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Showing posts with label USA TODAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA TODAY. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

These young men were tricked into sending nude photos, then blackmailed: The nightmare of sextortion

 


Rachel Hale
USA TODAY

It was around 10 p.m. on a Friday night in Indiana when one young man began messaging with a pretty girl from Indianapolis on a dating app. Lying in bed feeling lonely and bored, he was exhilarated when she suggested they exchange nude photos

Minutes later, he started violently shaking after the conversation took a turn. The woman was really a cybercriminal in Nigeria – and threatened to expose the nude photographs to his family and friends if he didn’t pay $1,000. The scammer had located his Facebook profile and compiled a photo collage of their sexts, nudes, a portrait from his college graduation and a screenshot of his full name and phone number. 

He caved to the threats and sent $300, but a month later, his fears manifested into reality. A childhood friend told him that she had received the nude photos in her Facebook spam inbox.

“I just felt my blood get hot, and my heart went down to the center of the earth,” says the 24-year-old, who requested that his name be withheld, citing concerns that the cybercriminals may track him down again and further extort him. “I can’t even begin to describe how embarrassing and humiliating it was.”

He fell victim to a growing crime in the United States: financial sextortion, a form of blackmail where predators persuade people to send explicit images or videos, then threaten to release the content unless the person sends a sum of money. In some cases, the crime can happen even if the participant doesn't send nude photos − the criminals use artificial intelligence to create highly realistic images. The most common victims are young men, particularly teenage boys ages 13 to 17.

Sextortion can lead to mental health problems and, in extreme cases, suicide. It has been connected to at least 30 deaths of teenage boys by suicide since 2021, according to a tally of private cases and the latest FBI numbers from cybersecurity experts.

More than half a dozen young men detailed their experiences to USA TODAY and recounted the shame, embarrassment and fear that kept them from telling someone they were being blackmailed or reporting it to the police.

Financial sextortion has exploded since the pandemic

Financial sextortion is the fastest-growing cybercrime targeting children in America, according to a report from the Network Contagion Research Institute. It probably has been around for decades, but in years past people didn't have the terminology or resources to report it in large numbers, says Lauren Coffren, executive director of the Exploited Children Division at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). 

In the years since the pandemic, reports of the blackmail surged − kids were online more, cybercriminals became more effective, and their operations grew in scale and organization.

In 2022, the FBI issued a public safety alert about "an explosion" of sextortion schemes that targeted more than 3,000 minors that year. From 2021 to 2023, tips received by NCMEC’s CyberTipline increased by more than 300%. The recently tabulated 2024 numbers reached an all-time high, the organization says.

That increase, Coffren says, is because cybercriminals have begun exploiting young people across the globe using the same scripts with each interaction.

One 17-year-old victim, who traced his blackmailer to Nigeria, says it’s “really frustrating” to navigate prosecution options. Another teen, whose predator was based in the Philippines, described the cyber abuse he experienced as “torture.”

“Even now, my blackmailer sometimes tries to contact me, but nothing has been shared because he would lose his leverage,” the second teen says.

The increased prevalence of the crime is also reflected by a surge in victims looking for support. Searches for “Sextortion” on Google have increased fivefold over the last 10 years. One of the largest financial sextortion support forums, r/Sextortion on Reddit, has grown to 33,000 members since its creation in 2020. 

Of forum posts that included gender information, 98% were male, according to a 2022 study of the thread. The thread’s main moderator, u/the_orig_odd_couple, says that in the past two years, there has been a noticeable increase in posts from victims who are under 18. 

Because predators are often abroad, these crimes typically land with the FBI. The agency declined to comment.

Online sexual exploitation can have long-term mental health effects

Teens are relying more on online friends than ever and often feel comfortable disclosing information to an online friend that they may not tell a physical one, said Melissa Stroebel, vice president of research and insights at Thorn, a technology nonprofit organization that creates products to shield children from sexual abuse. In 2023, more than 1 in 3 minors reported having an online sexual interaction.

Roughly 25% of sextortion is financial. Ninety percent of financial sextortion victims are young men ages 13 to 17, according to the NCMEC. Boys have a lower likelihood of disclosing victimization regarding sexual abuse but have higher risk-taking tendencies when it comes to sexual and romantic exploration in their teens, creating a perfect opportunity for blackmailers. Boys also aren’t featured as often in sexual abuse prevention conversations and materials, according to Stroebel.

“It’s really distinctly and disproportionately targeting that community,” Stroebel says. “Criminals are banking on the fact that they might have more success here.”

Because the human brain doesn’t finish developing until about age 25, young people respond to stress and decision-making differently from adults, which affects their ability to navigate these scams.

“Fear can compound and become very overwhelming in their brains, and then things start to feel bigger and bigger and bigger,” said Dr. Katie Hurley, senior director of clinical advising for the Jed Foundation. “Because often the threats are not just to themselves, but to other people they know, it feels like an intense amount of responsibility, and that's where they get frozen.”

