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FBI Phoenix Field Office Warns of Increase in Sextortion Schemes Targeting Young Boys

Posted on June 15, 2022June 24, 2025 by Dissent

From the Phoenix FBI, originally published June 14, 2022:

PHOENIX, AZ—Now that schools across Arizona are on summer break and young people have more unsupervised time online, the FBI Phoenix Field Office is warning parents and caregivers about an increase in incidents involving sextortion of young children. Across the country, the FBI is receiving an increasing number of reports of adults posing as young girls coercing young boys through social media to produce sexual images and videos and then extorting money from them.

Sextortion begins when an adult contacts a minor over any online platform used to meet and communicate, such as a game, app, or social media account. In a scheme that has recently become more prevalent, the predator (posing as a young girl) uses deception and manipulation to convince a young male, usually 14 to 17 years old, to engage in explicit activity over video, which is then secretly recorded by the predator. The predator then reveals that they have made the recordings and attempts to extort the victim for money to prevent them from being posted online.

Sextortion is a crime. The coercion of a child by an adult to produce what is considered Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) carries heavy penalties, which can include up to life sentences for the offender. To make the victimization stop, children typically have to come forward to someone—normally a parent, teacher, caregiver, or law enforcement. The embarrassment children feel from the activity they were forced to engage in is what typically prevents them from coming forward. Sextortion offenders may have hundreds of victims around the world, so coming forward to help law enforcement identify the offender may prevent countless other incidents of sexual exploitation to that victim and others.

“Disrupting these criminals is difficult, but the best ways to do just that are through awareness, education, and having important discussions with your children about their online safety,” says Sean Kaul, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Phoenix Field Office. “We completely understand that victims may feel embarrassed and afraid to come forward to report these incidents, but we really encourage victims to notify us so that these predators are held to account for their actions, if possible, and, most importantly, prevented from harming another child.”

The FBI provides the following tips to protect parents and children online:

  1. Be selective about what you share online, especially your personal information and passwords. If your social media accounts are open to everyone, a predator may be able to figure out a lot of information about you or your children.
  2. Be wary of anyone you encounter for the first time online. Block or ignore messages from strangers.
  3. Be aware that people can pretend to be anything or anyone online. Videos and photos are not proof that a person is who they claim to be.
  4. Be suspicious if you meet someone on a game or app and they ask you to start talking to them on a different platform.
  5. Encourage your children to report suspicious behavior to a trusted adult.
  6. Remind children that once photos are sent on the Internet – through e-mail or an app – that content is out there forever, and you can’t get it back.

If you believe you or someone you know is the victim of sextortion:

  1. Contact your local FBI field office (FBI Phoenix: 623-466-1999), the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at www.ic3.gov, or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (1-800-the-lost or Cybertipline.org).
  2. Contact your local police department.
  3. Do not delete anything before law enforcement is able to review it.
  4. Tell law enforcement everything about the encounters you had online. It may be embarrassing, but it is necessary to find the offender.

In 2021, the IC3 received more than 18,000 sextortion-related complaints, with losses topping $13.6 million. This number reflects all types of sextortion reported, not just this scheme.

More information about sextortion can be found at https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/stop-sextortion-youth-face-risk-online-090319.

Related posts:

  • Sextortion Crimes on the Increase: Talk to Your Kids Now
Category: BreachesFeatured NewsOnlineYouth & Schools

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