Lethbridge Herald

Dutch man sentenced in cyberbully­ing case

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — WINNIPEG

The mother of a 15-year-old Canadian girl whose suicide drew global attention to online abuse says she’s relieved and joyful after the man accused of tormenting her was sentenced to 11 years in prison by a Dutch court in a separate case.

Carol Todd, whose daughter Amanda Todd killed herself, said she’s happy Aydin Coban was given the maximum sentence on Thursday for cyberbully­ing dozens of young girls and gay men.

“I am grateful to the judges that they looked over all evidence and the testimony and realized that this person was guilty,” she said in an interview from Winnipeg. “I am saddened that someone has to go through those behaviours in order to bring joy to himself.”

The court in the Netherland­s convicted the 38-year-old man for fraud and blackmail via the internet, according to a statement from Dutch legal authoritie­s.

It gave him the maximum possible sentence of 10 years and eight months, “because of the devastatin­g consequenc­es his behaviour has on the young lives of the girls” in particular, and out of fear that he could commit new offences if released, the statement said.

He pretended to be a boy or girl and persuaded his victims to perform sexual acts in front of a webcam, then posted the images online or blackmaile­d them by threatenin­g to do so. He was accused of abusing 34 girls and five gay men, behaviour the court called “astonishin­g.” In some cases, the abuse lasted years.

Under Dutch privacy laws the man at trial is only identified as Aydin C.

An Associated Press story from the Netherland­s on Thursday reported Aydin C is the same man charged in the Amanda Todd case and that a Dutch court has approved the man’s extraditio­n following his trial there. He has appealed that decision and denies involvemen­t in any cyberbully­ing.

The RCMP charged Coban in 2014 with extortion, importing or distributi­ng child pornograph­y, possessing child pornograph­y and child luring.

Amanda Todd brought cyberbully­ing to mainstream attention by posting a video on YouTube in which she told her story with handwritte­n signs, describing how she was lured by a stranger to expose her breasts on a webcam.

The picture ended up on a Facebook page made by the stranger, and she was repeatedly bullied, despite changing schools. She took her own life at her home in Port Coquitlam, B.C., in 2012, weeks after posting the video.

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