Early experiences of abuse have long-term effects on their ability to build healthy relationships and establish trust with significant others later in life. Victims may develop anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder and are more prone to future experiences of online abuse, according to Laura Palumbo, communications director for the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.“Emotionally, the worst thing is not even the images themselves, it's the feeling of knowing that someone is after me with very, very bad intentions,” says the 17-year-old male victim.

Another male, who was just 13 years old when he was sextorted, says it took five years for the guilt and fear to subside. '

Hey I have ur nudes'

The exploitation typically starts with what seems like an innocent message through Instagram or Snapchat: “Hey there! I found your page through suggested friends.” The predator will direct the conversation to a sexual nature, and in some cases, send unsolicited nudes − often with the pressure or ask that the teen exchange their own.

Then the blackmail starts. Scammers ask for an amount, most commonly $500, to delete the images − or risk them being sent to the victim’s friends and family. To heighten these feelings of intimidation, criminals often create a countdown of how long victims have to send money, spamming teens with dozens of threats over the course of minutes or hours. The 17-year-old who spoke to USA TODAY says his abuser threatened to share the photos with child porn websites and live-camera porn sites; other blackmailers falsely told their victims they would become registered sex offenders. The act of grooming minor victims in order to receive nudes is illegal in the U.S.

Dozens of scripts obtained by USA TODAY outlined how extortionists create a sense of isolation and manipulate young victims.

“Hey I have ur nudes and everything needed to ruin your life, I have screenshot all ur followers and tags and those that comment on ur post. If you don’t cooperate with me, I won’t mind going through the stress of sending it to all of them,” one script read.I n reality, the account sending these messages is often a team of three to four foreign cybercriminals who simultaneously contact the victim, handle a money transfer, and conduct open-source research on the victim to find their family members, contacts and school.

Financial sextortion has often been traced to scammers in West African countries, including Nigeria and Ivory Coast, and Southeast Asian countries like the Philippines, according to the FBI.

For teens on social media, it should raise alarms if the person they receive a message from doesn't share mutual friends and if a profile’s photos look unusual, blurry or highly edited. In other cases, the Instagram accounts are highly believable, having been hacked from a real teenage girl or curated with photos over months.A 14-year-old who spoke to USA TODAY said he initially had suspicions about the account that sextorted him − the user was posing as a 15-year-old girl based in California but followed only 26 people and didn’t have any mutual followers.

Because scammers may be non-native English speakers, poor grammar or unusual vernacular can also be a tip-off of someone taking on a fake identity. 

Teens should also be alarmed if a new follower immediately guides a conversation to a romantic or sexual nature and should be wary of someone asking to move the conversation off social media onto a private text platform. Predators typically send unsolicited nudes within minutes, according to Coffren.

“This is a romance scam on steroids,” says cyber intelligence analyst Paul Raffile. “They are, within an hour, convincing these kids that they are trustworthy, that they can do something that potentially compromises themselves.”

Scammers have also abused the rise of generative artificial intelligence tools to create highly realistic deepfake images and videos. Roughly one of 10 reports Thorn reviewed involved artificially generated content.

'You might as well end it now':Terrorized by sextortion plot, a 17-year-old takes his life

Here’s what to do if you or your teen is sextorted 

Experts say victims should report the predator’s account but keep their own account and documentation of all messages. Having a paper trail of time frames and messages can be vital in finding a criminal's identity.

If a predator is going to send out images, it will typically happen within two weeks of contact. Once the images are sent out, the blackmailer loses their leverage and usually moves on, Coffren says.

Victims should report any attempt at sextortion to NCMEC’s CyberTipline, contact their local FBI field office, or report to the FBI at tips.fbi.gov. Teens experiencing sextortion should tell a trusted adult. For immediate mental health assistance, teens can also call or text the the 988 suicide hotline.

Those who have been scammed can work to remove the images from the internet through NCMEC’s Take It Down service, which works by assigning a digital fingerprint called a hash value to a reported sexually explicit photo or video from a minor. These hash values allow online platforms to remove the content, without the original image or video ever being viewed.

Experts agree telling teens to avoid social media platforms or not engage with strangers online is outdated advice given the sheer scale of the problem. Stroebel adds sex-shaming teen boys can inadvertently backfire. What’s more, a child could be blackmailed regardless of whether or not they’ve shared a nude image to begin with.

Parents should employ a mentality of discussing online exploitation “before it happens in case it happens,” Coffren says.

One young man, who was 23 at the time of blackmail, urged other victims to tell their parents. He panicked over “how stupid” he was after a scammer contacted him on Instagram but says his parents helped him navigate how to ignore his blackmailer and stay calm − and they blamed the predator, not their son, for what happened.

“Sextortion can happen to anyone. If it happens to you, please tell someone,” he says. “They will support you and be sympathetic.”

This article is the first in an ongoing USA TODAY series investigating a surge in financial sextortion and its mental health impact on teenage boys, which was connected to suicide in extreme cases.

