Saturday Star

Sextortion alert as cases rise

- NORMAN CLOETE norman.cloete@inl.co.za

SOUTH Africans, especially older widows, are being warned not to respond to “personal” ads online for fear of their becoming victims of extortion.

Experts say this group is particular­ly vulnerable because they often know very little about the internet and how criminals operate.

The warning was repeated after a man was arrested for allegedly blackmaili­ng a married man who was extorted to pay up to R5 000 to a stranger he met online.

The community leader in Cape Town was blackmaile­d after sharing nudes with the stranger. The victim, whose identity cannot be revealed, was extorted to fork out the money after the stranger threatened to go public and say he was an under-age boy. This turned out not to be true.

Fearing that his secret would be revealed and with his reputation at stake, the man said he had no choice but to pay.

Royal Investigat­ions lead investigat­or John Alexander said the alleged conman, Sabelo Goodman Mabuza, was arrested in Pretoria on Tuesday and has subsequent­ly appeared in the Stellenbos­ch Magistrate’s Court. His bail applicatio­n will be heard on May 24 and the State intends to oppose bail.

Alexander said: “Royal Investigat­ions were assigned to investigat­e another extortion case – the victim engaged a certain individual on www.adsafrica. co.za, which seemingly looks like an ordinary free classified­s website. Upon closer inspection you would see a more sinister category called ‘personals’. This is where prostituti­on is advertised at its finest.”

Alexander said the victim engaged someone for companions­hip and exchanged explicit nude pictures which came back to bite him. In less than a month the married man was extorted and paid numerous amounts ranging from R200 to R500.

“We discussed the matter with Captain B Adams from Stellenbos­ch Detectives Division and started an intense investigat­ion to identify the suspect.

“Captain Adams and I worked around the clock to bring justice for this victim, who was now at breaking point. We managed to identify the suspect only to find he was nearly 1 500km away in Pretoria. Adams went above and beyond the call of duty to drive to Pretoria where we arrested the suspect in Mayville Checkers Hyper,” he said.

The 32-year-old Mabuza was identified and found in possession of compromisi­ng evidence, which was confiscate­d. He was placed in transit and is being held at Stellenbos­ch SAPS.

Alexander said he was not at liberty to disclose the ways used to track down Mabuza for fear that criminals may adjust their own methods.

“We want to educate people and ask them not to engage on these types of websites where danger is looming and where people are using fake pictures to entice you and lure vulnerable victims into exchanging nude pictures which will be used as leverage for extortion,” he warned.

Alexander said extortion of this sort was on the rise in South Africa and suspects were almost never caught and arrested.

“Our SAPS deem these types of cases as petty and I heard of victims going to report this type of crime and are even more victimised by police officials in the charge office, which causes more trauma. Our SAPS should be sensitive toward victims and treat them in a dignified manner. We need to understand this victim is approachin­g the police out of desperatio­n. They are usually suicidal at this point and one little remark can push them over the edge,” he added.

In March, the Saturday Star reported that romance scams had become a billion-rand industry and people were duped out of cash daily. In one case, a Cape Town woman lost R2 million to someone she never met.

Hawks spokespers­on Captain Carol Mulamu said there had been a rise in online dating scams reported and a few perpetrato­rs had been arrested.

According to a recent report by the Southern African Fraud Prevention Service, South Africa ranks among the top 10 countries in the world in terms of cybercrime. Research done by IBM shows that a single data breach in South Africa costs an average of R36.5m, and the long-term costs of a data breach can be felt for years after the incident.

South Africa ranked seventh out of 16 countries polled for the highest cost of a cyber breach.

 ?? ?? SABELO Goodman Mabuza was arrested in Pretoria after he allegedly threatened a married man that he would go public with nude pictures they exchanged online.
SABELO Goodman Mabuza was arrested in Pretoria after he allegedly threatened a married man that he would go public with nude pictures they exchanged online.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa