The Riverton Police Department is warning the public to be careful about sending photos â even innocent ones â to strangers online after handling the most recent of Wyomingâs online sextortion cases. Â
A 16-year-old boyâs mother contacted the department Monday morning to say her son met someone online, whom he believed to be female. Â
Police were not convinced, putting the pronoun âsheâ in quotation marks in their account of the incident. Â
The contact asked for a picture of the boy, who in turn sent âherâ a picture of his face, says the RPD call log. Â
âA short while later, âsheâ returned the picture and it had been photoshopped and was now pornographic,â the log says. Â
âSheâ then demanded a $500 gift card, saying âsheâ would post the picture online if he didnât send it. Â
A Riverton police officer tried to contact the person extorting the teen but was unable to do. Â
The department took a report for documentation. Â
âIt almost goes without saying that folks need to be very careful with any personal information given out online,â reads the log. Â
State Police Sound AlarmÂ
This scenario is just what a state sex-crime investigator warned about last month in a legislative meeting. Â
Chris McDonald, commander of the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) taskforce for Wyoming, warned the public about this scenario in April after issuing prior warnings in the media â and after the FBI has issued similar warnings as well. Â
Often people posing as attractive women online will convince minor-aged boys to make sexually explicit images and videos of themselves, then blackmail them for more, McDonald told the legislative Joint Judiciary Committee at the time. Â
But McDonald also warned about deepfakes and âCGI,â or fabricated images, that werenât necessarily pornographic when first taken. Â
Similar to the Riverton boyâs situation, a girl in Wyoming was blackmailed when a suspect got into her snapchat story, copied a âcompletely innocentâ photo of her in a bathing suit, and altered it to make it look sexually graphic. Â
â(He) sent it back to our victim saying if you donât send me more actual images and videos Iâm going to post this to the school and everything else,â he said. Â
McDonald urged legislators to adapt their laws and funding around the new landscape of technological vice. Â
âTechnology is an arms race,â he said. âEvery time we feel like we get somewhere, something else is created. Itâs almost the worst case of whack-a-mole youâve ever played in your life.âÂ
Clair McFarland can be reached at: Clair@CowboyStateDaily.com




