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  • Sextortion Scam: What To Do If You're Being Blackmailed (2026)

  • Search 27,000+ reported romance scammers. Find stolen photos, fake profiles, emails and scripts. See statistics at scamwarners.com/romance-scam-statistics.php
Search 27,000+ reported romance scammers. Find stolen photos, fake profiles, emails and scripts. See statistics at scamwarners.com/romance-scam-statistics.php
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Think you might be talking to a romance scammer? Use our free Scam Checker Tool to find out. Learn how to spot a romance scammer, review real data from 27,000+ documented cases, or read about pig butchering scams and sextortion. Been scammed? Here's how to report it.

  by Bryon Williams
 
Lesson learned: dont play games with an obvious troll.
^^^Well Said. This also goes for normal scammers if you do not know what you are doing.

I am glad our site helped you. :=)
  by pssdparent2810
 
I reported the incident and also.changed both my son's number (victim) and mine as well yesterday but before I did we had not heard from them for a day and a half after incident. The only way we will find out if it was a scam is by time going by and nothing happening. I am still nervous even though the experts on here have said it is pretty much a scam. I just keep waiting for a doorbell to ring and they take my son. This has me pissed to the core. These people have no soul.
  by pssdparent2810
 
Byron, this happened wednesday and we have not heard anything from them, if they were to habe gone to the police would we ha e heard something by Now? I am really sorry to keep bothering the board about this but even though we believe it is a scam as do you it is the not knowing that is killing us. Our thoughts are they found out he just turned 18 and really cannot get money from him. Is it possible they just had a change of heart? I have the numbers they called from but cannot find out who they belong to.
  by Mike Wilson
 
Calling and asking for money or they will call the police or similar actions is a crime. They will not report this because they do not want to be in contact with real law enforcement and risk being arrested themselves for extortion .

Send me the telephone numbers used via PM and I will check them.
  by pssdparent2810
 
I sent the numbers mike
  by thatguy6793
 
I was just wondering if anyone has had a chance to check the number and okcupid profile I posted yesterday and verify that my situation was a scam. I haven’t heard anything in two days from the number so I feel a little better about it but I just want to be certain. And once again thank you all for you help and support.
  by Bryon Williams
 
https://www.okcupid.com/legal/terms
Adult users only

This Website is not intended for children under 18 years of age. If you are under 18, you are not authorized to use this Website and will not be afforded access to any features of this Website that allow for you to provide information to us or to share information with other users of this Website.
https://www.okcupid.com/profile/mistyfl ... atchsearch
mistyfly65 19 • Johns Island, United
  by Terminator5
 
Terminator5 wrote:Scam . It has all the essential elements of previous scams posted here :

Adult profile over 18

Aggressive Sexting

Later claims of being under age and demands for FAKE damages are made .


Can you post a link to this Fake Profile so we can look at it ?

Definate Scam
  by Freakingout123
 
Hey guys i contacted you the other day with my story but i have an update i have still been receiving calls and I've been avoided them but today i got 3 more phone calls from a new number 864-271-5333 leaving a voicemail saying they received complaints from the father and that they were a detective or cop or something and i googled the number and it was the local police departments number, help im freaking out again
  by AlanJones
 
Scammers regularly spoof phone numbers.

If the cops wanted to talk to you, they wouldn't be leaving voicemails, they would be knocking on your door.
  by Terminator5
 
You need to report this scam instead of freaking out . It's a scam report it .
  by Terminator5
 
Proof Its a SCAM

http://www.militarytimes.com/articles/s ... itary-ncis



U.S.-based scams can be more sinister. These perpetrators troll free dating sites like Plenty of Fish and MeetMe.com, Bolduc said, and the approach is usually more gradual. They'll strike up a conversation with a target, start to form what seems like a genuine relationship and only then start sending explicit pictures.


