accountability rules for social services.
Federal Family Minister Franziska Giffey (SPD) described the case on June 10, 2020, as "a wake-up call for the entire system". The law on improving child protection, passed in 2021, introduced digital case files and AI-supported risk identification in social services' work. These measures are intended to prevent warning signals like those in the Staufen case from being ignored in the future.
The case remains a cautionary example of how organized child abuse operates in the digital age, and what fatal consequences systemic failure can have. The reforms show that society has learned from this tragedy – even though for the affected child, they came too late.