Cyber Extortion/Sextortion/Sexting Archive

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A federal judge has ordered an Indiana man charged with coercing two teenage boys into making sexually explicit online videos to be held without bond.

U.S. attorney’s office spokesman Tim Horty says a lawyer for Richard Leon Finkbiner told U.S. District Magistrate Judge Craig McKee on Wednesday that they weren’t seeking  Finkbiner’s release from jail at this time.

Finkbiner, 39, was appointed federal public defender William Marsh to represent him. Marsh didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Finkbiner has been in custody since his arrest Friday at his home in the western Indiana community of Brazil.

Prosecutors say Finkbiner secretly recorded 14-year-old boys in Michigan and Maryland separately performing sexual acts during anonymous video chats and then threatened to post the videos online unless they made more videos.

(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

Bail denied for 'sextortion' suspect

Posted April 12, 2012 By NewsRoom

A federal judge on Wednesday ordered an Indiana man charged with coercing two teenage boys into making sexually explicit online videos to be held without bond, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

During a hearing in federal court in Terre Haute, defense attorneys told U.S. District Magistrate Judge Craig McKee that they would not seek 39-year-old Richard Leon Finkbiner’s release at this time, said Tim Horty, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office.

Finkbiner has been in custody since Friday, when he was arrested at his home in the western Indiana city of Brazil. It is not uncommon for suspects in federal criminal cases to be detained until trial.

Horty said Finkbiner only answered “yes” or “no” in response to McKee’s questions.

Federal defender William Marsh was appointed to represent Finkbiner. Marsh didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Prosecutors allege in a criminal complaint that Finkbiner secretly recorded a 14-year-old Michigan boy and another in Maryland performing sexual acts during anonymous video chats, then threatened to post the videos on gay porn sites unless they made more videos for his private use.

When investigators first examined Finkbiner’s computer, they found thousands of explicit video files depicting hundreds of minor victims, authorities say. During questioning by FBI agents, Finkbiner estimated that he had coerced at least 100 young people into making explicit videos, according to the complaint.

Authorities released a mug shot of Finkbiner on Monday, hoping that other potential victims will come forward.

Finkbiner is charged with two counts of sexual exploitation of a child. He could face up to 30 years in prison if convicted on both counts.

Prosecutors say the case is an example of “sextortion,” a crime authorities are seeing with greater frequency in which Internet predators catch victims in embarrassing situations online and threaten to expose them unless they create sexually explicit photos or videos.

'Sextortion' suspect remains in federal custody

Posted April 12, 2012 By NewsRoom

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. —
A Clay County man accused of possibly the largest case of online sexual extortion of minors in the nation will remain in federal custody awaiting trial.

Richard Leon Finkbiner, 39, of Brazil, waived a probable cause hearing and a detention hearing Wednesday when he appeared in federal court in Terre Haute on allegations that he coerced dozens of teenage boys into recording sexually explicit videos after he threatened to expose them on pornographic websites.

Finkbiner appeared in the custody of federal marshals at the hearing before Magistrate Craig McKee. Several people including family members attended the hearing, apparently in support of Finkbiner, who was arrested Friday at his rural Clay County home where he operated an Internet services company.

Formal charges are expected to be filed within 30 days. No trial date has been set.

U.S. Attorney Joseph Hogsett said investigators hope that anyone who may have been contacted by Finkbiner will notify investigators at the FBI’s Cybersquard Division in Indianapolis at 1-877-542-8979. Hogsett declined to say if more alleged victims have come forward since news of Finkbiner’s arrest was made public this week. However, he has said that victims could number from dozens to hundreds.

“We will prosecute this matter vigorously,” Hogsett said outside the federal courthouse.

He called the allegations against Finkbiner disturbing, and said such criminal cases “keep me awake at night.” When investigators served a search warrant at his home April 6, they found thousands of sexually explicit video clips of teenage boys performing sex acts that Finkbiner captured on his computer web camera. Some of the videos were allegedly transmitted using the popular video chat site, Skype.

Finkiner reportedly told investigators that his victims numbered at least 100 or more.

Finkbiner allegedly had secretly captured sexually explicit images that the teenagers themselves had sent out across what they thought were private Internet video chat sites.

