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Nude Selfie Sets Off 5-Year Nightmare

SMOKIE

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A 13, girl sent a nude selfie to a Florida man, setting off a five-year hellish nightmare that’s culminating in federal court.

543ff3319a1c7.jpg

A Michigan teenager learned the difficult way what can happen after hitting the send button on a nude selfie:

Unrelenting text messages and emails, stalking and extortion for five years, not only from the Florida man named Bruce who originally received the then 13-year-old’s photos, but from others she thought he shared them with, federal prosecutors argued in complaint in U.S. District Court, the Detroit Free Press andThe Detroit News

The now 18-year-old St. Clair County teen, whose name and hometown have not been released, bowed to pressure and sent photos to men who said that if she didn’t comply, they would post the photos they already had on the Internet.

For about 18 months, she complied and “took nude photographs of herself every other day and forwarded them,” according to the complaint.

She attempted suicide twice, according to the complaint, and finally told authorities of the years-long harassment in September after she found 30 images of herself on an Internet porn site. The photos and videos had generated thousands of comments.

More:


In a March email to a man described in the complaint as “Suspect No. 5,” she offered a glimpse of her tortured existence:

“I don’t understand why you can’t leave me alone,” she wrote in the email that is included in the complaint. “I’m already in therapy, I’ve gone to psych hospital twice now for trying to commit suicide. Are you trying to kill me?”

The man who originally received the teen’s nude photos, Bruce Powell, 26, was arrested by the FBI Tuesday evening at has Tallahassee, FL, home, and charged with cyberstalking and child pornography. He had allegedly contacted her by email as recently as Oct. 11, writing:

“This is literally your last chance to answer me. You have 24 hours. I know where you are, I know where your family is, all will be exposed unless you answer.”

Powell has been detained and is awaiting extradition to Michigan. He reportedly admitted his part in the years-long extortion scheme. Although a half-dozen suspects were originally thought to be involved in sending more than 4,000 messages, Powell admitted in his detention hearing in Florida they were all the same person: him.

Wake-Up Call for Parents

U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade said the case underscores the importance of parents having frank conversations with their children about the “very real danger of online predators.”

“The Internet is a window to the world, and predators are lurking outside, looking for ways to get in. When you send private information and photos to strangers, they obtain power over you,” McQuade told the Free Press.

“Parents should also tell their kids that no amount of shame should prevent them from asking for help when they find themselves in bad situations,” she said. “Victims sometimes suffer in silence and make the situation worse by complying with the demands of predators because they are too ashamed to admit their own roles.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics offers some tips to parents about talking to children about the dangers lurking online, but n attorney who is representing one of the 31 Rochester, MI, teens who potentially face felony charges for sexting nude images of themselves and their friends says action is as important as talking.

‘The Snappening’

Attorney Shannon Smith told WJBK-TV that parents should disable the Snapchat application on their kids’ phones as a precautionary measure.

Tell Us:




    • How are you talking to your kids about the dangers of online predators? Do you have any tips that would be helpful to others?
“Snapchat has caused issues in many of my cases,” Smith said. “The Snapchat app allows children to take photos without leaving a trace of the photo on your phone. It leads children to believe that there will be no consequences.”

About half of all Snapchat users are between the ages of 13-17, according to a story on The Telegraph, and the application was the culprit in the leaking of about 90,000 images reportedly leaked online in what has been dubbed “The Snappening.”

A handful of celebrities – including ]Jennifer Lawrence, Rihanna, Kim Kardashian, Jessica Brown-Findlay and Nick Hogan –have allegedly had private images shared online – but increasingly children are being targeted, the newspaper said.

A third-party client, Snapsaved.com, has admitted it was the source of the leaked photos, The Guardian reports.
 

UncleRJ

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Where were the parents!

IMHO, that is the big question in our world today.

The Mrs and I have raised two wonderful kids. Now successful adults leading lives that contribute to society.

They did indeed have access to the internet when they were young. And we watched them every minute and filtered their access to make sure that they did not stumble on the wrong sort of website by accident.

Where were the parents?

The kid did not trust them enough to come to them when this started.

And they were not there to make sure that the kid knew that this was unacceptable in the first place.

And the guys that took advantage of her and have quite possibly ruined her life have a special place in either prison or hell waiting for them.
 

