Sextortion disproportionately affects boys.
Between October 2021 & March 2023, the FBI & Homeland Security Investigation received more than 13,000 reports of online sextortion of minors. Most of the victims were boys. At least 20 boys have already died by suicide after experiencing sextortion.
The FBI is so concerned about these trends that they reached out to ON BOYS podcast. Agents are working to shutdown sextorionists, but they know that parents play a key role in keeping boys safe too.
“This trend of targeting boys for financial sextortion — where photos are taken or provided by the boy and then used to extort them for funds, under the impression that they will be shared online — is a scheme that seems to have emerged in the last few years,” says Chris Crocker, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the FBI St. Louis division.
Boys ages 14-17 seem to be the primary targets. Sextortionists connect with boys via online platforms (including gaming sites and social media; they often represent themselves as attractive teenage girls, show a lot of interest, perhaps share a sexy photo of “themselves,” and then ask the boy to reciprocate. When he does, they threaten to share the image unless the boy sends them money.
“The boys we’ve seen fall for these schemes are not dumb kids. They’re not kids that were necessarily obviously at any sort of risk. They’re good kids, good students, athletes, model kids, the kind of boys you would want your son to grow up to be,” Chris says. “These are not bad kids; these are good kids who make poor decisions. Every person is susceptible to doing that from time to time.”
Talk to your boys about sextortion, so they will talk to you if it occurs to them (or a friend). Make sure they know that you will help them, not yell at them or punish them.
“It is very important for parents to constantly reassure their children that they can come to them with something like this. Building that trust with your child is really important to avoiding these things – maybe not from occurring ever, but from reaching the worst possible outcome,” Chris says.”This is a really complex issue and there’s no easy way to handle it, but spreading awareness will prevent more of these outcomes.”
Chris Crocker, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the FBI St. Louis Division
To contact the FBI, dial 1-800-CALL-FBI or use tips.fbi.gov to provide information online.
The FBI’s partner at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children provides guidance on how to remove nude photos online that were taken before a person was 18 years old: https://takeitdown.ncmec.org/
Sextortion: A Growing Threat Preying on Our Nation’s Teens
A Teen’s Death in a Small Michigan Town Led the FBI & Police to an Online Sexual Extortion Scheme
This Boy’s Story Highlights Why Instagram’s Taking a New Stance on DMs
Instagram to Crack Down on Teen Sextortion
Maggie Dent: What Teenage Boys Really Need — ON BOYS episode
Talk with Boys Like a PRO (about anything & everything!) — Jen & Janet’s upcoming course (starts May 7, 2024)
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Protein, creatine, & performance enhancing drugs are common in boy world.
In fact, most teen boys experiment with them at some point. Approximately 80% of teenage boys say they’ve used a protein supplement within the last 12 months, says Kyle Ganson, an assistant professor who researches boys and body image.
“There’s a very broad list of performance enhancers, including dietary supplements and other substances that are perfectly legal and readily available to young people,” Kyle says. These substances are “purported to help you with your performance, with building strength, and with your appearance, but there’s not a lot of research on them and a lot of nuance to them.”
Whether they’re looking for this info or not, boys are likely to encounter it online. There are a plethora of social media influencers who hawk supplements and explicitly discuss their workout routines, nutrition, and dietary supplements. Not all of that information is accurate. In many cases, these influencers gain financially when they promote supplements.
Understanding boys’ motivation to use these substances is key to supporting them. An abstinence-only approach isn’t likely to work — and not necessary, in most cases, Kyle says. It’s better to engage boys in conversation and help them meet their goals.
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACES) & Muscle Dysmorphia — previous ON BOYS episode w Kyle
Boys & Body Image – ON BOYS episode
Zac Efron Admits Bulking Up for Baywatch “Messed” Him Up
Rob McElhenney from “Always Sunny” Reveals How He Got So Ripped
Safety Reporting Portal — site consumers can use to report adverse events
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Advocating for boys is one way to help boys and men thrive.
At present, there are no governmental commissions working on behalf of boys and men in the United States. Not at the federal level & not at the state level. Even though boys lag behind girls in academic achievement and boys & men experience suicide, murder, drug & alcohol addiction, homelessness, incarceration, & early death at disproportionately high rates. And even though there are multiple commissions dedicated to addressing & advancing the needs of girls and women.
Blair Daly, founder of the Washington Initiative for Boys & Men (WIBM) is working to change that.
“The male population, I think, can be described as an under-advocated-for population group,” Blair says. “There’s very little organized advocacy.”
That’s why he created WIBM, which combines advocacy journalism and grassroots political action to draw attention to the unique needs of boys and men in Washington state. As a result, Washington state may become the first state in the US to establish a Commission on Boys & Men.