According to the criminal complaint filed against him, he was able to track down those teens using information on social media sites such as Facebook, and then contacted them, threatening to make them into “gay porn stars” if they didn’t comply with his demands.

The criminal complaint filed against Finkbiner describes the actions he allegedly took to coerce two 14-year-old boys — one in Michigan and the other in Maryland — to record themselves using the web cameras on their computers while engaging in explicit sexual activities.

Hogsett said investigators had found “no evidence yet” that Finkbiner has traded or sold images or videos of his alleged victims. But the enormity of the evidence collected shows thousands of sexually explicit images and videos depicting hundreds of individuals, which may indicate the existence of many other victims. It was unknown if any Indiana victims exist.

Finkbiner was arrested on charges involving the Michigan and Maryland teens, though Hogsett said he anticipates more charges to come as more victims are identified.

Hogsett used the word ³sextortion² to describe Finkbiner¹s crime. He said the Internet has allowed sextortion cases to flourish as predators capture embarrassing images online, then threaten to expose their victims unless they agree to make more even more sexually explicit photos or videos.

Lisa Trigg is a reporter at the Tribune-Star in Terre Haute and can be reached at (812) 231-4254 or lisa.trigg@tribstar.com.

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It was a quick court proceeding Wednesday in Terre Haute for the man accused of ‘sextortion,’ a case that could involve more than 100 victims. 

Richard Finkbiner appeared in court for the first time since being arrested for child exploitation charges.

Finkbiner is accused of coercing two teenage boys from Michigan and Maryland into sexual activity through online video chat.

However, investigators believe there may be more than 100 more victims, making it one of the biggest cases of its kind.

According to court documents, Finkbiner recorded his alleged victims doing sexually explicit acts and then used the recordings to blackmail them into sending more sexual photos and videos, a crime referred to as ‘sextorition’.

“Frankly, as a law enforcement official and as a parent, it is the types of allegations in these cases that keep me up and night and we are confident in our case we are confident in our ability to protect any and all victims, alleged victims in this matter,” said U.S. Prosecutor Joe Hogsett.  

In court Wednesday, Finkbiner waived his right to a preliminary hearing and to a detention hearing.  He will remain in federal custody until he goes to trial. 

“Formal charges will be filed either by information or indictment by the grand jury and following formal charges, we will proceed to trial or other resolution to the matter,” said assistant U.S. attorney Zach Meyers.

The formal charge will likely be for the production of child pornography, which takes approximately 30 days.
 
Finkbiner’s family attended the hearing Wednesday, but they had no comment about the accusations. 

Sextortion case raises warning for parents

Posted April 11, 2012 By NewsRoom

INDIANAPOLIS -

The man at the center of a nationwide online sextortion case goes to federal court Wednesday.

The case has raised a new warning for parents about video chat lines.Your children may be using the same website allegedly used by the suspect to meet and talk with strangers.

The website Omegle.com bills itself as a way to “talk to strangers.” The site picks another user at random and connects them so they can chat. There’s also an option to have the site use your Facebook “likes” as a way of determining who you talk to. A mobile version of the site is also available – meaning parents should be vigilant about how their children are using the internet outside the home as well as inside.

There are hundreds of sites similar to Omegle. Although it carries the following warning on its front page, the site admits that it can’t control people’s behavior.

“Do not behave inappropriately on Omegle, and understand that human behavior is fundamentally uncontrollable. The people you encounter on Omegle may not behave appropriately. Use Omegle at your own peril, and do not use Omegle if you are under 13, or without a parent/guardian’s permission if you are under 18. Disconnect if anyone makes you feel uncomfortable.”

Federal investigators say 39-year-old Richard Finkbiner of Brazil, Indiana used the same website to coerce hundreds of people, including minors, to transmit sexual content.

Finkbiner goes to federal court for his initial hearing Wednesday on two counts of exploitation of a minor.

Authorities warn parents that the website used by Finkbiner, and many just like it, is still up and active.

“We don’t think twice about checking ahead of time before they go to a party at someone’s house. We have to do the same thing here. Knowing your son’s or daughter’s password, I know it’s intrusive; I know that they think that you are being too diligent of a parent. But my thought is be over-aggressive with that kind of stuff rather than under-aggressive. You would never forgive yourself if your child got involved with something like this,” said Tim Horty, US attorney spokesperson.