Rachel Hale’s role covering youth mental health at USA TODAY is funded by a grant from Pivotal Ventures. Pivotal Ventures does not provide editorial input. Reach her at rhale@usatoday.com and @rachelleighhale on X.


Friday, December 14, 2018

Banned from the Olympic movement for sexual misconduct, these men are still coaching kids


Nancy Armour and Rachel Axon and Brent Schrotenboer

Gerald Murphy served time in prison after being convicted of lewd and lascivious assault of a child. The state of Florida permanently revoked his teaching certificate for the crime.

Murphy was also a youth coach, a member of USA Taekwondo. The elite sports organization’s leadership eventually found out about his past. So did high-ranking officials at the U.S. Olympic Committee.

Yet even after USA Taekwondo banned Murphy in 2014, the governing body and the U.S. Olympic Committee essentially forgot about him. Nobody raised an alarm when his wife filed paperwork with the state to take over the gym he’d once owned. Nobody thought to check if Murphy was still coaching.

He was.

For four years it was as if Murphy’s ban never happened. A USA TODAY investigation found he continued to coach young athletes at the same gym, and that gym remains a member of USA Taekwondo.

“Do I coach at the school? Yeah, I am the teacher and owner,” Murphy told a USA TODAY reporter in August as he opened the gym for class in a strip mall just north of downtown Tallahassee.

one of a half-dozen coaches banned for sexual misconduct who USA TODAY reporters found were still active in their sport. Three of them were working at events or facilities affiliated with the national sports governing bodies that are supposed to be enforcing the bans.
Scandals sparked by coaches who sexually abuse young athletes have rocked Olympic sports for more than a decade, most recently with the case of Larry Nassar. More than 350 women and girls accused the USA Gymnastics national team doctor of molesting them under the guise of medical treatment. He’s now serving an effective life sentence after pleading guilty last year to possession of child pornography and criminal sexual conduct.
In a damning review of what the U.S. Olympic Committee and USA Gymnastics knew about Nassar and when, investigators from the law firm Ropes & Gray said this week that the problem goes beyond individual predators. Structural flaws in the governance of both the Olympic committee and sports governing bodies have resulted in a hands-off, corporate-like approach that puts the priority on winning medals, not protecting athletes. 
Former U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Scott Blackmun drew particularly harsh criticism in the Ropes & Gray report, issued Monday. Under his watch, the Olympic Committee vowed repeatedly to fix its child-protection system and, over the past eight years, made intermittent attempts to reform it.
Yet USA TODAY's investigation found that gaping holes remain. 
USA TODAY winnowed hundreds of banned individuals to a smaller list of nearly five dozen based on the ability to determine the misconduct that led to their bans and any suggestion they might still be coaching. To identify those still involved in youth sports, reporters reviewed court records and social media posts, interviewed advocates and parents and visited gyms and other athletic facilities around the nation.
These programs range from those that train young athletes for the Olympics to those at the grassroots level.

If you find someone you think is still coaching, please email us at: banned@usatoday.com.  

