PUBLIC INTELLIGENCE – Air Force Office of Special Investigations Publishes Report on Military Sextortion Scams

An image taken from the cover of a February 2013 U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations report on cybersex extortion scams.

Public Intelligence

The U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) is warning military personnel to avoid becoming victims of online sextortion scams that use โ€œsexual images (obtained either through enticement or malicious code)โ€ to extort money from unsuspecting victims.ย  โ€œCyber sextortionโ€ is described as a growing problem among the military services with incidents being reported by โ€œall Military Criminal Investigative Organizationsโ€ involving service members stationed in Europe, Asia and the U.S. The AFOSI report, released in February on a restricted basis, was recently posted online on the document-sharing website Scribd.

After reviewing Department of Defense statistics, the AFOSI found that cyber sextortion cases across the military services are primarily โ€œwebcam sextortion scamsโ€ where they DoD personnel were โ€œenticed to engage in online sexual activities which were secretly recordedโ€ and โ€œmoney was then extorted from the victims in order to prevent the release of compromising video material.โ€ย  Though it is โ€œunclear whether perpetrators are specifically targeting US military membersโ€, the report describes DoD members as potentially โ€œvulnerable to blackmail and extortionโ€ because of the expectation that they maintain โ€œa professional appearanceโ€ and the strict requirements for maintaining a security clearance.

According to the AFOSI report, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) has identified four similar cases of cyber sextortion (two on Guam, one in Japan, and one in Bahrain) involving Navy members between August 2012 and November 2012. The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (USACIDC) also reported three cases involving soldiers located in South Korea, Germany, and Texas.ย  The AFOSI itself has identified multiple cases involving U.S. Air Force members in Japan, South Korea, Alaska, Portugal and Guam.

Many of the incidents reportedly originated from a criminalย sextortion ring based in the Philippines.ย  In a public affairs notice posted earlier this month on the Air Force website, a spokesperson for the AFOSI said that the ring involved โ€œ21 employees of a Philippines-based web portal solutions companyโ€ who reportedly โ€œtargeted hundreds of U.S. Army and Navy members for a period of more than a yearโ€.

To protect against potential sextortion scams, the AFOSI recommends protecting personal information and limiting what information is divulged on social networking sites.ย  The report also recommends not responding to โ€œunsolicited e-mails or chat requestsโ€, particularly when the communication involves a โ€œrequest to exchange provocative pictures or videosโ€.

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Air Force Office of Special Investigations Publishes Report on Military Sextortion Scams