Sextortion on the rise
News Boys Art and Entertainment LGBT+ RSOL Politics Science, Technology, Health Current events Deaths
by Staff Writer - 2022
In recent weeks, numerous news stories have appeared about Ryan Last, a 17-year-old high school student who sent explicit pictures to a person he believed to be a teenage girl. Unable to pay the demands of the blackmailer, Ryan Last killed himself rather then face public humiliation. This is an all to familiar scenario within the Boylove community. These methods have been used for years by law enforcement and so-called "Pedo-hunters", online vigilantes seeking to entrap people in compromising and embarrassing situations. This has resulted in many thousands of arrests and numerous deaths by suicide, certainly hundreds and perhaps even thousands. It is unknown how many police officers, cyber-vigilantes, and other cybercriminals have collected this information for the purposes of blackmail, as few have been willing to come forward and admit that they were a victim of such a crime because of both the legal and social consequences. The real life horror stories abound of kids being targeted online in "sextortion schemes," that are are originating on social media sites and impacting at least 3,000 victims and leading to more than a dozen suicides so far according to U.S. Justice Department officials." Using similar tactics, law enforcement agents who register as adult users and later tell their targets that they are minors and who employ extreme measures to not let the target disengage have been entrapping unwary adults, leading to both imprisonment and many deaths. In both cases, the motivation is money. Several studies including "Harm in the Digital Age: Critiquing the Construction of Victims, Harm, and Evidence in Proactive Child Luring Investigations" published in the Manitoba Law Journal in 2020 have concluded that these types of law enforcement operations “rarely uncover any instances of harmful behavior, ‘real’ victimization, or any criminal activity aside from the initial conversation.” These sting operations across the country are being funded by the federal government in the U.S. at a cost of approximately $35 million dollars a year. The law enforcement agencies that run these operations receive funding based on how many arrests and convictions they get which is the incentive.
https://www.voanews.com/a/u-s-warns-of-rise-in-sextortion-schemes-targeting-teen-boys-/6882838.html https://theappeal.org/online-child-sex-stings-protect-act/ https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/19/politics/justice-department-sextortion/index.html |