‘Recovery scams’ targeting sextortion victims are on the rise, experts warn
VANCOUVER — A panicked 14-year-old from British Columbia and his family paid $1,500 to a company that claimed it would recover intimate images that were being used to extort him. It didn’t.
Darren Laur, chief training officer at White Hatter, an internet safety and digital literacy education company based in Victoria said the teen’s family reached out to him with their story after the other firm told them there was nothing that could be done.
He said the boy had fallen victim to a growing fraud tactic.
“These companies are popping up all over the place right now. Why? Because sextortion is on a huge increase,” Laur said in an interview. “They’re almost becoming predatory in and of themselves, in my opinion.”