Reporters also examined how the USOC and its 49 sports governing bodies track coaches who have been banned from participation in the Olympic movement. (USA Skateboarding, which was recognized by the USOC in June as its 50th governing body, was not included in the survey.) There they found a historically hands-off approach by the USOC, which left the job of protecting children largely to the governing bodies, many of which lack funding, staff and expertise.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., was not surprised to learn banned coaches remained active.
“One is too many,” said Blumenthal, ranking member of the Senate subcommittee that is investigating sexual abuse in the Olympic movement. “The six that you found probably are only the tip of the iceberg, judging by the laxity of enforcement and apprehension.”
At least 931 people have been sanctioned by a national governing body or by the national U.S. Center for SafeSport, a USA TODAY analysis of their publicly available lists and database found. Those sanctions often follow criminal cases or an investigation by the governing body or the center. The people on those lists are spread across every state and 36 sports. More than two-thirds are permanently forbidden to participate in the U.S. Olympic movement.
“It seems to me there’s still an issue of too much concern about the adult and not nearly enough concern about the safety of the children.” Marci Hamilton, CEO of CHILD USA
Yet no cohesive system warns parents when coaches have been banned. The USOC and its governing bodies rarely follow up to ensure that they are being kept away from young athletes.
As a result, coaches who violate their bans – and the facilities and organizations that hire them – face few repercussions.
Just 17 of 40 governing bodies that responded to a USA TODAY survey said they even have the power to take action against gyms and clubs that ignored the bans. (Nine of the governing bodies, including three of the largest – USA Volleyball, US Speedskating and U.S. Ski & Snowboard – did not respond to the survey.)
“What we’ve seen in more vigorous or effectual enforcement is close to zero,” Blumenthal said. “And it’s a major failure on the part of the USOC (that) ... puts athletes at risk every day.”
Lists of people barred from their sport form the backbone of the child protection system. But those lists have their own limitations.
A searchable database maintained by SafeSport, which now handles all sexual misconduct cases for the USOC and its governing bodies, includes only those banned or suspended since SafeSport opened in March 2017.
Finding coaches banned before that requires scouring the individual lists of the sports governing bodies. Only about half of the 40 governing bodies that responded to the USA TODAY survey maintain any sort of public list, however, and some of those simply duplicate what’s on SafeSport’s website. Three governing bodies – USA Climbing, USA Hockey and U.S. Soccer – have lists that they do not publish.
What’s included varies widely as well. Of the 931 cases, nearly 200 provide no detail about why the person was sanctioned. 
Figure skating’s list includes Tonya Harding, who was banned in 1994 for her role in the physical assault of fellow skater Nancy Kerrigan. Weightlifting includes those banned for doping. SafeSport’s database leaves out location details nearly a third of the time.
“They should also be erring on the side of caution so if there is a reason to think that someone has come forward and there was abuse of any variety, that person should be suspended and not permitted in the sport,” said Marci Hamilton, chief executive officer of CHILD USA, a nonprofit think tank that works to prevent child abuse.
“It seems to me there’s still an issue of too much concern about the adult and not nearly enough concern about the safety of the children.”
Eric Steele, who became executive director of USA Roller Sports in January after two decades with the Boy Scouts, said the Olympic movement is far behind other organizations, hampered by a lack of coordination.
For sports, Steele said, “there’s probably at least 35 different membership databases with different software, and they all have different capabilities.”
Under pressure from Congress, which has held five hearings over the past eight months, the USOC in late May required for the first time that governing bodies share information on people they had banned. SafeSport is now working to add those banned for sexual misconduct before March 2017 to the center’s database. CEO Shellie Pfohl said the goal is to complete that in early 2019.
At one of the hearings, the then-acting CEO of the Olympic movement, Susanne Lyons, acknowledged that the USOC needed centralized information on banned individuals across the movement. 
“It has not happened to date, and I regret that we did not exercise more of our authority to enforce that standard ... prior to this,” she said in May.
In a phone call after the release of the Ropes & Gray report, USA TODAY presented its findings to Lyons, who will become chairwoman of the USOC board Jan. 1.
Asked whether those findings undercut the USOC's assertions that it has taken meaningful action over the past eight years, Lyons said: "I think it’s going to take some time. ... We need to help the NGBs develop the right policies and procedures to enforce that all the way down to the grassroots level, because that is obviously a weakness in the system."

A felon and a coach

Murphy’s case underscores how easy it can be for banned coaches to get around sanctions.
At 35, Murphy was convicted in 1989 of lewd and lascivious assault of a child after being found in bed with Mistie Diaz, who was 14 at the time and baby-sat Murphy’s children. She had met Murphy while she was a student at a school where he was a teacher.
Murphy spent 18 months in prison after failing to meet the conditions of his sentencing.
Yet in 2014, Murphy was coaching at the statewide competition in Florida, which sends athletes to the national championship. Another coach alerted Ronda Sweet, a former USA Taekwondo board chairwoman, to Murphy’s felony conviction. She in turn informed USA Taekwondo’s attorney, board chairman and CEO.
Sweet also contacted John Ruger, then the USOC’s athlete ombudsman. Lyons was a USOC board member at the time and, while following up with her on another coach’s case, Sweet mentioned Murphy’s past to her, too.
“I know it was 25 years ago. SafeSport does not have a statute of limitations,” Sweet wrote to Lyons in an email obtained by USA TODAY. “This guy can't teach in a Florida school. (B)ut he can teach and coach at (USA Taekwondo) events.”
Lyons emailed Sweet back on April 4, 2014: “Very disappointing. I have asked that USOC look into this.” USA Taekwondo announced Murphy’s ban the same day.
The ban was supposed to get Murphy out of the USA Taekwondo system by stripping him of his membership. But USA TODAY found he has been coaching at the same gym in Tallahassee since he was banned.
“I don’t think he should be teaching at all. He did it to me. Who else has he done it to?” Mistie Diaz on Gerald Murphy


