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FBI warns of online ‘sextortion’ cases targeting teens
2022-03-25 00:00:00.0     华盛顿邮报-华盛顿特区     原网页

       FBI officials issued a warning Thursday following an increase in “sextortion” reports of teenage boys being targeted online by scam artists who entice them to share explicit content and then later extort money from the victims, officials said.

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       Authorities say scammers pose as young girls online via social media platforms and convince victims to produce sexual images and videos, according to statements released by the federal investigators. The victims typically range from 14 to 17 years old.

       In other instances, victims are encouraged to engage in explicit activity over video and the scammer secretly records the acts, FBI officials said. The scammers later attempt to extort money from victims by threatening to post the content online.

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       Scammers ask for payment via cash apps and even with gift cards, said Special Agent Barbara Smith, who supervises the child exploitation and human trafficking task force at the FBI Washington Field Office. But even after some victims pay, the victims continue to be extorted.

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       Smith said similar extortion schemes targeting men and boys have operated for years. But in the past six months, reports to the FBI out of the District and Northern Virginia increased from one report a month to two or three each week, she said in an interview Thursday.

       “This has been going on for several years; what’s new is the frequency, and more children are falling victim to this scam,” Smith said. These financially motivated sextortion schemes that capture children are actually overshadowing the traditional child predator sextortion schemes that they have.”

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       Investigators say the suspected scammers are abroad and offenders may have hundreds of victims worldwide.

       “We recognize victims may feel embarrassed and thus hesitant to come forward and report these incidents,” said Wayne Jacobs, special agent in charge of the Washington Field Office’s criminal/cyber division. “The most effective way to disrupt these criminals is through awareness, education, and having important discussions with your children about their online safety.”

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       Smith’s task force is involved because juveniles are producing pornographic images that can later be spread through underground networks across the Internet.

       Victims are being asked to come forward so agents can upload the illegal images to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children database to track them in case they appear in other investigations, Smith said.

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       Agency officials suggest parents limit who has access to social media accounts; block or ignore messages from strangers online; and to be suspicious of people their children meet in an online game or app and ask to start talking to them on a different platform.

       Parents should encourage children to report suspicious behavior to adults, FBI officials said.

       “This is very traumatic for many high school, middle school-aged students, and we want to make sure they are getting the victims’ services they need,” Smith said.

       


标签:综合
关键词: sextortion     FBI officials     children     Smith     advertisement     online     schemes     scammers     victims    
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