“The best defense against this crime is to talk to your children about what to do if they’re targeted online.” “This is a growing crisis and we’ve seen sextortion completely devastate children and families,” said Michelle DeLaune, CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The tactics used by those behind the fake accounts are getting more aggressive, and cases have been rising around the world, advocates said. It isn’t clear whether federal prosecutors had brought any cases tied to the scams. The Department of Homeland Security is also working to track fake accounts back to their source, said Steve Francis, the acting executive director of Homeland Security Investigations. The alert is meant to thrust the issue into the public spotlight, so kids can feel more comfortable coming forward and adults can help them learn how to spot fake identities and reject anyone asking for explicit images, said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Polite of the Justice Department’s criminal division. It happens often on large platforms like Instagram or Facebook, but can also be on gaming or video chats, authorities said. The suspects typically pose as kids of similar age, often using a girl’s profile picture. Many of the current wave of schemes are believed to be originating with scammers based in West African countries like Nigeria and the Ivory Coast. READ MORE: Arrested polygamous leader had 20 wives including some minors, FBI says “Victims may feel like there is no way out-it is up to all of us to reassure them that they are not in trouble, there is hope, and they are not alone,” said FBI Director Christopher Wray in a statement. Embarrassment and shame can prevent them from asking for help. There’s been a staggering tenfold increase in reports since last year, and there are likely more victims who never came forward, FBI officials said. The FBI said it was issuing the national public safety alert now since kids may be spending more time online as schools close for winter break. Most victims are between 14 and 17, but kids as young as 10 have been targeted. READ MORE: Whistleblower says 665 workers left FBI over misconduct in two decades Many think they are chatting online with kids around their own age but are quickly manipulated into sending explicit pictures and then blackmailed for money with threats to release the images, the FBI said. authorities have not seen before, Justice Department officials said. WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI sounded the alarm Monday about an explosive increase in teenage boys being targeted online and extorted for money after being tricked into sending sexually explicit pictures.Īt least 3,000 children, mostly teenage boys, have been victims of the schemes that are connected to more than a dozen suicides this year, a scale that U.S.
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