“I don’t think he should be teaching at all,” said Diaz, now 44, who agreed to be identified for this story. “He did it to me. Who else has he done it to?”
Four days after Murphy was banned, his wife incorporated the Dragon System Institute of Martial Arts. Her name appears on its state incorporation paperwork, and Murphy’s son is listed as general manager.
In August, Murphy showed a USA TODAY reporter three certificates his wife received for completing SafeSport training in March. His wife and son are USA Taekwondo members, Murphy said, and coach the school’s athletes at events sanctioned by national governing bodies. 
The club was still listed as a member on USA Taekwondo’s website as of Nov. 21. It’s not clear in whose name the club was registered with the governing body. After USA TODAY sent the organization detailed questions about Murphy, the club was removed from the governing body's club locator app.
Most of the governing bodies surveyed told USA TODAY their membership systems would prevent a banned individual from obtaining a membership or participating in sanctioned events. But none checks with its member clubs to see if that’s happening or monitors members to make sure they’re not employing anyone who is banned.  
While Murphy’s wife owning a school should have raised a red flag, that would require someone on USA Taekwondo’s small staff – listed as 11 people on its website – to notice similarities in names and addresses to people on the banned list.
Asked during a Senate hearing in October whether banned coaches are able to work at clubs, USA Weightlifting CEO Phil Andrews responded: “That problem does exist. … I think the biggest issue is the fact that the club level, physically we are not in all of these cities ourselves. Physically, we’re not there to investigate and to enforce these bans.”
Instead, governing bodies rely on the public – individual members and parents, primarily – to do their investigative work.  
Luquanda Colston’s three children go to Dragon System Martial Arts, and she has taken classes there herself. Stopped in a nearby parking lot, she said she did not know USA Taekwondo had such a list or that Murphy was on it.
Colston said that if she had known Murphy was banned, it probably would have affected her decision to sign her children up at his school.
“That would be concerning, yeah, because that is important for parents to know,” she said.
USA Taekwondo has the power to enforce Murphy’s ban. It was one of 17 governing bodies that responded to USA TODAY’s survey by saying it could revoke a club’s membership or impose other sanctions for not abiding by the list. But only USA Gymnastics has ever taken that step.
The USOC did not respond to questions about the role its officials played in Murphy’s case. USA Taekwondo executive director Steve McNally declined to answer detailed questions about Murphy’s case and its policies, saying the governing body was "involved in a legal process that prevents me from commenting."
But in an earlier response, to USA TODAY's survey, McNally said that if his organization “receives a report” about a banned member participating in a member club, it would write to the club “reminding them of their obligations as members, and informing them that if they don’t take corrective action by a specific date the club’s membership will also be removed.”
“If we are successful in determining what individuals are abusing athletes but they continue to find employment elsewhere or they continue to work in their current jobs, then we’ve accomplished really nothing,” said Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, chair of the Senate subcommittee that is investigating sexual abuse in the Olympic movement.

USOC ignores advice

The USOC has long maintained that preventing sexual abuse in the Olympic movement is not its job.
The governing bodies are more likely to have day-to-day interaction with athletes and coaches. That, the Olympic committee has said, makes them better suited to enforce sexual misconduct policies, including the banned lists. 
That long-standing resistance to taking the lead was reflected in Blackmun's acknowledgment that sexual abuse wasn't even on his radar when he took over as CEO.
"When I started in 2010 if someone said what are the top 15 priorities for the USOC, I wouldn’t have had sex abuse on the list," Blackmun told the Ropes & Gray investigators. 
That stance ignores the power the USOC has through the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act, the 1978 law that chartered the USOC and provides protections for athletes, coaches and officials.   
The USOC decides what nonprofit organization is recognized as the sport’s governing body. And the USOC can revoke that recognition if it feels a governing body is not meeting its obligations to athletes.   
The committee “literally can do whatever they want to,” said Nancy Hogshead-Makar, an Olympic swimming gold medalist and civil rights attorney who founded the nonprofit Champion Women to advocate for girls and women in sport. “Congress imbued them with the absolute authority to be able to regulate, discipline, fine, decertify, audit – anything they want to with the national governing bodies.”
Yet for years the USOC rebuffed requests from its governing bodies to exercise its authority. At one point the committee chastised USA Gymnastics for taking the initiative to crack down on coaches.
In 1999, the USOC threatened to revoke USA Gymnastics’ national governing body status because it was automatically banning coaches convicted of sex crimes. The USOC was concerned that not giving those coaches a hearing could violate the Ted Stevens Act.
In a response, then-USA Gymnastics CEO Bob Colarossi foreshadowed the very scenario the Olympic movement now faces.
“This is not an issue that can be wished away,” he wrote. “The USOC can either position itself as a leader in the protection of young athletes or it can wait until it is forced to deal with the problem under much more difficult circumstances.”
In 2004 and again in 2005, then-USA Swimming executive director Chuck Wielgus recommended that the USOC follow the lead of other national youth organizations by crafting policies and programs that could be implemented at the local level.
The USOC ignored that advice.
Only after the revelation in 2010 that USA Swimming had quietly banned more than 35 coaches for sexual misconduct did the USOC launch a working group to address the problem. The group produced recommendations but little immediate action. A centralized list of banned coaches was discussed at length, but the working group determined it “was not the best solution for all sports organizations.”
It took three years for the group’s other recommendations to be implemented. As a result, Dec. 31, 2013, marked the first time that national governing bodies were required to conduct criminal background checks of coaches and other officials.
In the meantime, a second group – convened to develop what would ultimately become SafeSport – also considered the idea of a universal banned list. The idea stalled again.
In its report released this week, Ropes & Gray concluded the USOC failed to adopt “appropriate child-protective policies,” which had the effect of “allowing abuse to occur.”
The investigators wrote: “The USOC, despite having been directly informed by NGBs of the threat of sexual misconduct in elite sports, failed to address the risk until 2010, and then failed to take effective action for many years, permitting NGBs to continue adhering to inadequate and harmful policies and practices.”
Because the Olympic committee was so focused on success at the Summer and Winter Games, investigators said it wasn't even in a position to know if the governing bodies had strong, effective policies to protect against abuse.
Only 15 of the 40 governing bodies that responded to USA TODAY’s survey had a banned list before SafeSport opened in March 2017. In many cases, the reluctance to create a list stemmed from a fear of being sued by those on it.
That should no longer be an issue. A new federal law this year, the Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Abuse and SafeSport Authorization Act, protects SafeSport and the national governing bodies from defamation lawsuits without proof of actual malice.
“It is positive that USOC’s independent investigators published their report today, if only so that the USOC can no longer cite an ongoing independent investigation as its reason for delaying change," Moran said in a statement Monday after the Ropes & Gray report's release.
While the USOC has touted SafeSport as a game-changer in protecting young athletes, even that did not come easily. The center opened nearly three years after the Olympic committee announced its creation as the USOC struggled to raise outside funding.  
In contrast, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency began operating a year after the USOC approved its creation.
The USOC often compares the two efforts, but they continue to have drastically different resources. In 2017, the anti-doping agency received $9.5 million from the federal government and $5.1 million from the USOC. SafeSport’s budget includes $3.1 million from the USOC, and it expects an additional $2.3 million starting this year under a three-year federal grant for prevention and education.
Inundated with more than 1,600 reports of sexual misconduct or abuse, SafeSport increased its staff from four employees to 29 as of late October.
Blumenthal said he supports increased funding from Congress.
“We’re not talking about billions of dollars,” he said. “In the total scheme of the federal budget, it’s a rounding term.”

