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What Is Sextortion
Power Topic
What’s Ahead
- What is sextortion?
- How does it start?
- Who can be trusted online?
- What should I do if this is happening to me?
- How can I help someone else?
- How can I protect myself and my friends?
- What can I do if I am sexually assaulted?
- What can I do if I experience or witness sexual harassment?
What Is Sextortion?
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The FBI defines sextortion as a crime that occurs online when an adult convinces a person under the age of 18 to share sexual images or perform sexual acts on a webcam.
- The FBI is seeing an alarming increase in sextortion cases.
- Perpetrators exploit young people through connected devices, often within their own homes.
- The strategies shared here can help protect against sextortion by perpetrators of any age.
How Does Sextortion Start?
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Sextortion can begin on any online platform where people communicate. A perpetrator may contact you:
- While you are playing online games
- Through dating apps
- Via social media platforms
- In some cases, the first contact is a threat claiming the person already has images or videos.
- More commonly, perpetrators pretend to be someone your age and express romantic interest or offer something of value.
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To pressure victims into sharing images, perpetrators may use:
- Threats
- Flattery
- Money
- Gifts or in-game rewards
- Once images are obtained, perpetrators threaten to share them to demand more.
- An adult commits a crime the moment they ask a minor for a sexual image.
How Do Perpetrators Do This?
- Perpetrators study how to target children and teens online.
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In documented cases, perpetrators have:
- Pretended to be teenagers on social media
- Offered money, smartphones, or gaming currency
- Made threats of physical violence or harm
- Used video games to exchange rewards for images
Watch this short video of a sextortion survivor describing her experience at age 14.
Talk About It
- Has anyone you didn’t know ever tried to contact you online?
- Did you ever suspect an adult was pretending to be a teen?
- What did you do—or what would you do—if this happened?
- Why do you think adults seek out youth online?
Who Can Be Trusted Online?
- It can be very difficult to know who to trust online.
- The FBI reports that perpetrators often manage dozens of accounts and communicate with many young people simultaneously.
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Be extremely cautious when sharing personal information online:
- It may feel safe to be online at home, but harm can still occur.
- Avoid sharing your full name, address, school, age, location, or friends’ names.
How Can Sextortion Harm Me?
- Even without in-person contact, sextortion causes serious emotional harm.
- Perpetrators can become relentless in their threats and harassment.
- Victims often feel scared, ashamed, anxious, isolated, and desperate.
- Many victims feel trapped and unsure how to escape the situation.
What Should I Do If This Is Happening to Me?
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Tell a trusted adult that you are being targeted online and need help.
- You are not in trouble.
- There are people who can help stop this.
- Contact the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST (843-5678) or online.
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Reach out to the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324) or report the crime online.
- FBI agents handle these cases regularly.
- Their goal is to stop the abuse and help you stay safe.
Will I Be in Trouble?
- You are not breaking the law.
- Perpetrators rely on fear and embarrassment to keep victims silent.
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You are not at fault even if:
- You were using an app you were too young to be on
- You initially felt comfortable creating content
- You accepted money, gifts, or in-game rewards
Sextortion is a crime because it is illegal and wrong for an adult to request, pay for, or demand sexual images from a minor.
How Can I Help Someone Else?
- Listen with compassion and without judgment
- Tell them you are sorry this is happening
- Reassure them they have done nothing wrong
- Encourage them to seek help and offer to support them in finding a trusted adult
How Can I Protect Myself and My Friends?
- Limit what you share online and review privacy settings
- Trust your instincts—block and report suspicious messages
- Remember that photos and videos can be fake or stolen
- Be cautious if someone asks to move conversations to private platforms
- Once content is shared, control over it is lost
- Ask for help immediately if something feels wrong
Protect yourself and your friends through awareness, caution, and by asking for help when needed.
Do More
- How can you help educate others about sextortion?
- Who at your school is responsible for helping with this issue?
- Who in your community could provide support?
- Share one thing you learned today and one action you will take moving forward