WTHR decided to test Omegle. The operators of the website introduced us to a stranger to chat with online. At 5:00 pm, watch our surprising conversation.

Ind. 'sextortion' suspect ordered held, no bond

Posted April 11, 2012 By NewsRoom

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered an Indiana man charged with coercing two teenage boys into making sexually explicit online videos to be held without bond, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

During a hearing in federal court in Terre Haute, defense attorneys told U.S. District Magistrate Judge Craig McKee that they would not seek 39-year-old Richard Leon Finkbiner‘s release at this time, said Tim Horty, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office.

Finkbiner has been in custody since Friday, when he was arrested at his home in the western Indiana city of Brazil. It is not uncommon for suspects in federal criminal cases to be detained until trial.

Horty said Finkbiner only answered “yes” or “no” in response to McKee’s questions.

Federal defender William Marsh was appointed to represent Finkbiner. Marsh didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Prosecutors allege in a criminal complaint that Finkbiner secretly recorded a 14-year-old Michigan boy and another in Maryland performing sexual acts during anonymous video chats, then threatened to post the videos on gay porn sites unless they made more videos for his private use.

When investigators first examined Finkbiner’s computer, they found thousands of explicit video files depicting hundreds of minor victims, authorities say. During questioning by FBI agents, Finkbiner estimated that he had coerced at least 100 young people into making explicit videos, according to the complaint.

Authorities released a mug shot of Finkbiner on Monday, hoping that other potential victims will come forward.

Finkbiner is charged with two counts of sexual exploitation of a child. He could face up to 30 years in prison if convicted on both counts.

Prosecutors say the case is an example of “sextortion,” a crime authorities are seeing with greater frequency in which Internet predators catch victims in embarrassing situations online and threaten to expose them unless they create sexually explicit photos or videos.

(WHAS11) — An Indiana man is under arrest, accused of coercing young boys into sending him sexually explicit images.

Richard Finkbiner of Brazil, Ind. has been charged with two federal counts of sexually exploiting a child. Now, investigators said they found thousands more sexually explicit videos and images and those findings could make this the largest sextortion scheme in history.

It’s a reminder that your children can be at great risk even in the safety of their own home. It may start small – on a home computer or at school – but the problem is big. So big, it doesn’t seem to be going away any time soon.

Internet safety is difficult for police because the World Wide Web holds true to its title – it’s everywhere and so is its threat.

“What scares me about the internet is it’s kind of like the wild west i mean you just don’t know who’s out there,” father Andy Just said.

And what your child puts out there is easy for the wrong people to see.

“Getting a 14 year old to believe anything you as a parent say can sometimes be a challenge maybe the best example is that anything you post online is the same as putting it up on a billboard,” Michael Losavio, instructor of justice administration, said.

In the case of Finkbiner, it was blackmail, but Losavio said child predators work hard to lure their prey and they know to start simple.

“The grooming behavior online is to start that level of trust then let it escalate get the child to do more and more things that they might not normally do,” Lasavio said.

Talking to your child regularly about what they do and who they talk to on the internet ensures that they have your trust first.

“If the child is afraid to talk with their parents and say i need help,  they’re at a greater risk; they’ll be a target,” Lasavio said.

Just said: “I teach my children to have common sense and let them know that there’s people out there in the internet, and just like in the real world that are dangerous and they need to be careful.”

Losavio said it well, “if you wouldn’t leave your child unaccompanied in times square, why would you leave you them alone on the internet?” and he said even if you trust your child, don’t underestimate the capabilities of online predators.
 

On February 26, a 14-year old boy in Oakland County, Michigan broke down into hysterics. He told his brother that he had spent the week making sexually explicit videos with his computer’s webcam, and that he had done so to appease a blackmailer he had met online. If he wasn’t able to convince a friend to have oral sex with him on camera the next day, he risked exposure by the blackmailer. He had actually invited a friend over, without telling the friend why.

The brother told their parents, who immediately went to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office. A deputy arrived soon after and sat down with the 14-year old for an interview; what he heard was unbelievably lurid.

