Alex McCartney, 26, had pleaded guilty earlier this year to a charge of
manslaughter in a Northern Ireland court after a young American girl who was
among the thousands of alleged victims he blackmailed online died by suicide.
McCartney had admitted to a total of 185 charges involving 70 child
victims in court including blackmail, inciting a child to engage in sexual
activity and producing and distributing indecent images of children.
He was also held culpable for the death of 12-year-old Cimarron Thomas
in West Virginia, according to the U.K.'s Press Association news agency.
Cimarron Thomas, who lived in West Virginia with her mother, father and
siblings, died of suicide in May 2018. During her online interactions
with McCartney, authorities say he attempted to coerce her into sending graphic
images involving a younger sibling.
McCartney was already under investigation at the time, and was about to
face charges from British investigators when authorities discovered Cimarron's
identity and the circumstances of her death, the BBC News reported Friday,
October 25.
Thomas' father, a U.S. Army veteran, died by suicide 18 months after his
daughter, not knowing any of the circumstances behind Cimarron's death.
Jim Gamble, a former senior British police officer specializing in child
safety, said that it was a "shocking case."
The sheer scale of it and the horrific nature of the harm inflicted on
these young girls makes it one of the worst I've ever seen," Gamble said,
adding: "Don't watch this and think this happens very rarely."
Detective Chief Superintendent Eamonn Corrigan of the Police Service of
Northern Ireland's Crime Operations Department issued a statement Friday,
calling McCartney "nothing but a disgusting child predator who was posing
as young girls online to groom, manipulate and sexually abuse his victims, as
young as four, to satisfy his own sexual perversions and that of other online
child sexual offenders."
McCartney's crimes occurred between 2014 and 2019, when he's believed by
police to have targeted about 3,500 victims, mostly via Snapchat, all over the
world, including in Australia, New Zealand and the U.S., according to the Press
Association. The case against him in the Belfast Crown Court focused on 70
child victims, including Thomas.
Snapchat has not released any response to Friday's verdict against
McCartney from Snapchat. The social messaging app was accused in September of
having features that make it a favored platform of sexual criminals targeting
children, in a lawsuit filed by New Mexico against its parent company, Snap
Inc.
An undercover investigation by the New Mexico State found that Snapchat
has crafted "an environment where predators can easily target children
through sextortion schemes and other forms of sexual abuse," Attorney
General Raúl Torrez said in a news release.
In a statement responding to the New Mexico case, Snapchat said the app
was designed "as a place to communicate with a close circle of friends,
with built-in safety guardrails," and it said there were "deliberate
design choices to make it difficult for strangers to discover minors on our
service."
"We continue to evolve our safety mechanisms and policies, from
leveraging advanced technology to detect and block certain activity, to
prohibiting friending from suspicious accounts, to working alongside law
enforcement and government agencies, among so much more," the company
said, adding that it continued to work with "industry, government, and law
enforcement to exchange information and concept stronger defenses."
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