“Without a focus on the male population, we think a lot is being missed,” Blair says. Advocacy is necessary to focus attention on (& find solutions for) issues that disproportionately harm boys & men.
Washington Initiative for Boys & Men
7 Democrats, 7 Republicans Sponsor 2024 Commission on Boys & Men Legislation — article highlighting the diverse support for a WA Commission on Boys & Men
Updated one-pager about WA legislation to develop a Commission on Boys & Men
What is the Washington Initiative for Boys & Men? Blair Daly Explains — YouTube video
Boys Moms as Boy Advocates — ON BOYS episode featuring Gemma Gaudette
50/50 Shared Parenting — ON BOYS episode
Real Talk about Fentanyl, Opioids, & Marijuana — ON BOYS episode
Talk with Boys Like a PRO (about anything & everything!) — Jen & Janet’s upcoming course (starts May 7, 2024)
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Gifted & twice-exceptional boys often struggle in school, despite their intelligence & talents.
In fact, boys who are gifted or twice-exceptional (which means they are gifted & have a learning disability) are considered “problem kids.” Teachers (and other adults) may make boredom as lack of focus, or assume that poor grades indicate lack of intelligence. For many 2E boys, their learning disabilities overshadow their giftedness; for others, their giftedness hides their learning disabilities, says Deborah (Deb) Gennarelli, a gifted education specialist who is also the author of Twice-Exceptional Boys: A Roadmap to Getting it Right.
Intensity is part of giftedness — a part that frequently presents challenges for gifted & 2E boys. “Intensity is treated different in boys than in girls in this culture,” Deb says. Teachers & parents may punish or try to “fix” boys’ intensity, which typically only creates more problems.
Gifted & 2E boys need support to thrive. “We can’t ignore the fact that students that have high intelligence look at things in different ways, behave in different ways, learn in different ways,” Deb says. “With the right support, these boys can go from surviving to thriving.”
Twice-Exceptional Boys: A Roadmap to Getting it Right, by Deborah Gennarelli, M.Ed.
www.deborahgennarelli.com — Deb’s website
Twice-Exceptional Boys (w Ramsey Hootman) — ON BOYS episode
When Your Kid is the Classroom Problem Child — heartbreaking The Cut article about a 2E boy
Twice Exceptional Students — info from the National Association for Gifted Children
Twice Exceptional — classic Building Boys post
Talk with Boys Like a PRO (about anything & everything!) — Jen & Janet’s upcoming course (starts May 7, 2024)
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Like it or not, fentanyl, other opioids, and marijuana are part of our boys’ world.
“It is very easy to get drugs on social media,” says Michelle Leopold, a mother who’s son, Trevor, died after taking a pill he purchase online.
Ignoring these uncomfortable fact isn’t helpful. We have to educate ourselves and educate our boys. Here’s why:
Today’s marijuana and marijuana-based products are far stronger than those of the past.
“It’s so important to learn about today’s marijuana,”Michelle says. Although marijuana and THC products are now legal in many states, study after study has shown that these products are not safe for developing brains.
In 2019, Trevor, age 18, swallowed a blue pill he thought was oxycodone. It wasn’t.
Despite its markings, there was no oxycodone in the pill. The pill Trevor purchased was a counterfeit pill, & it contained fentanyl, a narcotic that’s 100 times more powerful than morphine, 50 times more powerful than heroin—and lethal at just a few grains.
Trevor didn’t get high; Trevor died.
According to the US. Dept of Justice, over 150 people die every day from overdoses related to synthetic opioids like fentanyl. As many as 7 in 10 counterfeit pills — pills sold online & purported to be oxycodone or other “prescription” meds — may now contain a lethal dose of fentanyl.
“People now need to assume that any drug they don’t get from their pharmacist has fentanyl in it,” Michelle says. “The odds are not in your favor.”
“I am going to use Trevor’s story to prevent other parents from losing their children.” — Michelle Leopold
Marijuana to Fentanyl: My Son is More Than a Statistic — post by Michelle
www.wearenotalone.community — Michelle’s blog (packed w info!)
Addiction Inoculation w Jessica Lahey — ON BOYS episode
Troubled Boys (w Kenneth R Rosen) — ON BOYS episode
Another View of Wilderness Therapy — ON BOYS episode
http://drugfree.org/ and toll-free Helpline (1-855-DRUGFREE / 1-855-378-4373)
SAMHSA National Helpline 1-800-662-4357 (Confidential free help, from public health agencies, to find substance use treatment and information)
dancesafe.org (Fentanyl Test Strips and Drug Checking Kits)
Adding Naloxone to Your First Aid Kit — Decipher Your Health post (NOTE: Jen now has naloxone in her home)
shatterproof.org — includes a Narcan training video
Al-Anon — support for family & friends of people w alcohol use disorder
Nar-Anon — support for family & friends of people who use narcotics
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