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Saturday, February 22, 2025

CyberTipline - NCMEC - Trinity Mount Ministries - REPORT CHILD ABUSE! REPORT CSAM! 1-800-843-5678

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Overview

NCMEC’s CyberTipline is the nation’s centralized reporting system for the online exploitation of children. The public and electronic service providers can make reports of suspected online enticement of children for sexual acts, child sexual molestation, child sexual abuse material, child sex tourism, child sex trafficking, unsolicited obscene materials sent to a child, misleading domain names, and misleading words or digital images on the internet.

Every child deserves a safe childhood.

What Happens to Information in a CyberTip?

NCMEC staff review each tip and work to find a potential location for the incident reported so that it may be made available to the appropriate law-enforcement agency for possible investigation. We also use the information from our CyberTipline reports to help shape our prevention and safety messages.

Is Your Image Out There?

Get Support

One of the worst things about having an explicit image online is feeling like you’re facing everything alone. But you have people who care for you and want to help. Reach out to them!

A trusted adult can offer advice, help you report, and help you deal with other issues. It could be your mom, dad, an aunt, a school counselor, or anyone you trust and are comfortable talking to. You can also “self report” by making a report on your own to the CyberTipline.

Families of exploited children often feel alone in their struggle and overwhelmed by the issues affecting their lives. NCMEC provides assistance and support to victims and families such as crisis intervention and local counseling referrals to appropriate professionals. Additionally, NCMEC’s Team HOPE is a volunteer program that connects families to others who have experienced the crisis of a sexually exploited child.

Don't Give Up

Having a sexually exploitative image of yourself exposed online is a scary experience. It can make you feel vulnerable and isolated, but remember, others have been in the same situation as you – and they’ve overcome it. Learn the steps you can take to limit the spread of the content.

By the Numbers

In 2023, reports made to the CyberTipline rose more than 12% from the previous year, surpassing 36.2 million reports.

There were 105,653,162 data files reported to the CyberTipline in 2023.

Reports of online enticement increased by more than 300% from 44,155 in 2021 to 186,819 in 2023. 

Find more data in the CyberTipline Report.

By the Numbers

In 2022:

Find more data in the CyberTipline Report.

More

Learn more about online exploitation and safety.

Coping with Child Sexual Abuse (CSAM) Exposure For Families

Production and Active Trading of Child Sexual Exploitation Images Depicting Identified Victims

Trends Identified in CyberTipline Sextortion Reports

The Online Enticement of Children: An In-Depth Analysis of CyberTipline Reports

How NCMEC is responding to the ever-changing threats to children online.

NCMEC is a founding member of



Thursday, February 20, 2025

Police Arrest Santa Clara Teacher For Having An Inappropriate Relationship With A Student



David Alexander

POSTED 11:00 AM, February 19, 2025 | UPDATED AT 09:33 AM, February 20, 2025

Los Gatos-Monte Sereno police have arrested Darrin Garcia, a former teacher and current athletic director at SCUSD for alleged sex with a minor.

A former Santa Clara High School teacher and “well-known” coach stands accused of having sex with a student.

Darrin Garcia, 53, has been an athletic director in the Santa Clara Unified School District (SCUSD) since 2022, according to SCUSD. Prior to that role, Garcia was a gym and health teacher at Santa Clara High School, where he also coached track.

He has also been a sports mentor across the county.

On Feb. 12, Los Gatos-Monte Sereno police nabbed Garcia at Kathleen McDonald High School in San Jose where he works, charging him with statutory rape.

“These are extremely serious charges. The safety and security of our students are our top priorities,” SCUSD officials wrote in a statement. “Our priorities of student safety and well-being will continue to guide our actions.”

Police executed the warrant after they received a report alleging that Garcia had a sexual relationship with a student from 2021 to 2023 while teaching at Santa Clara High School, according to police.

In an email exchange, Sgt. Katherine Mann, with Los Gatos-Monte Sereno police, wrote that Garcia no longer lives in Los Gatos, where he allegedly had sex with the girl.

The investigation continues, Mann wrote, with detectives scouring Garcia’s electronic devices and conducting follow-up. She wrote that she does not know whether there are more victims.

Garcia is a father of two, according to a 2016 article in The Roar, the Santa Clara High School student news website. At the time of the article, his son was 11, and his daughter was 13, making them in their twenties. He has taught at Lynbrook High School in San Jose and Saratoga High School in Saratoga, according to the article.

SCUSD has placed Garcia on administrative leave, according to the school district’s statement. The school district conducts background checks with the Department of Justice and FBI prior to hiring employees and gets “timely notifications” if its employees are charged with a crime.

The school district is conducting its own investigation but due to employee privacy concerns, is limited in how much information it can release, according to the statement.

