Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

'More Canadian Teens Sharing Sexual Images, Being Extorted'

Chinta Puxley, The Canadian Press, 05 Sep, 2014 12:51 PM
    WINNIPEG - The Canadian Centre for Child Protection says it is seeing an alarming increase in the number of teens who are sharing sexual images of themselves through live web chats and then being extorted for money.
     
    The centre, based in Winnipeg, said its tipline has received more than a dozen calls from teens in the past few weeks saying they are being blackmailed this way.
     
    Signy Arnason, the centre's associate director, said an adult poses as a teenager and secretly records teens exposing themselves. The adult then threatens to share the sexual images unless the teen pays between $200 to $900.
     
    "The number 1 request from these kids is 'I just want this to go away, I don't want my parents to know'," Arnason said. "It's 'Help me, help me make this issue go away.'"
     
    This kind of "sextortion" has been blamed for driving some tormented teens to commit suicide.
     
    Amanda Todd, a 15-year-old in British Columbia, committed suicide in 2012 after being extorted for two years. She exposed herself while on a web chat and the image was used to blackmail her into putting on another "show" online. She eventually posted a heartbreaking, nine-minute video online detailing her torment before committing suicide.
     
    The suicide of another sexually exploited teenager in Nova Scotia in 2013, who cannot be named under a publication ban, turned a spotlight on cyberbullying and prompted new laws on the distribution of sexual images.
     
    But Arnason said this kind of continued sexual extortion highlights the risks teens face with live video streaming because they can be filmed without their knowledge. She said teenagers are impulsive and sexually curious — a deadly combination online.
     
    "When they're on live video chat, they're really not thinking about the tactics somebody could be using on the other side to be recording what they're doing," she said. "They think they're living in the here and now — it's live — and when they close that off, it's over."
     
    Even if the blackmailer is paid, Arnason said that is no guarantee the incriminating pictures or video are destroyed. Often the extortion escalates, she said.
     
    "The individual still has that video or image," she said. "They can tell you they're deleting it but why would anybody believe them? They're still in possession of what these kids so desperately want back."
     
    Although there is more awareness about cyberbullying, Arnason said parents must talk to their children to make sure they understand the dangers of sexual behaviour online. Parents also have to make sure their teens feel comfortable coming to them if they run into trouble online, she said.
     
    "It doesn't mean you're not going to be upset or that you don't need to talk about it the next day but you need to let your kid know you're there for them," Arnason said.
     
    "If we can increase the likelihood that they come forward, we're going to reduce the chances that they pay the money, that they maybe send another sexual image hoping it will go away."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former NHL enforcer facing assault and driving charges in Kamloops, B.C.

    Former NHL enforcer facing assault and driving charges in Kamloops, B.C.
    A former NHL tough guy is facing assault and driving charges after an alleged incident in Kamloops, B.C.

    Former NHL enforcer facing assault and driving charges in Kamloops, B.C.

    Bombardier workers in Thunder Bay, Ont., turn down latest company offer

    Bombardier workers in Thunder Bay, Ont., turn down latest company offer
    Workers at Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) in Thunder Bay, Ont., have rejected the latest offer from the transportation company.

    Bombardier workers in Thunder Bay, Ont., turn down latest company offer

    Halifax university changes frosh week, a year after incident shone spotlight

    Halifax university changes frosh week, a year after incident shone spotlight
    Saint Mary's University in Halifax is providing training to student leaders who are involved in orientation week activities, nearly a year since a frosh chant glorified non-consensual sex with underage girls.

    Halifax university changes frosh week, a year after incident shone spotlight

    NDP government would open inquiry into native women murders within 100 days

    NDP government would open inquiry into native women murders within 100 days
    Tom Mulcair says an NDP government would establish a full public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women within 100 days of taking office.

    NDP government would open inquiry into native women murders within 100 days

    Fire crews start extinguishing Iqaluit's 'dumpcano'

    Fire crews start extinguishing Iqaluit's 'dumpcano'
    Fire crews are hoping to finally start pumping water on a dump fire in Iqaluit that has been smouldering since May.

    Fire crews start extinguishing Iqaluit's 'dumpcano'

    Canadians pay more than $500M in fees a year for paper bills, statements: report

    Canadians pay more than $500M in fees a year for paper bills, statements: report
    Canadians are probably paying more than half a billion dollars a year to receive printed bills and bank statements by mail, according to the Public Interest Advocacy Centre.

    Canadians pay more than $500M in fees a year for paper bills, statements: report