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Under New Law, California Students Could Get Lessons in Risks of Sextortion
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A teenager uses her mobile phone to access social media in New York City, on Jan. 31, 2024. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
By Summer Lane
7/17/2024Updated: 7/17/2024

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law July 15 that asks an advisory board to the state’s Board of Education to consider providing recommendations for the health curriculum warning about the dangers of so-called sextortion for California public school students. The term refers to when someone obtains sexually compromising material and threatens to publish it.

Assembly Bill 2932, authored by Republican Assemblyman Joe Patterson, had no formal opposition and passed both houses this year unanimously.

Such recommendations—which will be made by the state’s Instructional Quality Commission—will likely focus on middle and high school students, based on education guidelines that already include sexual health and HIV education established through the California Healthy Youth Act.

However, the language of the bill does not specify any age range.

“The language of AB 2932 is consistent with how other additions have been made to the framework in the past,” Mr. Patterson told The Epoch Times.

It will require the commission to “consider including education on sextortion to ensure students know what to look for and how to get help,” he said.

Sextortion is a crime that occurs on websites, apps, messaging platforms, or digital game environments where teens or children can meet and interact with other people, according to the FBI.

Children may begin interacting with someone online whom they believe is their age, which makes them prone to letting down their guard. The child is gradually lured to share compromising pictures or videos, then the predator extorts them by threatening to publish the content online, or release it to their family members or friends.

Financial sextortion targets victims primarily aged 14 to 17, according to the bureau.

Awareness on the topic of sextortion is key in combating it, according to the bill’s co-author, Republican Assemblywoman Diane Dixon.

“It is important we provide the knowledge to identify potential wrongdoing and abuse so our children know there are resources and adults who can help them if they find themselves in an unfortunate situation,” she told The Epoch Times.

The FBI encourages young people being exploited to contact their local FBI field office or call 1-800-CALL-FBI, or report it online at tips.fbi.gov.

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Summer Lane is the bestselling author of 30 adventure books, including the hit "Collapse Series." She is a reporter and writer with years of experience in journalism and political analysis. Summer is a wife and mother and lives in the Central Valley of California.

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