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Authorities in South Dakota have canceled an Amber Alert after locating two children believed to have been brought to South Dakota by a Canadian sex offender.

The Amber Alert originated in Canada on Monday, when authorities with Saskatchewan's Royal Canadian Mounted Police, as part of an investigation, discovered 50-year-old Benjamin Moore, his common law partner and her two children were no longer at their residence.

Authorities in South Dakota issued an Amber Alert late Tuesday evening after receiving credible information that the suspect may have brought the two children, who are 7- and 8-years-old, across the international border and into the state.

According to the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI), the safety of the children was believed to be in danger, and an order was in place to return the custody of the children to Canadian authorities.
 
Benjamin Martin Moore, 50, two children and their mother crossed into the United States illegally by driving through a barbed wire fence near the Turner Port of Entry in Montana, CBP said in a Thursday news release.

Havre Border Patrol Station agents discovered a cut fence while patrolling the international boundary.
[....]
A border patrol agent with the Homeland Security Investigations Task Force helped locate Moore.

CBP said Moore is currently in custody pending prosecution.

Moore was working campground security for the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally at a campground in South Dakota when police arrested him, according to campers.

Brian Lester and his wife were tenting at the Glencoe Camp Resort while attending the annual biker rally from Aug. 1 to 9.

Thirty yards from their site, Moore, along with his common-law spouse and her two children were camping out of their vehicle, he said.

All four of them were subjects in an Amber Alert issued by Saskatchewan RCMP on Monday evening. Although, Lester did not know that at the time.

Lester said he first noticed the kids Sunday when he woke up to the sound of them playing outside his tent, adding it is “very rare” to see children at the Glencoe campground during the rally, which raised a few red flags.

“Glencoe Campground is known for a pretty big adult party and it’s not a place where children belong,” he said.
[....]
Lester said he and his wife reported the children to campground employees, adding they were worried about what the kids might be exposed to. However, they were told there was no age restriction in the campsites.

Lester then spoke with two security guards about his concerns, he said, one of them was Moore.

“[Moore] told me he was down from Canada. He is aware of the happenings of Glencoe campground and what kids should and should not see, which is why he chose to put the kids over in the tent area that is less populated,” he said.

Lester said he and his wife still felt off about the situation. They kept an eye on the mom and kids over the next two days, and noticed the family’s vehicle never left the campsite.

“They had toys and they were playing. The kids didn’t seem to be in distress,” he said

Lester and his wife left two days later, hours before the Amber Alert was extended into South Dakota Tuesday night.

Within 90 minutes of the alert being issued in the state, all four of them were located at a campground near Sturgis, SD, according to the South Dakota Department of Public Safety.

The two children are safe with U.S. officials and receiving supports and resources while they wait to return to Saskatchewan.

RCMP along with South Dakota Authorities and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are performing their own investigations. Charges have yet to be laid in relation to the Amber Alert.
[....]
“We felt sick to our stomach that we didn’t do more or pursue it harder,” Lester said.

“But to our knowledge they weren’t breaking the law.”

Lester’s wife immediately called police to report the children’s location, which is when they were told all four of them had been found.

The couple is “ecstatic” that the children are safe, but Lester still wonders if they could have been found sooner had security followed up on his concerns.

“Things happen for a reason. We’re also glad that we didn’t push it too hard that it scared them off,” he said. “It all worked out the way it should.”

Lester is hopeful that his original complaints to campground employees helped bring awareness to Moore and the children, which is why officials located them as quickly as they did.
[....]
in a Facebook post, campground officials said its security team played a role in apprehending Moore.

“We’d like to take a moment and recognize the great work of Glencoe’s 2022 Security Team for locating and assisting local law enforcement apprehending the Amber Alert suspect,” the post read.

“Our Chief of Security’s training and guidance of his staff possibly saved the lives of innocent victims.”

RCMP could not confirm if Moore was working as a security guard at the time of his arrest. They also would not speculate if that were the reason the four of them left the province and if they planned to return after the rally.

 
Benjamin Moore, 52, was sentenced Friday to 52 months in federal prison. Hewas charged with possession of child pornography and had two previous sexual-type convictions in Canada.

In the factual basis statement in the case, Moore admits he kidnapped his children, cut through barbed wire along the Montana-Canadian border, and received a job as a security guard at the Sturgis rally where he was later caught.
In court, Moore said that he just wanted to go home and provide for his family as he is the sole breadwinner, and his family is struggling without him.


Upon completion of his 52-month sentence, it is believed Moore will be sent back to Canada where he will face another charge for failing to register as a sex offender.
 
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