But in some cases, days or weeks later, the service member will get a call from someone claiming that the girl is underage. The caller will say "pay me or I'll tell the cops." This happened to one service member who told NCIS agents that a woman contacted him through Facebook to ask for money to help pay for her grandmother's surgery. "She sent me a nude picture and asked for one from me. She wanted to meet [and] have sex with me," the victim said, according to interview notes NCIS provided to Military Times. "After I hadn’t talked to her for a while, I got a message from a guy saying I had to pay for the damage I had done."



"So now our poor service member believes that he’s in possession of child pornography," McDonald said. "The guy says he is her father. He wants money to pay for mental health treatment — maybe says she attempted suicide — in exchange for not reporting it."




Then, perhaps, another man will call, claiming to be local law enforcement and encouraging the service member to pay the girl's father. Or in one case, the suspect posed as an NCIS agent, said the agency's spokesman, Ed Buice. That's when panic can set in.




"A service member who feels like they’ve been duped into taking their pants off and paying money is one thing, but it ratchets way up when the service member thinks that he has been sent child pornography," Buice said. "Now he's willing to do anything, and pay any amount of money, to keep his secret."


When a sailor or Marine makes a sextortion report, NCIS agents run all of the images through the International Crimes Against Children database, to ensure they don't match any known exploited underage kids. Separately, that's been a big focus for U.S. law enforcement. According to more than 600 agencies surveyed in the National Child Exploitation Threat Assessment, enticement of children online is on the rise. In late-November, a Minnesota man was sentenced to 38 years in prison after targeting more than 150 underage boys as part of a sextortion scheme.



More often than not, women are seldom involved, officials said. The photos are often stolen from Instagram or Google, and the women whose likenesses are being used won't even know their pictures are involved. Buice called these scams "scripted." It's "dinner theater," he said.



"When the scheme first came to our attention, they were using photos of active-duty female Marines to help legitimize their profiles," McDonald added. "Because if it’s a fellow Marine, I’m more likely to accept that friend request."









Catching and punishing these scammers has proven exceedingly difficult. NCIS officials say that, despite all of the reports, they've been unable to prosecute even one perpetrator. So they've focused instead on prevention, telling service members to not send compromising photos or videos to strangers on the internet.

Law enforcement officials want people to know that, if they become ensnared in a sextortion scam, they should cease correspondence immediately, save all communication they've had and, above all, don't send any money.



"If these individuals pay at all, [the scammers] will ask for more money," Bolduc said. "... These perpetrators know that [military personnel] have a steady income. ... They know they get paid on the first [of the month], they get paid on the fifteenth. These perpetrators also know that they’re held to a higher standard. Threatening that their career may go down the drain is terrifying to a young service member."





The sailor who spoke with Military Times said that if service members are on social media, they should refrain from posting photos of themselves in uniform. Don't list your job either, he said, and if a scammer says they can revoke a security clearance, it's likely an empty threat.




If you're going to chat with strangers online, he said, don't be so quick to get undressed. "Just try to get to know people a little better," he added. "Try to get a little more out of them before you try to do anything interesting."


Myers is a reporter with Army Times. On Twitter: @MeghannReports.
  by pssdparent2810
 
Mod Note: This poster has not received any spoofed calls. Only the initial calls from the father in law and mother. He/she is responding to a post not meant to be directed to him/her. See my post below. (BW)
Terminator5 wrote:You need to report this scam instead of freaking out . It's a scam report it .
Answer me this, if I receive a phone call from a possible spoofed number and I call that number back how is it the individual was able to respond and answer my calls? That is why i am freaked out
  by Bryon Williams
 
T5 was responding to this post.

Did you receive a call from someone saying they were law enforcement?
Freakingout123 wrote:Hey guys i contacted you the other day with my story but i have an update i have still been receiving calls and I've been avoided them but today i got 3 more phone calls from a new number 864-271-5333 leaving a voicemail saying they received complaints from the father and that they were a detective or cop or something and i googled the number and it was the local police departments number, help im freaking out again
  by pssdparent2810
 
Wmy apologies but are you able to answer my question Byron?
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