Two days before, on February 24, the boy had visited an unnamed video chat website. He made contact with a man there and showed the man his penis. The man was recording the chat and played back the recording for the boy. Not only did the recording show the boy’s genitalia, but it included his face. The man promised to distribute the video to gay porn websites unless the 14-year old agreed to contact him at horni_man@hotmail.com and through Skype. The boy made the Skype call immediately, and the man on the other end announced the boy would now become his “cam slave” if he wanted to save his reputation.

The next day, a Saturday, the boy connected to the same Skype account as instructed. The man blacked out his own screen, but he could see the boy. “it’s simple if u do what ur told the vid will NEVER b seen by anyone but me if not it will be,” wrote the man. He listed specific websites to which he might post the video and told the boy, “ill add your name and email so if anyone googles u they will see ur video. So u wanna play or b a famous gay porn star?”

The boy felt he had no choice. When the man ordered him to dance around the room and remove his clothes, he did so. When the man ordered him to masturbate, he did so. When the man ordered him to lick his own ejaculate, he did so. The man then told him to show up the next day for another session.

The boy spent Sunday at a school sporting event. When he returned home, he connected to the man on Skype again. This session was even more depraved than the last. The man was recording it all, of course, and when it was over, the man showed him the new video. To keep all the videos off the Internet, the boy would have to return for one last session, this time with a friend. If the two would not have oral sex, the videos would be posted.

Whatever degradations the boy had experienced, at least they had involved him alone. Now he would have to rope someone new into the scheme, which was unlikely to be easy and would require some unbelievably awkward explanations. But the alternative was also horrific. The stress had become so extreme that the boy broke down on Sunday night and told his brother, who told the parents, who told police.

The Oakland County Sheriff looked at the e-mail headers from messages sent by horni_man@hotmail.com, each of which pointed to the same sender’s IP address. The address was controlled by New Wave Communications, which in response to a subpoena told police that the address had been assigned to Clay County Internet, a small Internet provider and host serving the rural area southeast of Terre Haute, Indiana. (A price list from the company advertises dial-up Internet for $20/month and Web design for $55/hour.) Clay County Internet was run by one Richard Leon Finkbiner, but did Finkbiner have anything to do with the blackmail? Given that he ran a small ISP, it wasn’t clear.

Oakland County sent a subpoena to Microsoft and brought in the FBI for help. An FBI agent in Detroit reviewed the messages in the horni_man account and found that whoever ran it had been extorting many other people, too. One victim had written, “all I ask you for is to delete it please im onlyh 14 please just do this to somebody else not me please.” In a response to a separate victim, the account holder had warned that “I wont get caught im a hacker I covered my tracks.”

But he hadn’t. The FBI agent found a Google Voice number among the e-mail messages; a subpoena to Google revealed that the number had been registered to “Rick Finkbiner,” who was about to receive a visit.

The warrant

On April 6, a federal search warrant team showed up at Finkbiner’s home, which sat across from a cornfield on a rural state road. The team went through all computers and digital media in the home; they found thousands of videos showing hundreds of people going through the same ordeal as the 14 year old boy. As an FBI agent put it in a document filed later that day, “Many, if not most, of these individuals appear to be between the ages of 14-16 years of age.”

Finkbiner agreed to an interview with the agents searching his home. Special Agent Ryan Barrett sat him down and asked him about the suspected blackmail. Finkbiner confessed. By his own admission, he had blackmailed around 100 people in the same way. When asked about pictures of a specific 14-year old boy, Finkbiner “could not specifically recall or recognize the images, stating that he had induced or coerced the production of videos and images of so many people engaged in sexually explicit conduct that he could not readily recognize every individual,” Barrett wrote.

That same day, a federal magistrate judge signed off on an arrest warrant and Finkbiner was taken into custody.

“As a member of the law enforcement community, and more importantly, as a parent, these are the types of cases that keep me up at night,” said US Attorney Joseph Hogsett in a statement yesterday. “This defendant may not remember his alleged victims, but the true tragedy is that not one of them will ever forget.”

Only two of the victims have been identified so far, both 14-year old boys, but the FBI’s Indianapolis “cybersquad” is asking victims to come forward. Based only on the initial charges against him, Finkbiner faces a maximum sentence of 30 years in jail if found guilty.

