When a Teen Victim Reached Out, GASA Acted: Expert Advice on Handling Sextortion Cases

Image

In early 2024, the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) reported  a 25% rise in sextortion cases  involving children aged 14–15 compared to the same period the previous year. A March 2024 study  by Snap Inc. in India revealed that 71% of Gen Z individuals were targeted , and 55% fell victim —most of them between the ages of 13 and 17. 

While public awareness campaigns are increasing, too many victims—especially minors—still have nowhere to turn. Recently, one such victim reached out directly to GASA.

A 15-year-old boy  contacted GASA, explaining that a scammer had threatened to distribute fake, explicit images that looked like him. The criminal had his phone number and was threatening to send the images to his contacts. He was terrified and asked for urgent help.

The message that came through GASA’s website contact form was written in broken English, but the fear was clear. A teenage boy, alone, being threatened with fabricated images and fearing exposure to his entire network.

GASA responded by engaging anti-sextortion expert Paul Raffile , who has spoken on the subject at both the Global Anti-Scam Summit Americas 2024  and the Global Anti-Scam Summit London 2025

Responding Effectively: Expert Advice

Paul’s guidance included a series of trauma-informed, high-impact steps—many of which can serve as best practice for any organisation confronted with a similar case. The advice was relayed confidentially to the victim—quickly, clearly, and without judgment.

Image

  1. Cease all communication with the scammer. No replies, no negotiation. Every response gives the perpetrator more leverage. Silence is the most effective way to reduce their power.

  2. Block and report across all platforms. Snapchat, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp—block the account and report it through the platform’s abuse function.

  3. Protect digital identity. Victims should either deactivate all accounts temporarily or change usernames, display names, and profile photos. This limits the scammer’s ability to track or harass them.

  4. Use image takedown tools. If the victim has access to the fake images, they can use the   Take It Down  service from NCMEC. The tool hashes the images and distributes these digital fingerprints to major platforms to prevent future uploads—without ever storing the images themselves.

  5. Reassure the victim. Leak threats are typically bluffs. As Paul notes, “Scammers rarely follow through—it damages their business and gets them banned.” Panic is the scammer’s weapon. Reassurance is critical.

  6. Report to authorities. In the U.S., this includes   IC3.gov ,   FBI.gov/tips , and   CyberTipline.org  for cases involving minors. Local cybercrime agencies should be used in other countries.

  7. Reverse financial transactions. If money has been sent, victims should report it to their bank or the payment platform. Reversals are often possible, and the scammer is unlikely to know that it was initiated.

  8. Manage phone harassment. iPhone users can enable Filter Unknown Senders to suppress messages from unrecognised numbers. If harassment continues, changing the phone number is often easy and effective.

Lessons for the Broader Ecosystem

This case demonstrates the value of a connected, expert-driven response. The victim did not reach a platform or police agency—he reached GASA. In turn, GASA activated its expert network and worked with sextortion specialist Paul Raffile to provide timely, confidential guidance.

It reveals the wider gaps that still leave young victims vulnerable. Many don’t know where to turn. They’re scared to report. And in some regions, the necessary tools—like takedown services, escalation paths, or victim support protocols—may not even exist.

At GASA, we are committed to:

  • Advocating for better education around online abuse and sextortion

  • Promoting cross-sector collaboration between NGOs, platforms, and enforcement

  • Surfacing expert-informed responses that can be scaled and shared

  • Building trusted networks so that no victim’s cry for help goes unheard

As sextortion scams grow more sophisticated, so too must our collective response—faster, smarter, and more compassionate.

About the Author

James Greening , operating under a pseudonym, brings a wealth of experience to his role. Formerly the sole driving force behind Fake Website Buster, James leverages his expertise to raise awareness about online scams. He currently serves as a Content Marketing & Design Specialist  for the Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA).

James’s mission aligns with GASA’s mission to protect consumers worldwide from scams. He is committed to empowering professionals with the insights necessary to detect and mitigate online scams, ensuring the security and integrity of their operations and digital ecosystems.

Connect with James Greening on LinkedIn

May 9, 2025
5 minute read
Category
Best Practices Topic - Fraud Prevention Industry - Consumer Protection & Authorities
Written by
Jorij Abraham
Managing Director
Share article

Latest blogs & research

Brazil Launches BC Protege+ to Block Fraudulent Bank Account Openings

Brazil’s BC Protege+ Blocks Fake Bank Accounts Before They Can Be Opened

Brazil’s Central Bank launched BC Protege+, allowing individuals and businesses to block bank account openings in their name. With over 1 million activations, the tool offers a structural model for reducing identity-based fraud.

Topic - Fraud Prevention Industry - Financial Authorities Region - Latin America

From Vienna to Global Action: Key Takeaways from the UN Global Fraud Summit

Explore key insights from our participation at the UNODC's Global Fraud Summit in Vienna. Discover how AI is changing the scam landscape, the power of national anti-scam centres, and the introduction of the Public-Private Partnership Framework to protect communities from fraud.

Region - Global Scam Trends Topic - Fraud Policy Industry - Law Enforcement

League of Protectors: Women Fighting Against Scams

Explore key insights from our International Women’s Month webinar on combating scams. Discover how women leaders are driving cross-border collaboration, digital literacy, and collective action to protect communities from fraud.

Video Scam Trends Region - Africa Event - GASA Meet-Ups

The Real Gap in Fraud Defense Is Strategy, Not AI

Fraud losses keep rising despite advances in AI detection. The real challenge is fragmented strategy across banks, platforms, telcos and governments. Effective scam prevention requires coordination, shared signals and earlier intervention.

Industry - National Cyber Security Centers (NCSCs) Industry - Telecom Operators / Hosters Topic - Data Sharing Region - Global
executive order on scam networks

New Executive Order on Cybercrime and Fraud Marks a More Coordinated U.S. Response

A U.S. Executive Order targets cybercrime, scams, and global fraud networks with a more coordinated government response.

Best Practices Region - North America Industry - Law Enforcement Region - Asia-Pacific

Global Anti-Scam Alliance Launches Scam.org with OpenAI and Key Partners

The Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA) launched today Scam.org, an AI-powered platform that provides scam education, prevention, detection, reporting, and victim support.

News Topic - Fraud Prevention Topic - Scam Awareness Region - Global

La Industrialización del Engaño: Por qué 2026 será el año en que las estafas cibernéticas cambien para siempre

El auge de la inteligencia artificial está eliminando las señales tradicionales de alerta y transformando las estafas en un sistema industrial a gran escala.

Research Industry - Telecom Operators / Hosters Scam Trends Topic - Fraud Research

The Industrialization of Deception: Why 2026 Will Be the Year Cyber Scams Change Forever

The rise of artificial intelligence is eliminating traditional warning signs and transforming scams into a large-scale industrial system.

Research Scam Trends Topic - Fraud Research Industry - Big Tech / Social Media