San Francisco Chronicle

Inmates allegedly ran online dating extortion scheme

- By Meg Kinnard Meg Kinnard is an Associated Press writer.

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Five inmates in the Carolinas extorted more than half a million dollars from military personnel throughout the country, using illegal cell phones to pose as underage women on dating sites, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

Standing in front of a state prison in Columbia, S.C., U.S. Attorney Sherri Lydon told reporters that five inmates had been indicted on federal charges including extortion and wire fraud. Ten others throughout the Carolinas have been charged with helping inmates collect extortion payments via services including Western Union or PayPal.

According to court documents, inmates used contraband phones to join dating websites, contacting and exchanging nude images with service members across the country.

Once the targets had been reeled in, Drew Goodridge of the Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service said, inmates then posed as an authority figure, like a father or police officer, claiming the girl with whom the victim had been communicat­ing was underage and demanding money to keep the exchanges private.

Fearful they’d be accused of disseminat­ing child pornograph­y, possibly losing their military careers, more than 442 service members handed over more than $560,000 total, authoritie­s said.

Lydon said the victims come from all branches and ranks of the military. According to Goodridge, more than 250 other cases were being investigat­ed for potential extortion as part of a probe his agency began in January 2017.

“This operation will continue until we break the back of these criminal networks,” he said.

Inmates aren’t allowed to have cell phones behind bars, although thousands are smuggled inside each year.

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