Cybersecurity

FBI, DOJ warn of ‘staggering increase’ in cases of sexploitation among minors

The FBI issued a national public safety alert Monday about a “staggering increase” in cases over the last year.

Rows of laptop computers are set up.

Several federal agencies warned on Monday of a significant uptick in cases of “financial sexploitation” of children and teens, a cybercrime in which the victims are coerced into sending explicit images online and then extorted for money.

The FBI, in partnership with the Justice Department and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, issued a national public safety alert Monday about what an FBI official described as a “staggering increase” in cases — 7,000 reports in the last year alone, according to the agencies. Those reports have resulted in at least 3,000 victims and over a dozen related suicides, a Justice Department official said.

The majority of offenders are based in West Africa — specifically Nigeria and the Ivory Coast — and the victims are overwhelmingly male, according to the alert. Offenders typically engage with their victims over social media platforms like Instagram and Facebook, but can also take place on gaming platforms

In a rare move, the agencies did not announce plans to prosecute any individuals in connection with the reports.

“When it comes to these types of prosecutions, they can be quite difficult, first and foremost with identification of offenders,” a Justice Department official noted.

Online identities can be difficult to validate and are easy to fake, and linking them back to a real person can take a long time, the official said. These cases are further complicated by the fact that most offenders are located outside the U.S., leading to questions of extradition.

The alert was purposefully timed as children and families prepare for winter break, a Justice Department official said, as “a lot of kids are going to be out of school at home, spending a lot of time online.”