As the new school year begins, it is important to be aware of sextortion and to monitor children’s social media activity.
According to Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, sextortion and child pornography may be related to human trafficking, and anyone from anywhere can pose as your child’s friend on social media sites.
According to the attorney general’s office, a 45-year-old man from North Port, Florida, was recently given a 13-year prison term for claiming to be a teenage female in order to target a young boy in New Jersey on two social networking platforms.
The individual allegedly targeted the victim on the social video game apps Discord and Roblox, both of which are marketed to children.
The man allegedly lured the child into sending nude images by providing him an electronic gift card, according to Moody’s office.
He then allegedly blackmailed the child into performing and uploading films of obscene sexual practices, threatening to publish the naked images if he did not comply.
Investigators allegedly discovered other messages connected to the man’s social media accounts, along with photographs of child sex abuse.
According to reports, the man pleaded guilty to eight offenses and received a 13-year prison sentence, followed by 15 years of sex-offender probation upon his release.
Moody has also created an online safety toolkit to help parents explain Internet safety.
Online sextortion is a growing problem that could happen to anyone, regardless of their age. It is critical to teach your child how to spot a potential sextortion scam and how to respond if it occurs to them.
Anyplace where individuals interact and communicate is susceptible to sextortion, including:
- Messaging apps like WhatsApp, Google Chat, and Skype
- Email or text messages
- Dating apps, like Hinge and Tinder
- Chat-based video games, like Fortnite, Roblox, Discord, and Minecraft
- Social media sites, like Facebook, Instagram, or Snapchat
The scammer may pose as another child or adolescent. After gaining the trust of their young victim, they request compromising images or videos. In other situations, the scammer threatens the child when they first interact by claiming they already have compromising images or footage of the child.
In either case, the sextortionist demands more images from the victim or makes some other demand before threatening to divulge the private information.
Here are a few tips for parents to follow to keep children safe online:
- Pay attention to a child’s online activity
- Make social media profiles private for kids
- Prevent children from changing or using a phony date of birth to access websites that permit interactions with older people
- Explain that internet profiles can be edited to appear as someone else
- Make it clear that once something is posted on the internet, it will stay visible forever
- Teach kids how to ask for help, regardless of how bad the situation appears
No one should ever have to deal with sextortion on their own, especially a child. If your child is the victim of Internet sextortion, it is critical that you seek legal help as soon as possible so that your child can move on from this. If our Florida Victims of Sextortion Lawyers at Whittel & Melton can help you in any way, please call us today at 866-608-5529 or contact us online 24/7.