“无神恶魔”:青少年在“性敲诈”后自杀,国际犯罪团伙盯上美国儿童
"Godless Demons": Teen Commits Suicide After "Sextortion" As International Crime Ring Targets American Children

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/godless-demons-teen-commits-suicide-after-sextortion-international-crime-ring-targets

西弗吉尼亚州15岁少年布莱斯·泰特(Bryce Tate)的死亡正在联邦调查中,可能涉及性敲诈勒索,凸显了针对青少年的在线掠夺日益严重的全国性危机。布莱斯在被冒充当地同龄人的人通过短信联系并勒索500美元后不久自杀,施害者娴熟地掌握了他的生活细节。 他的父亲认为布莱斯是被施害者谋杀的,他们在布莱斯生命的最后时刻向他发送了大约120条信息,引发了他的恐慌。当局正在调查与“764”的关联,这是一个已知的国际犯罪网络,以剥削弱势群体(包括未成年人)为目的,与俄罗斯和其他国家有关联。 联邦调查局报告称,性敲诈勒索案件显著增加,仅2024年就收到超过33,000起涉及儿童的报告。最近对与764附属机构有关的个人进行了起诉,其中包括一名现役海军成员,这凸显了这些行动的严重性和范围。

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原文

Federal authorities are investigating the death of a 15-year-old West Virginia boy as part of a broader examination into sextortion networks that have increasingly targeted American teenagers, resulting in what experts describe as a national crisis of online predation, the New York Post reported.

Bryce Tate, 15

Bryce Tate, a student at Nitro High School in Cross Lanes, was discovered dead in his home on November 6 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The tragedy unfolded roughly three hours after he began communicating with someone who contacted him via text message around 4:30 p.m.

His father, Adam Tate, has concluded that his son fell victim to a sophisticated extortion operation. Details shared with the Post indicate that the scheme began with photographs that were not artificially generated but rather appeared to show an actual girl who had previously been victimized herself.

Such schemes follow a well-established pattern, where criminals solicit explicit images from their targets, then threaten to share those images with the victim's social circle unless a ransom is paid.

The extortionists demanded $500 from Bryce, according to his father.

"My son had 30 freaking dollars and he's like, 'Sir, I'll give you my last $30.' And these cowards wouldn't take it," Tate told The Post.

The scammers appear to have done their homework, compiling detailed information about the teenager's daily life to create a convincing facade.

"They acted like a local 17-year-old girl. They knew which gym he worked out at, they knew a couple of his best friends and name-dropped them. They knew he played basketball for Nitro High School," Tate explained. "They built his trust to where he believed that this was truly somebody in this area."

Tate also rejects the characterization of his son's death as simply a suicide.

"They say it's suicide, but in my book it is 100% murder," he said. "They're godless demons, in my opinion. Just cowards, awful individuals, worse than criminals."

During the last 20 minutes of his life, Bryce was bombarded with roughly 120 messages. Law enforcement officials explained to his father that this tactic creates "tunnel vision to where you can't set your phone down," trapping victims in a spiral of panic and fear.

Bradford Arick, a public affairs specialist with the FBI, told The Post that "The FBI has seen a huge increase in the number of sextortion cases involving children and teens being threatened and coerced into sending explicit images online."

According to a representative from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children who spoke with the Post, the organization logged more than 33,000 sextortion reports involving children in 2024 alone. The first half of 2025 has seen comparable numbers.

While the FBI would not discuss the particulars of Bryce's case, citing an active investigation, the messages he received bear the hallmarks of a criminal enterprise known as 764—an international operation with tentacles reaching into Russia, Europe, Africa and the United States.

Earlier this month, the Department of Justice announced indictments against five individuals in the United States connected to Greggy's Cult, a 764 affiliate. Among those charged was an active-duty member of the Navy.

The FBI previously characterized 764 as a "violent online network that seeks to destroy civilized society through the corruption and exploitation of vulnerable populations, which often include minors."

In April, Attorney General Pam Bondi minced no words in describing the organization, calling it "one of the most heinous online child exploitation enterprises we have ever encountered — a network built on terror, abuse and the deliberate targeting of children."

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