Teens break online porn black mail scam

2006 July 29
by Hazel

Terrified’ teens credited in breakup of porn scam

Trish Audette and Natalie Alcoba, CanWest News Service
Published: Saturday, July 29, 2006

EDMONTON — Two Edmonton teenagers, whose identities will forever be protected, may be responsible for preventing thousands of other young women around the world from being victimized.

The teens, aged 13 and 15, are being called heroines in a child-porn bust that saw a Kingston, Ont., man arrested in connection to an online blackmail scam allegedly targeting more than 100 girls in North America and Europe.

Mark Gary Bedford, 21, is charged with two counts of luring a child, two counts each of possession and distribution of child pornography and three counts of child pornography. Additional charges are pending as police in Ontario, Alberta and England contact and identify more alleged victims.

“It comes back to the victims and what they’re going through. We had two very young girls who had been victimized,” said Det. Kevin Fald, a member of Alberta’s Integrated Child Exploitation unit, a specialized program announced by Alberta last year that draws on the resources of police forces across the province.

“They are terrified to come forward and tell their parents. Life as they know it is pretty much over and they don’t want to talk about it with police. It must have been terrifying for them. But they did it anyway. Without victims coming forward to us, we have nothing. We don’t have a starting point.”

Last summer, the girls told police officers they were using Internet chat rooms to communicate with friends when they were dared to flash or expose themselves in front of their web cameras. The images captured were supposed to be a prank between friends.

On fulfilling their ends, however, the girls received the message: “I am not who you think I am.”

That message was followed by threats the image would be shared with the girls’ parents, friends and posted on the Internet for general distribution unless the girls participated in more explicit, fully nude sexual activity in front of the web cameras.”[Predators] try to make you feel so overwhelmingly guilty about what you have done, you won’t want to tell your parents,” Fald said Friday at RCMP headquarters in Edmonton.

Police allege the suspect, who lived with his parents and surfed the Internet from his bedroom, had been hacking into chat accounts since September of last year. In some cases, he allegedly assume the identity of the account holder and ask the girl’s friends to take off their clothes. In other cases, he would pose as a young man — using online aliases like Marco1812000 or Supalover666 — and befriend them.

Law enforcement agencies in Ontario, Edmonton and Kent, England, were part of an eight-month investigation that’s revealed victims in Canada and the United Kingdom.

Police in Kent received their first complaint from a parent in April. After that it just “snowballed,” said Insp. Stephen Evans, a veteran with the Kent Police. There are now 42 known victims.

Kent police were able to track the alleged offender’s IP address, which is the geographic address of an Internet connection, to Kingston. Investigators learned of another existing investigation involving Edmonton police and a collaborative effort ensued.

Four victims have been identified in Edmonton and another in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Police estimate more than 100 girls were targeted, including some in Kingston and Ottawa.

Police said they believe the man worked alone and allegedly distributed the photos only among his victims — a ploy often used to convince young girls that what they are doing is OK.

“It just seems that some of the kids who are involved in this type of activity these days really don’t feel like they’re doing anything wrong because they’re in the comfort of their own home,” said Det. Sgt. Frank Goldschmidt, with the Ontario provincial police child-porn section.

This is the second international child pornography case broken in the last six months as a result of investigations done in Edmonton. The first was in March, when the arrest of married father Carl Treleaven allowed American and Canadian police to unravel a child pornography ring that saw more than 40 people sharing graphic photos and live streaming video involving children as young as 18 months.

© CanWest News Service 2006

One Response leave one →
  1. 2009 July 21

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