Demoniacal

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13, with a phone, no parental involvement, and some pedophile gets enjoyment from this. This is why my son has a phone, but either my wife or myself check everything he does on it daily. Hopefully when this sick pedo gets to prison the guards happen to look the other way for as long as this poor young girl's parents did.
 

rjmara

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Why does any 13 year old child have a phone? Where are the parents?
It's sad to say,but it's the new pacifier.Look around at the kids when you go out somewhere,there all on there phones,in there own little bubble.
 

Cruel-Phate

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I blame the parents. The kid is 13....the parents need to more in touch with there child. This day and age a 13 year old with a phone is normal but how about a little safe guard, the tools are there, I am all for respecting there privacy but take the time to not alienate your kids, you know when something is not right if you know your damn kids. Parents are not perfect, there is no book that says how...rrrr yeah ridiculous
 

InMyImage

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Phones are quite different now, as is social networking, but when my daughter was 13 or 14 she had a facebook account after we had a discussion about the fact that it was a priveledge and that we had to know the password and that we would check her page randomly to see not only what she was doing, but what her friends were doning and that if we did not approve of anything going on then we would take away the privilege.

Anytime that we saw anything questionable, we did not just shut her down, we took the opportunity to discuss what we saw and use it to help strengthen our communication and bond with her. We have never condemned her for anything and have always told her that we understand sometimes things just happen even when you don't intend for them to, but that she should never feel afraid or ashamed of talking to us about anything.

If she went out with friends, she always knew that she could call us at anytime for a ride and that we would even give her friends rides if necessary without us confronting the parents about the behavior of their children... we figured that they could do that when explaining their hangover or where they left their car...

Additionally, she was required to discuss specific things about her day with us when she was younger. "Fine" didn't cut it. We continue this with out autistic son, although we have to give more prompts and supports but even he is getting used to the fact that when he gets home from school he has to tell us 3 things about his day and at least 1 thing that he did with a friend.

Because of this, our daughter has been very open with us about things going on with her and her friends. She has discussed issues of pregnant friends, friends drinking or doing drug or abusing prescription meds. She even has asked us for advice on how to support a suicidal and severly depressed friend who was having significant issues dealing with her own parental issues.

It amazes me how so many parents today have lost touch with their with their children because of changes to work and dinner habits, but have not made any efforts to reconnect with them at other times and build a relationship of respect and trust with their own children.
 

dre

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Phones are quite different now, as is social networking, but when my daughter was 13 or 14 she had a facebook account after we had a discussion about the fact that it was a priveledge and that we had to know the password and that we would check her page randomly to see not only what she was doing, but what her friends were doning and that if we did not approve of anything going on then we would take away the privilege.

Anytime that we saw anything questionable, we did not just shut her down, we took the opportunity to discuss what we saw and use it to help strengthen our communication and bond with her. We have never condemned her for anything and have always told her that we understand sometimes things just happen even when you don't intend for them to, but that she should never feel afraid or ashamed of talking to us about anything.

If she went out with friends, she always knew that she could call us at anytime for a ride and that we would even give her friends rides if necessary without us confronting the parents about the behavior of their children... we figured that they could do that when explaining their hangover or where they left their car...

Additionally, she was required to discuss specific things about her day with us when she was younger. "Fine" didn't cut it. We continue this with out autistic son, although we have to give more prompts and supports but even he is getting used to the fact that when he gets home from school he has to tell us 3 things about his day and at least 1 thing that he did with a friend.

Because of this, our daughter has been very open with us about things going on with her and her friends. She has discussed issues of pregnant friends, friends drinking or doing drug or abusing prescription meds. She even has asked us for advice on how to support a suicidal and severly depressed friend who was having significant issues dealing with her own parental issues.

It amazes me how so many parents today have lost touch with their with their children because of changes to work and dinner habits, but have not made any efforts to reconnect with them at other times and build a relationship of respect and trust with their own children.
I agree with. This I'm 32 and growing up my parent basically treated me like that and I felt OK about telling them anything. I felt like a person not a child being yelled at like my friends.
 

cherrycakes

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Not gonna lie I took nudes and posted them when I was like 16. Has yet to ruin my life. I don't really do nudes anymore, though. Now I'm married. :p
 

InMyImage

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Not gonna lie I took nudes and posted them when I was like 16. Has yet to ruin my life. I don't really do nudes anymore, though. Now I'm married. :p
a) Not really surprised by this.
b) Being married is stopping you from doing something that hubby probably knew you were doing before getting married and possibly while dating?
 

dre

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Here's my selfie
91623996d7625eaaa858641219a9fa4b.jpg
 

MrScaryZ

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A 13, girl sent a nude selfie to a Florida man, setting off a five-year hellish nightmare that’s culminating in federal court.

