TEXT NEWSTIPS/PHOTOS - 925-800-NEWS (6397)
Advertisement
Home » FBI Warns Public Of Growing Threat Of Sextortion Against Minors

FBI Warns Public Of Growing Threat Of Sextortion Against Minors

by CLAYCORD.com
4 comments

The FBI’s Bay Area office is warning the public against the growing threat of “sextortion” targeting minors, with suspects coercing them into creating and sending sexually explicit images or videos online.

Victims are usually males between the ages of 14 to 17, the FBI said in a statement Tuesday.

Some youth fall victim to financially motivated sextortion in which perpetrators coerce them to create and send sexually explicit material. The offenders then threaten to release that material unless they receive payment through gift cards, mobile payment services, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency.

Suspects of financially motivated sextortion are usually located outside the U.S. and primarily in African countries such as Nigeria and Ivory Coast, or in Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines, the FBI said.

Advertisement

Sextortion has led some victims to self-harm and even suicide.

“From October 2021 to March 2023, the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations received over 13,000 reports of online financial sextortion of minors. The sextortion involved at least 12,600 victims — primarily boys — and led to at least 20 suicides,” according to the FBI.

From October 2022 to March 2023, the FBI saw at least a 20% rise in cases of financially motivated sextortion involving minor victims compared to the same period the previous year.

“We’ve seen an alarming increase in financial sextortion schemes targeting children not only in the Bay Area, but across the country. Parents, educators, and caregivers need to be aware of this increasingly urgent threat and empower victims to come forward” FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Tripp said in a statement.

Advertisement

Those who believe that they are a victim of sextortion or financially motivated sextortion are urged to report the activity to law enforcement or the FBI by calling (800) CALL-FBI or visiting tips.fbi.gov.

4 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

By all means find and follow good advice on keeping your kids safe but keep in mind that the people trying to scare you each and every day, have a vested interest in keeping you terrified. It’s an industry.

6
1

Would you allow your kids to wander around streets of SF where junkies and homeless are?
Don’t allow them to wander around on the web, their online activities need to be supervised daily.

5
2

Adults should not wander the web either. Keep in mind that nearly everyone you run across is a stranger and on the Internet you can’t tell if someone is your regular stranger or a stranger spoofing someone you know.
 
It does not mean you need to be hostile towards strangers but be mindful that their agenda is more likely to be for their benefit, not yours.

3
1

I remember the early days of the Internet, when AOL and Compuserve were destinations instead of gateways. Then, the rule was to assume everyone you talk to is a 13-year-old girl. Except for the 13-year-old girls, who you should assume to be FBI agents.

Advertisement

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Latest News

© Copyright 2023 Claycord News & Talk