She’s issued a heartbreaking warning đđ
The mother of a 14-year-old who died by suicide claims he was the victim of a âsextortionâ scam that took place online.
Any parent will tell you of the many concerns they harbor when it comes to their children finding their feet in the wild west that is the internet. Most want to at least be aware of what sites their little ones are visiting, what apps theyâve downloaded, what social media platforms they have accounts for. Some go further than that, monitoring their childâs online activity with a view to shielding them from potential pitfalls.
Even so, itâs difficult, if not impossible, to be in all places at once. Children and young teens can be susceptible to dangerous viral trends, not to mention fraudsters and scam artists.
The mother of Caleb Morgan knows this only too well.
On June 10, Caleb, of El Dorado, Kansas, started up a conversation with what he believed to be a â14-year-old girlâ on TikTok, with the chat then moving to Snapchat.
As per the Daily Mail, Calebâs mother, Morgan, alleges the other person sent compromising images of âherselfâ to Caleb, who then sent pictures of himself in return.
Things then took a turn for the ominous, with the âgirlâ in question demanding that Caleb send large amounts of cash in exchange for not leaking his photos. According to Morgan, the stranger âmade him feel like his life was over as he had made this mistakeâ.
Caleb took his own life by shooting himself with a gun at his family home.
The teenagerâs father called his mother to deliver the heartbreaking news.
âWhen I got there Caleb was still alive and breathing but they were unable to resuscitate him so they stopped trying as nothing was working,â Morgan recalled.
âHe passed away in the house and it was very difficult because I wanted to be with him but they wouldnât let me go inside as they didnât want me to see anything.
âI was hysterical and screaming and begging them to not give up on my boy and let me go to him. I was inconsolable.â
The motive behind Caleb dying by suicide was initially a mystery for his grieving parents, until the El Dorado Police Department went through his phone and discovered the conversations.
Morgan revealed: âThat is when they had gone through his TikTok messages and showed me the progression. It had stolen my boyâs happiness and hope in a 35-minute span.â
Caleb, his mother said, had even âsent a photo of the gunâ in a desperate bid to put an end to the extortion.
As per the FBI website, a âsextortionâ scam involves the blackmailing of a victim with sexually explicit images in order to receive money.
âIn some cases, the first contact from the criminal will be a threat. The person may claim to already have a revealing picture or video of a child that will be shared if the victim does not send more pictures,â according to information on the site.
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