View attachment 7482

A Michigan teenager learned the difficult way what can happen after hitting the send button on a nude selfie:

Unrelenting text messages and emails, stalking and extortion for five years, not only from the Florida man named Bruce who originally received the then 13-year-old’s photos, but from others she thought he shared them with, federal prosecutors argued in complaint in U.S. District Court, the Detroit Free Press andThe Detroit News

The now 18-year-old St. Clair County teen, whose name and hometown have not been released, bowed to pressure and sent photos to men who said that if she didn’t comply, they would post the photos they already had on the Internet.

For about 18 months, she complied and “took nude photographs of herself every other day and forwarded them,” according to the complaint.

She attempted suicide twice, according to the complaint, and finally told authorities of the years-long harassment in September after she found 30 images of herself on an Internet porn site. The photos and videos had generated thousands of comments.

More:

haha @SMOKIE

In a March email to a man described in the complaint as “Suspect No. 5,” she offered a glimpse of her tortured existence:

“I don’t understand why you can’t leave me alone,” she wrote in the email that is included in the complaint. “I’m already in therapy, I’ve gone to psych hospital twice now for trying to commit suicide. Are you trying to kill me?”

The man who originally received the teen’s nude photos, Bruce Powell, 26, was arrested by the FBI Tuesday evening at has Tallahassee, FL, home, and charged with cyberstalking and child pornography. He had allegedly contacted her by email as recently as Oct. 11, writing:

“This is literally your last chance to answer me. You have 24 hours. I know where you are, I know where your family is, all will be exposed unless you answer.”

Powell has been detained and is awaiting extradition to Michigan. He reportedly admitted his part in the years-long extortion scheme. Although a half-dozen suspects were originally thought to be involved in sending more than 4,000 messages, Powell admitted in his detention hearing in Florida they were all the same person: him.

Wake-Up Call for Parents

U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade said the case underscores the importance of parents having frank conversations with their children about the “very real danger of online predators.”

“The Internet is a window to the world, and predators are lurking outside, looking for ways to get in. When you send private information and photos to strangers, they obtain power over you,” McQuade told the Free Press.

“Parents should also tell their kids that no amount of shame should prevent them from asking for help when they find themselves in bad situations,” she said. “Victims sometimes suffer in silence and make the situation worse by complying with the demands of predators because they are too ashamed to admit their own roles.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics offers some tips to parents about talking to children about the dangers lurking online, but n attorney who is representing one of the 31 Rochester, MI, teens who potentially face felony charges for sexting nude images of themselves and their friends says action is as important as talking.

‘The Snappening’

Attorney Shannon Smith told WJBK-TV that parents should disable the Snapchat application on their kids’ phones as a precautionary measure.

Tell Us:




    • How are you talking to your kids about the dangers of online predators? Do you have any tips that would be helpful to others?
“Snapchat has caused issues in many of my cases,” Smith said. “The Snapchat app allows children to take photos without leaving a trace of the photo on your phone. It leads children to believe that there will be no consequences.”

About half of all Snapchat users are between the ages of 13-17, according to a story on The Telegraph, and the application was the culprit in the leaking of about 90,000 images reportedly leaked online in what has been dubbed “The Snappening.”

A handful of celebrities – including ]Jennifer Lawrence, Rihanna, Kim Kardashian, Jessica Brown-Findlay and Nick Hogan –have allegedly had private images shared online – but increasingly children are being targeted, the newspaper said.

A third-party client, Snapsaved.com, has admitted it was the source of the leaked photos, The Guardian reports.

@SMOKIE I thought for a second you were talking about yourself. oohh god no :)... I keep warning my Niece and Nephew they are 15 and 17 they do not listen My sister has lost control of them and all I can do is say Just wait until you get in trouble.. Especially here in Texas they just throw you into the nastiest freaking place with rapists, everything no segregation for even a misdemeanor.. Dear lord this kid at least he hopefully learns from it
 

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