The case may prove to be the largest “sextortion” case on record; it certainly dwarfs other notorious cases, such as the one against wheelchair-bound California man Luis Mijangos, who remotely switched on webcams and microphones to monitor women at home. It’s also a sobering reminder about the power of the Internet. The kind of crazy sexual extortion that would have taken some serious effort for a 14-year old from Oakland County to stumble into offline can now happen in the privacy of one’s bedroom. All it takes is a laptop and a lack of good judgment.

Sextortion case draws safety concern

Posted April 11, 2012 By NewsRoom

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTHI) – One day after authorities announced the arrest of Richard Finkbiner, 39, of Clay County on charges of blackmailing teenagers in exchange for sexually explicit images, some parents are left to wonder how safe their children are online.

Authorities point out that national, state and local law enforcement and prosecutors have arrested thousands of alleged online predators in recent years, and the U.S. Justice Department reports indictments against 2,929 in 2011 alone through the department’s Project Safe Child program.

They also note that many sexual predators can face tough penalties, particularly those charged with federal crimes.

“In the area of child exploitation, federal law is extremely severe and harsh,” said U.S. Attorney Joseph Hogsett in a Monday press release.

Still, authorities warn that the prevalence of internet technology makes it possible for child predators to target minors across the country and around the world.

Those who work with internet technology say that one poor decision by a child can have lasting consequences, particularly in cases of sextortion.

“Children have the judgment of children, and unfortunately, in these cases, they’re paying adult consequences, said Jerry Hargis, a consultant with the Joink technology company.

In many cases, sharing photos or videos can carry potential dangers to kids, Hargis said.  

“It’s difficult to control where content goes once it’s placed on the internet, either through the loss of control you have when you put it on a public site or through someone else accessing it with or without your permission,” Hargis said.

Hargis said it’s important for parents to educate themselves about online issues by visiting sites like this one from Microsoft , this one from the Federal government , this one from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children or this one from the Family Online Safety Institute .

“Typically, the kids will learn more about the technology than their parents … and parents shouldn’t be intimidated by that,” Hargis said. “The same sorts of things that make for good parenting in every other circumstance make for good parenting online.”

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INDIANAPOLIS —
When a 14-year-old boy from suburban Detroit posed naked in front of a web camera, he likely never thought it would be used to blackmail him.

But that’s what federal authorities say happened to the Michigan teen and scores more like him who were victims of a “sextortionist,” who demanded not money, but more graphically sexual images from the teenagers he targeted.

Those federal authorities say extortion using sexual images is a growing crime as predators exploit the rise of social media and the prevalence of a “sexting” culture that leads teens and children alike to think it’s OK to text or transmit naked images of themselves into the virtual world.

On Monday, U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett announced the arrest of Richard Leon Finkbiner, a 39-year-old Brazil, Ind., computer consultant and church youth group volunteer charged with  sexual exploitation of two teenage boys.

Details of the case against Finkbiner — put together by the FBI, Indiana State Police and sex-crime investigators from the Kokomo Police Department who are part of a multi-agency computer-crimes task force — sound like the plot line of a TV crime show.

Authorities allege Finkbiner secretly captured sexually explicit images that the teenagers themselves had sent out over what they thought were private Internet video chat sites.

Finkbiner then used what Hogsett called “online surveillance techniques” to track down the identity of those teenagers, using information on social media sites like Facebook. He then contacted them, threatening to make them into “gay porn stars” by releasing the videos publicly, if they didn’t comply with his demands, authorities said.

The charges against Finkbinder are headline-grabbing, but investigators who specialize in sex crimes against children say they’re becoming tragically more common with the rise in social media.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Steve DeBrota, who heads a multi-agency task force devoted to investigating and prosecuting crimes against children in Indiana, said he saw an increase in “sextortion” cases about four years ago.

That’s when web cameras became almost standard on most laptops and when video chat sites like Skype became more pervasive. In addition, an increasing number of teenagers and children started  frequenting social media sites, posting videos to YouTube, and meeting up with strangers from around the world on online websites like Chatroulette, which is for webcam-based conversations.

A recent case DeBrota helped prosecute involved a homeless man, Jimmy Lee Cook, who used free wi-fi to access the Internet to entice a 12-year-old Kokomo girl to upload sexually explicit videos of herself to YouTube. Investigators have found more of Cook’s victims since, including an 8-year-old.