While school officials acknowledge that the news is “shocking and can bring up a range of emotions,” it does not intend to plan to “communicate directly with students” about the arrest.

However, Jennifer Dericco, SCUSD’s public information officer, wrote in an email that school officials met with students Feb. 14 to “share resources, including our school’s wellness team.”

“Working together, we can maintain an environment where all students can remain focused on learning,” school officials wrote in the statement.

How much jail time Garcia will face if convicted will depend on how the Santa Clara County District Attorney decides to prosecute the case, Mann wrote.

The rape charge, California Penal Code Section 261.5, could be either a felony or a misdemeanor. If convicted of a misdemeanor, according to the code, Garcia would face a year in county jail. If convicted of a felony, he could face up to four years in county jail.

A second charge, “bigamy, incest and crimes against nature,” is a felony punishable by “imprisonment in the state prison for the term prescribed,” according to the California Penal Code.

Because Garcia is older than 21, the charge’s severity depends on whether the victim was 16 years old or younger at the time of the crime, information that police and the district did not provide.

However, given the alleged relationship began in 2021, it is unlikely the girl was 17 at the start of it. If the victim were 17 in 2021, that would likely have made her 19 in 2023, making it unlikely she was still in high school.

The law does not ordinarily require statutory rapists to register as sex offenders, according to California Penal Code.

Police are asking anyone with information about this case to contact Detective Riley Frizzell at (408) 827-3558 or police@losgatosca.gov.

Garcia is out on bail.

Contact David Alexander at d.todd.alexander@gmail.com

The Silicon Valley Voice


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.


Grassley Opening Statement on Ensuring Children’s Safety in the Digital Era

 

Prepared Opening Statement by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee


Wednesday, February 19, 2025
 
Good morning. In today’s digital era, our young people face risks that previous generations couldn’t have imagined. Even though technology brings amazing opportunities for education and growth, it also opens the door to new dangers that we must confront. This isn’t the first hearing we’ve had on this issue. And unfortunately, it probably won’t be the last.
 
We held a hearing on this same subject roughly a year ago, when we brought in CEOs from some of the largest social media companies to discuss safety issues on their platforms. And we held a similar hearing a year before that.
 
On the one hand, this is alarming because the problem is getting worse. In 2023, for instance, the NCMEC CyberTipline received 36.2 million reports of suspected online child sexual exploitation, a 12% increase over 2022. And even though the numbers haven’t been published for 2024, I hear they’re only expected to go up.
 
Additionally alarming are the new technologies that are being used by bad actors to exploit children online. Predators can use Generative AI, for instance, to take normal images of children and manipulate them to create novel forms of CSAM. In 2024 alone, NCMEC reported over 60,890 instances of Generative AI CSAM.
 
Despite this, so far, Congress has enacted no significant legislation to address the dangers children face online. And tech platforms have been unhelpful in our legislative efforts. Big Tech promises to collaborate, but they’re noticeably silent in supporting legislation that would effect meaningful change. In fact, Big Tech’s lobbyists swarm the Hill, armed with red herrings and scare tactics, suggesting that we’ll somehow break the Internet if we implement even modest reforms.
 
Meanwhile, these tech platforms generate revenues that dwarf the economies of most nations. How do they make so much money? By compromising our data and privacy, and by keeping our children’s eyes glued to the screens through addictive algorithms.

Indeed, in one recent study, 46% of teens reported that they are online “almost constantly.” This has had severe mental health consequences for adolescents. It has also led to a rise in sexual exploitation, as some algorithms have actually connected victims to their abusers.
 
Should tech platforms be allowed to profit at the expense of our children’s privacy, safety and health? Should they be allowed to contribute to a toxic digital ecosystem without being held accountable? I believe the answer is clear. When these platforms fail to implement adequate safety measures, they are complicit in the harm that follows, and they should be held accountable.
 
That said, there are some signs of encouragement. Just as new technologies are being developed that exacerbate harms to children online, so too are technologies being developed to combat exploitation. For example, with AI rapidly evolving, open-source safety tools are being developed to recognize and report CSAM. Some of the witnesses here today will be able to speak to these tools.
 
Additionally, on a Committee with some of the most diverse viewpoints in the Senate, we’ve advanced bipartisan legislation that addresses legal gaps in our current framework—especially those related to the blanket immunity that Section 230 provides.
 
Last Congress, for example, we reported several online safety bills out of Committee with overwhelming bipartisan support. And there are a number of bills that are being considered and refined this Congress, which we’ll give attention to in due course.
 
That being said, we can’t come up with a wise and effective legislative solution without first understanding the nature and scope of the problem. That’s why we’re here today. Our witnesses come from various backgrounds and represent diverse perspectives, all of which point to the need for our Committee to improve legislation and continue working to keep our kids safe.