More than 50 people have been arrested across the state of Texas as part of a nationwide a sting operations into online child sex crime.

The alleged perpetrators are believed to have attempted to meet up with underage children for sex, while others possessed and promoted child pornography.

Officers from the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force posed as underage children online for the sting, dubbed Operation 'Broken Heart'.

The abuses are alleged to have occurred over several months in Montgomery, Fort Bend and Harris counties near Houston. Among those arrested were public employees.

Operation Broken Heart led to the arrest of 51 people involved in online solicitation, sex trafficking of minors, and child porn, police in Texas say

Authorities have revealed some details on how the sting operation took place as well as information about some of the individual cases.

Officers said that the majority of the arrests involved adults grooming children online, or undercover officers posing as children.

'This is not just something that is relegated to your next door neighbor or one town away,' Houston Police Sergeant Luis Menendez-Sierra, who works closely with ICAC, said. 'Parents need to be vigilant.'

Christopher Lakner, left, is alleged to have told investigators that he wanted to keep girls in cages, force them into becoming pregnant and then sell the babies. Travis Shane Ryan, right, was arrested on charges of pornography involving juveniles

Brian Pool, 42, left, David Wayne Oneal, 31, center, and Mark Williamson, 67, right, were all arrested on charges of pornography involving juveniles

Harold Black, left, Red Moore, second from left, and Leonardo Vargas, second from right, were arrested for the online solicitation of a minor and possession of child pornography charges. Peter Fernandez, right, faces charges of possessing child pornography

'A suspect traveled all the way from California here to Houston, where he met his victim and sexually assaulted her,' Sgt. Luis Menedez-Sierra told ABC News. 'This is not a local crime, this is not something just related to your next door neighbor, or one town away. This is a nationwide issue.'

In one case involving Christopher Lakner, 26, Constable Alan Rosen said that 'during chats, he tried to convince undercover personnel he thought was a teenage girl to help kidnap children from area parks, breed them to make babies.'

Lakner is alleged to have told investigators that he wanted to keep girls in cages, force them into becoming pregnant and then sell the babies.

Lackner was arrested at the point where he was alleged to have arranged a meeting with what was in fact an undercover officer. He was arrested in April and is still in custody.

Jack Vincent Jameson, 31, left, Michael Ryan Heape, 20, center, and Terry Scott Cepowski, 59, right, were all arrested on charges of pornography involving juveniles

Christopher Nichols, left,Matthew Oliver, second from left, Andre Cisneros, second from right,Edgar Barahona, were all arrested for the online solicitation of a minor and Nichols and Barahona for the alleged promotion of child pornography

'The comments that Constable Rosen made exceeded widely what is appropriate for a law enforcement officer to say publicly,' Brian Roberts, Lackner's attorney, told ABC News.

Operation Broken Heart' is the code name for a nationwide operation to tackle child sex abuse.

The operation targets suspects who deal in child pornography, groom children online, engage in sex trafficking or travel to foreign countries to abuse children, according to the Department of Justice.

Officials said they investigated more than 18,500 complaints of crimes against children leading to 2,300 arrests across the country

61 Internet Crimes Against Children task forces, located in all 50 states and comprised of more than 4,500 federal, state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies, led the coordinated operation throughout April and May this year.

Officials said they investigated more than 18,500 complaints of crimes against children leading to 2,300 arrests across the country.

More than 2,150 presentations on internet safety were given to more than 200,000 youths and adults.

'The sexual abuse of children is repugnant, and it victimizes the most innocent and vulnerable of all,' Attorney General William Barr said.

'We must bring the full force of the law against sexual predators, and with the help of our Internet Crimes Against Children program, we will, said Attorney General William Barr

'We must bring the full force of the law against sexual predators, and with the help of our Internet Crimes Against Children program, we will.

'Over the span of just two months, our ICAC task forces investigated more than 18,000 complaints of internet-related abuse and helped arrest 1,700 alleged abusers. We are committed to bringing the defendants in these cases to justice and protecting every American child.'

Since the ICAC Program began, almost one million complaints have been investigated resulting in the arrest of 95,500 individuals.

Furthermore, more than 708,500 law enforcement officers, prosecutors and other professionals have been trained in techniques used to investigate and prosecute ICAC-related cases.