‘Cannot say why he was active’

Public lists of banned coaches are not a cure-all, as the father of a girl once coached by Randall Cates learned.
After a 2015 hearing in Lexington, Kentucky, US Equestrian gave Cates its first lifetime ban, punishment for what it said was his “systemic and insidious grooming” of a female rider that included thousands of lurid text messages and, eventually, sexual relations when the girl was 16 or 17 and Cates was in his mid-40s.
Even though the athlete defended Cates and claimed her mother had fabricated the text messages, the hearing panel revoked Cates’ membership and permanently banned him from any affiliated training facilities or competitions.
Citing corroborating evidence found in the girl’s journal as well as the technological improbability of the mother making up thousands of messages, the panel said the texts “revealed a sordid multi-year attempt by Mr. Cates to draw Victim under his influence and groom her for sexual interaction.”
Cates was “constantly pushing for Victim to engage in sexual acts that she may have not been comfortable performing, such as oral sex and … sexual intercourse,” US Equestrian’s hearing panel stated.
Asked for comment, Cates said the “supposed victim testified that the alleged acts did not occur” and referred USA TODAY to her attorney. That attorney issued a statement for her saying that she denies the allegations and that “the numerous texts were fabricated.”
The girl did not cooperate with Tulsa police, her father said, and no criminal charges were filed. USA TODAY is not naming the father so his daughter will not be identified.
US Equestrian added Cates to the banned list on its website and sent letters to other organizations with ties to US Equestrian, such as the American Saddle Horse Association.
But that didn’t end Cates’ coaching career.
A property he owns in Oklahoma offers lessons and camps to young riders, and a USA TODAY reporter saw several teenagers there in June. Facebook posts from his account indicate he continued to participate in horse shows after the ban.
A post on May 21, 2017, praised a regional event by the Texas American Saddle Horse Association.
“Spring TASHA horse show in the books. I want to thank the TASHA organization for putting on a really fun horse show!” the post read.
Another Facebook post, from May 20 of this year, read, “TASHA always puts on a fantastic horse show! 17 horses and 48 entries in 2 days. Thank you to our customers and crew. See you TASHA at College Station in December!”
Both posts were removed from public view in June, after USA TODAY began asking about them.
Around that same time, US Equestrian sent a letter to the American Saddlebred Horse Association saying Cates’ activity was in “direct contravention to” the two organizations’ “Affiliate Agreement and the spirit of the Safe Sport Movement.”
US Equestrian asked the saddlebred association to ensure that competitions enforced suspensions and bans and “prohibit anyone on those lists from participating in any manner, including entering the competition show grounds.”
“When Cates was banned in 2015, USEF notified ASHA leadership, as well as the leadership of all other USEF-related affiliates, in writing of Cates’ ban,” US Equestrian CEO Bill Moroney said in a statement to USA TODAY. “We cannot say why he was active at local ASHA events, as the USEF ban extends to all affiliate organizations and he should not have been allowed to participate.”
The failure to make Cates’ ban stick came as a shock to the father of the female rider, who found out Cates was still active from USA TODAY.
“I don’t understand why they don’t publish his face on a poster and stick it up in every arena in the country,” the girl’s father said. “If you’re truly trying to protect these children, these little girls, then that’s what you would do.”

