The Wyoming crime team that fights child sexual exploitation and the circulation of photos and videos associated with it is warning people not to open suspicious mail from Canada.
Itâs an extortion scheme, according to a Tuesday joint news release from the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigationâs Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force and the Natrona County Sheriffâs Office.
The mailers have a Canada postage stamp.
Their wording âclaims you clicked a suspicious internet link that provided the hackers accessâ and that illegal images were then planted âon your devices,â says the statement.
The messaging âuses threats of police involvement to scare youâ and demands money within 36 hours, alongside a URL and a QR code for Bitcoin, Coinbase, or Cash App.
The letters also mention the recipientsâ family members by name, the agencies report, and arrives as a mailed letter to a recipientâs home address.
Around Wyoming
Law enforcement in Natrona County have received at least two reports of this scheme in the past 24 hours, says the statement, with additional reports around the state of Wyoming.
DCI did not immediately return a call to its spokesmanâs office to comment on which other counties are seeing the scam, among other details.
The statement encourages people to warn others they know about the scam.
ICAC agents âare working diligently to investigate these reports, track the origin of the letters, and hold those responsible accountable,â says the statement.
Scare Tactics
Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak said heâs checking to see if such reports had surfaced in his county.
It wouldnât surprise him since terrifying outcomes of law enforcement are the leverage many extortionists use lately, he said.
âThat type of scam is just a different variation we get all the time, where someone is basically threatening that somethingâs going to happen if you donât give money,â said Kozak.
A common one in Laramie County is a message claiming someone will be arrested for skipping jury duty if he or she doesnât pay money, the sheriff said.
Weaponizing the concept of law enforcement is the most common tactic in messaging extortion campaigns, he said.
âThink about it: You know that would be someoneâs worst nightmare, right? For someone to accuse someone of having child porn on their phone or computer,â Kozak said. âI could see where someone could fall for that one maybe.
Donât Open It
While the letters appear to use scare tactics with leverage, any involvement with child sex abuse material (CSAM), which laymen sometimes call child pornography, is a âfalls under serious criminal conduct,â the statement adds.
People who receive such letters should notify law enforcement immediately, the agencies wrote.
âDo not open (the letter) and instead report it immediately to your local law enforcement agencyâ or contact the Casper DCI office at 307-261-2194, the statement says, adding âdo not send moneyâ to the sender.
By midday Tuesday, multiple agencies around Wyoming had shared the statement.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