“We’ve had a full platter of problems, dealing with child predators,” DeBrota said. “This just adds another another set of problems.”

DeBrota’s fear is that children and teens are mimicking behavior that’s been “normalized” by some adults and glamorized by Hollywood. Posting a naked video of yourself on YouTube, after all, is what boosts the fame — or infamy — of some reality TV stars.

A recent Pew Research Center poll found that 6 percent of Americans over 18 admitted having sent a nude or near-nude image of themselves to someone else; 15 percent said they had received one. In the  30- to 49-year-old demographic, 17 percent reported receiving such a message.

“Why would we not expect teens to model what adults do, and for that to move its way down to children?” DeBrota said.

But what may seem like flirtation turns dangerous, he said, when those images end up in the hands of sadistic predators who revel in terrifying their victims.

“For them, it’s game of ‘I own you,’ ” said DeBrota. “Part of the thrill is the control they have over their victims.”

That’s why DeBrota urges parents to have candid conversations with their children about how they’re using social media. Twenty years ago, child predators took Polaroid pictures of their victims and used that to blackmail them into secrecy, DeBrota said. The crime only stopped when victims had the courage to come forward.

The tools have changed with technology, but the essence of the crime remains the same, he said.

“These are offenders who won’t get better on their own,” DeBrota said. “They tend to have multiple victims, and their crimes will only get worse.”

Maureen Hayden is the Indiana Statehouse bureau chief for CNHI, the parent company of the Tribune-Star. She can be reached at maureen.hayden@indianamediagroup.com  

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INDIANAPOLIS —
Federal authorities say a Clay County man has confessed to coercing scores of teenage boys into recording sexually explicit videos after he threatened to expose them on pornographic websites.

U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett said the arrest of 39-year-old Richard Leon Finkbiner of Brazil may be the largest case of online sexual extortion of minors in the country.

Finkbiner was arrested Friday morning after federal and state investigators executed a search warrant at his home, which also houses an Internet services company.

Hogsett said investigators found thousands of sexually explicit video clips of teenage boys who had allegedly been coerced into performing sex acts that Finkbiner captured on his computer web camera. Some of the videos were allegedly transmitted using the popular video chat site, Skype. Finkbiner told investigators that his victims numbered at least 100 or more.

The way Finkbiner enticed the teens into recording the sex acts is the stuff of parental nightmares, Hogsett said.

Finkbiner allegedly had secretly captured sexually explicit images that the teenagers themselves had sent out across what they thought were private Internet video chat sites.

According to the criminal complaint filed against him, he was able to track down those teens using information on social media sites like Facebook, and then contacted them, threatening to make them into “gay porn stars” if they didn’t comply with his demands.

“I can’t sleep at night thinking about this case,” Hogsett said. 

At Monday news conferences in Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Brazil, Hogsett released a photograph of Finkbiner and asked the media to get information out about the case in hopes that more victims would come forward. One of the teenage victims told investigators he had seen the man identified as Finkbiner during an online video session.

“It’s possible others may have seen him and recognize him,” Hogsett said.

Hogsett asked anyone who had contact with Finkbiner to call the FBI’s Cybersquard Division in Indianapolis at (877) 542-8979.

The criminal complaint filed against Finkbiner is graphic in detail. It describes the actions he allegedly took to coerce two 14-year-old boys, one in Michigan and the other in Maryland, to record themselves engaged in explicit sexual activities using the web cameras on their computers.

The complaint also contains the pleas of one of Finkbinder’s alleged victims, begging the Brazil man to stop. Finkbinder’s typed response, according to the complaint: “I wont get caught im a hacker I covered my tracks.”

Eventually, both boys told family members what was happening, and those family members contacted police.

Hogsett said investigators had found “no evidence yet” that Finkbiner has traded or sold images or videos of his alleged victims. But the enormity of the evidence collected shows thousands of sexually explicit images and videos depicting hundreds of individuals, which may indicate the existence of many other victims. At this early stage of the investigation, he said, it is impossible to estimate if any Indiana victims exist.

Finkbiner was arrested on charges involving the Michigan and Maryland teens, though Hogsett said he anticipates more charges to come as more victims are identified.