No real steps from USOC

Without a broader, more aggressive notification system, enforcement depends on  the vigilance of parents and others in the sport. Shifting that responsibility to families and even victims is a huge ask, as was demonstrated by the Herculean struggle to keep prominent volleyball coach Rick Butler out of the sport. 
For years, Butler was a powerhouse volleyball coach. His suburban Chicago club produced Olympians and nearly 1,000 college athletes.
USA Volleyball banned Butler in 1995 after it determined he had sexually abused three players in the 1980s before they turned 18. Butler’s attorney, Danielle Ambrose, said the coach acknowledged having sexual relationships with the women but argued they were legal and consensual.
Though USA Volleyball lifted part of the ban in 2000, Butler remained barred from coaching underage girls. Yet he continued to do so, openly.
The women who said Butler abused them as well as Hogshead-Makar’s organization, Champion Women, wrote 130 letters to clubs, sponsors and other sports organizations. Two more women filed complaints. In January, USA Volleyball banned him again, completely.
The organization put out a statement announcing the ban, and it wasn’t long before the Amateur Athletic Union and Junior Volleyball Association followed suit. In June, Walt Disney Resorts banned Butler from its property when it hosted the AAU national championships.
But he’s still involved in the sport. USA TODAY observed him overseeing a tournament at his facility over Memorial Day weekend. He also met with the elite team his wife coaches following a match that Butler had watched intently from just off the court.
“He has very good athletes, so college coaches probably will go look at his athletes,” said Sarah Powers-Barnhard, one of the women USA Volleyball found Butler had abused in the 1980s.
“His coaching has been hurt,” said Powers-Barnhard, now a coach herself. “Every time, his numbers are lower.”
Such broad coordination across sport governing bodies remains rare.
Of the governing bodies that responded to the USA TODAY survey, only USA Judo reported reciprocity with a peer organization, recognizing the disciplinary actions of both the U.S. Judo Association and the U.S. Judo Federation.
Five other governing bodies said they share information about banned individuals with other organizations, such as the AAU, or another sport governing body. Six share the information with their sport’s international federation.

That’s why a universal list needs to be the goal, Blumenthal said. But, he acknowledged, the USOC and the sport governing bodies have a long way to go to get there.
"There's no excuse for failing to use these lists – not only disseminating them to national governing boards but also imposing requirements that they be enforced and that there be penalties for clubs and organizations that fail to heed the warnings they provide,” he said.
“What we found in our hearings is a gap in dissemination and use of them, and we’ve seen no real steps from the USOC to correct that failing.”
Armour reported from Aurora, Illinois, and Grand Rapids, Michigan; Axon reported from Tallahassee, Florida; Jacksonville, Florida; and Columbus, Ohio; Schrotenboer reported from Edmond, Oklahoma.
Contributing: Matt Wynn, Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat

Saturday, December 1, 2018

'Toxic stress' on children can harm their lifelong learning, mental and physical health



