Tuesday, October 7, 2025 - A sextortion network traced to Lagos, Nigeria, has been linked to the death of a 16-year-old American schoolboy, Evan Boettler, who took his own life after receiving blackmail messages from a fake Snapchat account.
Boettler, from Missouri, died just 90 minutes after being
threatened by an online user posing as a teenage girl under the name
JennyTee60, according to a BBC investigation.
The account had persuaded him to share explicit images
before demanding money and threatening to leak the pictures. One of the
messages sent to him read: “I have your nudes and everything needed to ruin
your life.”
Investigators later traced the Snapchat account to an IP
address in Lagos, Nigeria, uncovering a web of cybercriminals locally known as
Yahoo Boys. These groups, often operating from so-called “Hustle Kingdoms,” run
organized sextortion and romance scams targeting young people in Western
countries.
One of the scammers, identified only as Ola, described how
they use fake identities generated online to deceive victims. “You open a
female account using fake names from fake generators,” he said. When asked
about remorse, he replied: “I don’t feel bad because I need the money.”
Authorities say the scammers primarily target teenage boys
because they are more vulnerable to threats of exposure. Some networks have
also turned to cyber-spiritualists, who allegedly perform rituals to protect
scammers from arrest or increase their victims’ susceptibility.
The FBI reports that cases of sextortion in the United
States more than doubled in recent years, with over 55,000 cases recorded in
2024. The UK’s National Crime Agency also receives an average of 110 sextortion
reports each month.
Technology companies, including Meta and Snapchat, have
pledged stronger safeguards. Meta said it has invested over $30 billion in
safety measures, while Snapchat stated it has “zero tolerance for sextortion”
and cooperates with law enforcement to identify offenders.
However, the investigation into Boettler’s death reportedly
stalled after Nigerian telecommunications provider GloWorld failed to retain
the data connected to the IP address used by the scammer.
Nearly two years later, Evan’s parents, Kari and Brad
Boettler, say they are still seeking justice and hoping for stronger global
efforts to combat online sexual exploitation.

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