Hogsett used the word “sextortion” to describe Finkbiner’s crime. He said the Internet has allowed sextortion cases to flourish as predators capture embarrassing images online, then threaten to expose their victims unless they agree to make more even more sexually explicit photos or videos.

“Unfortunately, the Internet has its dark side,” Hogsett said.

Finkbiner is being housed in the Vigo County jail. His first court appearance is scheduled for Wednesday. He faces up to 30 years in prison if convicted on the current charges of sexual exploitation of children.

The case was brought as part of the U.S. Attorney’s Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat child sexual exploitation and abuse.

Hogsett highlighted last year’s successful prosecution of Trevor Shea, a Maryland man who pleaded guilty to victimizing about a dozen young girls across the country utilizing a similar sextortion scheme. Included in that case was a minor in Hendricks County, Ind.  Shea has been sentenced to 33 years in prison.

Tribune-Star reporter Lisa Trigg contributed to this article.

Maureen Hayden is the Indiana Statehouse bureau chief for CNHI, the parent company of the Tribune-Star. She can be reached at maureen.hayden@indianamedia.com

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INDIANAPOLIS —
Federal authorities say a Western Indiana man has confessed to coercing scores of teenage boys into recording sexually explicit videos after he threatened to expose them on pornographic websites.

U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett said the arrest of 39-year-old Richard Leon Finkbiner of Brazil may be the largest case of online sexual extortion of minors in the U.S. Finkbiner was arrested Friday after federal and state investigators executed a search warrant at his home.

Hogsett said investigators found thousands of sexually explicit video clips of teenage boys who’d allegedly been forced into performing sex acts that Finkbiner captured on his computer Web camera. Some of the videos were allegedly transmitted using the popular video chat site, Skype. Finkbiner told investigators that his victims numbered at least 100 or more.

The way Finkbiner enticed the teenagers into recording the sex acts is the stuff of parental nightmares, Hogsett said. Finkbiner allegedly had secretly captured sexually explicit images that the teenagers themselves had sent out over what they thought were private Internet video chat sites.

According to the criminal complaint filed against him, he was able to track down those teenagers using information on social media sites like Facebook, and then contacted them, threatening to make them into “gay porn stars” if they didn’t comply with his demands.

“I can’t sleep at night thinking about this case,” Hogsett said.  

On Monday morning at a press conference, Hogsett released a photograph of Finkbiner and asked the media to get information out about the case in hopes that more victims would come forward.

Hogsett asked anyone who had contact with Finkbiner to call the FBI’s Cybersquad Division in Indianapolis at 877-542-8979.

The criminal complaint filed against Finkbiner is graphic in detail. It describes the actions he allegedly took to coerce two 14-year-old boys, one in Michigan and the other in Maryland, to record themselves engaged in explicit sexual activities using the Web cameras on their computers.

The complaint also contains the pleas of one of Finkbiner’s alleged victims, begging him to stop. Finkbiner’s response, according to the complaint: “I wont get caught im a hacker I covered my tracks.”

Eventually, both boys confessed to family members what was happening, and those family members contacted police.

Finkbiner was arrested on charges involving the Michigan and Maryland teens, though Hogsett said he anticipates more charges to come as more victims are identified. Hogsett used the word “sextortion” to describe Finkbiner’s crime. He said the Internet has allowed sextortion cases to flourish as predators capture embarrassing images online, then threaten to expose their victims unless they agree to make even more sexually explicit photos or videos.

“Unfortunately, the Internet has its dark side,” Hogsett said.

Finkbiner is being housed in the Vigo County jail. His first court appearance is scheduled for Wednesday. He faces up to 30 years in prison if convicted on the current charges of sexual exploitation of children.

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INDIANAPOLIS —Investigators are trying to identify hundreds of potential victims whose images were found on the computer of an Indiana man charged with coercing two teenage boys into performing online sex acts for him by threatening to post on gay-porn sites compromising videos he secretly made of them.

U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett said during a Monday news conference that the “sextortion” case against Richard Leon Finkbiner could become the largest of its kind in the U.S.

Finkbiner, 39, was arrested Friday at his home in the Clay County community of Brazil and faces two preliminary counts of sexually exploiting a child. He remained in custody Monday and has a detention hearing set for Wednesday.