The 10-year-old girl suffered from persistent asthma, but the cause was unclear. Tests ruled out everything from pet hair to cockroaches.
Then the girl's mother thought of a possible trigger. 
“Her asthma does seem to get worse whenever her dad punches a hole in the wall," she told Dr. Nadine Burke Harris. "Do you think that could be related?”
Harris, a San Francisco pediatrician, includes the example in her new book, "The Deepest Well," to show the connection between what's known as "toxic stress" and physical health.
Medical professionals and researchers have long studied the effect of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and lifelong mental health and addiction. Now awareness is growing of the link between childhood trauma on long-term physical health.
The more ACEs a person suffers as a child – divorce, domestic violence, family members with addiction – the higher the risk of problems later in learning, mental and physical health, even early death.
That's because people with ACEs are more likely to experience “toxic stress” – repeated, extreme activation of their stress response.
Toxic stress affects the developing brain, the immune system, the cardiovascular system and the metabolic regulatory system, says Al Race, deputy director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard. It dramatically increases the risk of hypertension, heart disease and diabetes, among other costly health conditions. 
Children with four or more ACEs are four times more likely to suffer from depression in their lifetimes, eight times more likely to become alcoholics and 20 times more likely to use intravenous drugs, research shows. Those who are exposed to very high doses of adversity without caring adults to help can have more than double the lifetime risk of heart disease and cancer and a nearly 20-year difference in life expectancy.
"There's a huge body of science that shows the connection between the early years of life with a wide range of health problems later in life," Race says. "Toxic stress allows us to understand why that relationship exists and how it can get inside developing biological systems in the body."
Given the stakes, researchers are scrambling to figure out how best to diagnose ACEs.
Researchers at Harvard, the University of California-San Francisco and other institutions are working on screening tools to detect the biological markers of toxic stress in children so they can detect it earlier and help parents mitigate the effects.
"There's no one accepted way to measure the effect of excessive stress activation," Race says. As with adults, he says, "every child reacts to stress differently."  
The Center for Youth Wellness, founded by Harris, has launched a social media campaign and the new Stress Health website to share the science with parents. The National Pediatric Practice Community, a network of nearly 600 doctors organized by the center, is screening for ACEs and sharing ways to reduce their influence on mental and physical health.
Dr. Imelda Dacones is CEO of Northwest Permanente, the independent medical group that provides care to Kaiser Permanente members in the Northwest.
"More people are clamoring for government policy and health care organizations to provide trauma-informed care because the data is out there," she says. "The sad thing about ACEs is we've known about them since 1997, but there's been a lag in translating it to create a system to actually do something about it."
More than 20 million children have experienced three or more ACEs. Dr. Don Mordecai, the mental health leader for Kaiser Permanente, says children who experience multiple ACEs are at risk for toxic stress and the lifelong mental and physical health effects it can have.
Kaiser Permanente worked with the  federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to produce the original study on ACEs more than 20 years ago. 
About 25 percent of adults have experienced at least three or more ACEs.
In her book, Harris describes physical and emotional abuse as common for both the diverse patients at her low-cost clinic and the wealthy people in her area. 
"I see it every day in my practice," Harris says.
She sees children who experience frequent infections, failure to grow well and learning disabilities. 
The effect can start in infancy, Harris says, and is experienced by even sleeping babies who are in stressful environments.
One of the key ways parents can protect their children, she says, is by nurturing healthy relationships outside the home, especially if they experienced their own traumatic childhoods.
"All of the research is telling us that relationships are healing," Harris says. "Folks who have high levels of social support are more resistant to the flu and have better immune functioning."
Sleep, good nutrition, mindfulness and exercise also help. 
Former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, a primary-care physician, has made human connection for adults’ health his post-government priority.
Harris and Murthy, who have been friends for more than two decades, agree that positive relationships help adults become better parents.
When parents' friends are part of children's lives, Harris says, they can boost the child's "cumulative dose of therapeutic interaction."
We can't "choose the homes in which we grew up," Murthy says, but relationships with family and others outside the home can help parents and others heal from early trauma.
Murthy is writing a book on social isolation.
"I worry we have come so far in terms of medicine, technology and economic advancement but seem to have a growing amount of emotional pain," he says. To help people heal from childhood or current trauma, he says, "one of the most powerful ways we can do that is by cultivating strong connections."
More:
The CDC is continuing the work it started with Kaiser Permanente by occasionally monitoring the health of the 17,000 people it began studying in 1995.
The Northwest Permanente Medical Group is developing a health complexity score, incorporating medical complexity and social complexity scores, for children and families.
The social complexity score will be based on information from the Oregon state health and human services agency, which will track ACEs as children and families move through services for food, housing, financial help, or correctional facilities. The scores will be used to help connect people with social organizations.
Here are common signs of toxic stress in school-age children, according to the Center for Youth Wellness:
• Poor coping skills.
• Behavior and learning difficulties.
• Mood swings.
• Sleep problems.  
• Overeating and other compulsive behaviors.
• Fear and anxiety triggered by places or people that remind them of past trauma. 
Rahil Briggs is national director of HealthySteps, a pediatric program that works with parents and children to influence behavior to better prepare them for kindergarten, and founder of a pediatric psychology center at Montefiore Health System in New York. Montefiore is one of five medical sites working with Harvard on its biomarkers research.
When Briggs thinks of toxic stress, she thinks of two children, ages 7 months and 2 years, who were home in 2006 when their father killed a third sibling.
The infant couldn't sit up, and the toddler wouldn't speak at an age when kids should know 50 words and be able to string two together.
Worse yet, they both cried inconsolably. The older child would crawl under furniture when he wanted to soothe himself. 
"This child was finely tuned to understand it's better just to retreat rather than to ask for help," Briggs says. 
When children don't gain enough weight, or lose too much, they can be diagnosed with "failure to thrive." Briggs says the diagnosis is most often "related to the environment the child is growing up in."
Harris hopes her digital ad campaign will remind some parents of the danger their homes present for their children's long-term health.
In the video ads, a boy puts an ice pack on his sleeping mother's eye and cleans up liquor bottles around his father, who is sleeping on a couch.
He puts all the bottles into trash bags and stuffs them into an overflowing closet. He is shown opening the closet later in life.
Jabeen Yusuf heads public health education at the Center for Youth Wellness.
"For a lot of parents, they understand that if you’re hitting your child, it's harmful to their child," she says. "But they will say, 'I didn't realize the things they are witnessing could be harmful to their health.'"
Yusuf calls it the "myth of childhood amnesia."
"We have to create safe, stable relationships and sometimes leaving a dangerous environment is what’s going to be necessary," Harris says. "A lot of the times, moms in particular are willing to do for their children what they are not willing to do for themselves." 
If you are interested in connecting with people online who have overcome or are currently struggling with the health problems mentioned in this story, join USA TODAY’s ‘I Survived It’ Facebook support group.
Original Article