Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

FBI warns violent groups targeting minors on the rise

- By Laura Esposito Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The FBI’s Pittsburgh office is asking parents and caregivers to be on the watch amidst a “disturbing” rise in online groups extorting children into performing acts of self harm and committing suicide on camera.

The predators are meeting juveniles through video games and online chat rooms. They use threats and manipulati­on to coerce victims into live-streaming violence against themselves, animals, and their families, with the ultimate goal of having the victim commit suicide.

“The [group’s] goal is pure chaos and the death of a person,” Christophe­r M. Giordano, the assistant agent in charge at the Pittsburgh office, said at a news conference Friday.

The predators are victimizin­g minors across the country, including in the Pittsburgh area. Agents said they are investigat­ing several cases in the region, but none that has resulted in a death. They declined to release additional details.

Agents first warned the public about the harmful groups in November, and since then, they said they had seen a rise in cases.

“These groups don’t care how many dead bodies they leave in their wake,” Special Agent Giordano said.

Coercing minors into committing such acts is how predators elevate their status within the group, Special Agent Giordano said, calling the trend the most horrific thing he’s seen during his more than 20-year career.

Special Agent Giordano asked parents, school administra­tors and other concerned adults to familiariz­e themselves with several warnings that their children are being targeted, such as signs of selfharm, suicide ideations, or a newfound fascinatio­n with cults. They also cautioned parents to monitor children’s online activity and the applicatio­ns they use.

“It is happening here,” Special Agent Giordano said. “Recognize these signs or we will lose these kids.”

While many of the predators are overseas, agents said in November that they had identified suspects in the Pittsburgh area and hoped that identifyin­g more victims would move the investigat­ion forward.

It’s estimated that “tens of thousands” of people are members of these groups, but few have been arrested, agents said.

Last month, a 47-year-old man in Michigan was arrested and faces numerous sexual exploitati­on charges after it was discovered he was affiliated with a group known as 764.

Under the username “Rabid,” Richard Anthony Reyna Densmore was involved in creating a chat room on Discord to stream minors engaging in self harm and “fansigning,” in which victims cut the predator’s online username into their skin, according to the United

States Attorney’s Office.

“As the allegation­s in this case demonstrat­e, the online threats to our children and teenagers evolve and grow every day,” Mark Totten, U. S. attorney for the Western District of Michigan, said in February.

“Perpetrato­rs can reach kids anywhere, anytime, with devastatin­g effects on our families and communitie­s.”

According to the Global Network of Extremism & Technology, 764 recruits victimizer­s from online communitie­s “interested in obscene material and celebratin­g mass shooters, terrorists, and violent extremists.”

Then, they identify likely victims in online communitie­s where “vulnerable individual­s may be found,” such as in spaces used by members of the LGBTQ+ community, minorities, and those with mental illness.

Minors are prominent members of these groups, agents said, falling in line with an increase in juvenile violence and extreme behavior they’re seeing across the country.

“It’s rare [for the FBI] to charge someone as an adult because there are no mechanisms in place,” Special Agent Giordano said. “That’s why it’s important to work with state and local authoritie­s.”

If a child exhibits any troubling behavior, parents, school administra­tors and others should report it to local police and follow up with the FBI, agents said.

 ?? Sebastian Foltz/Post-Gazette ?? Assistant special agent in charge Chris Giordano speaks about cyber predators and child sextortion case concerns during a news conference on Friday at the FBI facility on the South Side. Special Agent Giordano urged parents to keep an eye on their children’s activities on social media and online gaming.
Sebastian Foltz/Post-Gazette Assistant special agent in charge Chris Giordano speaks about cyber predators and child sextortion case concerns during a news conference on Friday at the FBI facility on the South Side. Special Agent Giordano urged parents to keep an eye on their children’s activities on social media and online gaming.

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