During questioning by FBI agents, Finkbiner estimated that he had coerced at least 100 young people into making explicit videos, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Terre Haute, Ind. Hogsett said investigators found “thousands” of explicit images on Finkbiner’s hard drive, mostly of teenage boys.

“We are fearful that it could involve hundreds of individuals not just here in Indiana but across the country,” Hogsett said.

Authorities released a mug shot of him Monday, hoping other potential victims will come forward.

Officials did not say whether they suspect Finkbiner shared the images with anyone else. They did say there are websites that offer advice on how to sexually extort others and where images can be posted.

Finkbiner owns Clay County Internet in Brazil, Ind., which provides website hosting and other computer-related services.


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Indiana man charged with child 'sextortion'

Posted April 10, 2012 By NewsRoom

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Investigators are trying to identify hundreds of potential victims whose images were found on the computer of an Indiana man charged with coercing two teenage boys into performing online sex acts for him by threatening to post on gay porn sites compromising videos he secretly made of them.

U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett said during a Monday news conference that the “sextortion” case against Richard Leon Finkbiner could become the largest of its kind in the U.S. to date.

Finkbiner, 39, was arrested Friday at his home in the Clay County community of Brazil and faces two preliminary counts of sexually exploiting a child. He remained in custody Monday and has a detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday. Court records indicated he didn’t have an attorney.

During questioning by FBI agents, Finkbiner estimated that he had coerced at least 100 young people into making explicit videos, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Terre Haute. Hogsett said investigators found “thousands” of explicit images on Finkbiner’s hard drive, mostly of teenage boys.

“We are fearful that it could involve hundreds of individuals not just here in Indiana but across the country,” Hogsett said.

Authorities released a mug shot of him Monday, hoping that other potential victims will come forward.

“Mr. Finkbiner has focused his attention on what appear to be young men between the ages of 14 to 16,” Hogsett said.

The preliminary charges pertain to Finkbiner’s alleged extortion of two 14-year-old boys, one in Maryland and the other in Michigan. Prosecutors say he surreptitiously recorded videos of the boys exposing themselves on webcam chat sites and threatened to post them and the boys’ identities on gay porn sites unless the boys performed sexual acts for him via webcam.

“So u wanna play or b a famous gay porn star?” he allegedly asked the Michigan boy.

The boy told Finkbiner he was underage and pleaded with him to delete the recording, the complaint says. “u know that I under age and that is against the law and u could be arrested for this.”

But the complaint says Finkbiner responded: “yes it is illegal im ok with that…I won’t get caught im a hacker I covered my tracks.”

The boys complied with Finkbiner’s demands at first before reporting the crime to relatives, officials said. Investigators then tracked the communications to Clay County Internet in Brazil, a company Finkbiner owns that provides website hosting and other computer-related services, the complaint said.

Officials did not say whether they suspect Finkbiner shared the images with anyone else. They did say that there are websites that offer advice on how to sexually extort others and where images can be posted.

Sextortion is a growing crime in which Internet predators catch victims in embarrassing situations online and threaten to expose them unless they create sexually explicit photos or videos.

“This is not the normal extortion,” said Indiana State Police Lt. Chuck Cohen, who specializes in online crime. “This is extortion for sexual satisfaction.”

The crime has been reported across the U.S.

In Alabama, a 24-year-old man was sentenced to 18 years in prison in 2010 after he admitted sending threatening e-mails on Facebook and MySpace extorting nude photos from more than 50 young women in Alabama, Pennsylvania and Missouri.

A 31-year-old California man was arrested that same year after allegedly hacking into more than 200 computers and threatened to expose nude photos. Authorities say 44 of the victims were juveniles, and the man even managed to remotely activate some victims’ webcams without their knowledge.

More recently, a 21-year-old Maryland man who pleaded guilty to charges he extorted an Indiana teen and up to nine other girls across the country into sexual favors online was sentenced in January to 33 years in federal prison.

Cohen urged any young people who have been targeted by online predators to tell their parents, a teacher or another responsible adult.

“The only way to stop the embarrassment is to get others involved,” he said.

___

Follow Charles Wilson on Twitter: https://twitter.com/CharlesDWilson

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