logo
Alberta agencies work to educate public, amid rise of online child sexual exploitation

Alberta agencies work to educate public, amid rise of online child sexual exploitation

CBC27-01-2025

Social Sharing
Terrance Sambhudyal and more than a dozen other parents sit in bleachers at their children's middle school, in southeast Edmonton, learning more about the digital world where their kids socialize.
A pair of educators from the Saffron Centre, a sexual abuse support and education organization based in Sherwood Park, Alta., just east of Edmonton, are presenting a long-standing Cyberworld seminar, teaching those in attendance about online safety.
The two-hour presentation, among other things, touches on privacy and how much information can actually be shared in a photo, how to transfer boundaries from the real world to online, and red flags and luring techniques to watch for to prevent online child sexual exploitation.
"I'm a little more informed to see what's going on at their level," Sambhudyal told CBC News after the presentation.
The father of two teenagers attended because he felt out of touch with his kids' reality, he said.
"While it's a little bit uncomfortable to start with, it's important to pick up some of these things before things escalate. You can stop it from the grassroots level, so to speak, and guide [your kids] accordingly," he said.
Online child sexual exploitation and abuse is a growing problem across Canada, with cases in Alberta drastically up over the past several years. Cases of sexual extortion — or sextortion — are of particular concern, multiple law enforcement officials told CBC.
Yet, officials believe only a fraction of incidents are ever reported.
Perpetrators of such offences could be anywhere in the world, and organized crime groups are sometimes running such schemes.
"As long as the Internet's been around, there have been issues with safety and children online," said Kiara Warkentin, the Saffron Centre's director of justice, research and outreach.
"Especially since COVID, we've seen a massive increase in the number of online child sexual exploitation files, as well as the number of sexual extortion files online — especially involving young children and teenagers."
Technological advancement has always presented the potential for harm and good, said Bailey Kacsmar, an Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute fellow. She is also a University of Alberta assistant professor of computing science.
If harm arises, the question becomes whether technology can solve the problem — and whether it's preventable at all, she said.
"Many of the things we need to do to try to prevent these issues are simply either not technologically possible, or boils down to us needing to figure out ways of mitigating the harms via social means — so either programs or education," Kacsmar said.
The tech sector has a role to play when it comes to issues like online child sexual exploitation, but the responsibility does not solely fall on it, she said.
"Ultimately, many of these issues aren't created by technology — they're amplified by technology. So we can't ignore the [social] roots within," she said.
The province's Internet Child Exploitation (ICE) unit, part of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Teams (ALERT), has seen its file intake more than triple in six years, according to its latest annual report.
The ICE unit focuses more on prevention through a community engagement team — and public education is "our best tool," said Cst. Stephanie Bosch, an ICE unit member.
"Historically, telling kids to not do things is not an approach that we can take," Bosch said. "It would be great for us to just tell kids, 'Hey, don't go online.' But the reality of it, it's parenting in a digital age: kids have access to technology, they're going to be utilizing it."
Much of a youth's life happens online now, she said. The ICE unit often sees that kids, if they are prohibited from some kind of technology or social media, are accessing those platforms through their friends' devices, or even school-owned devices.
Speaking with parents — and others in positions of trust with youth — can arm them with the knowledge needed to initiate conversations with kids, which, hopefully, leads to fewer victims, she said.
The Saffron Centre is just one local agency that offers educational programming.
"We recognize that parents may or may not struggle to keep up with everything that's going on, because things do change fast," Warkentin said.
"We want to make sure that we're on top of the trends as much as we can be to help educate them, so they can keep their kids safe."
In addition to safety, an adult discussing online safety with a child, or learning from a child how different apps work, can build trust between them — which is critical if something was to go wrong, Bosch said.
"Kids need to know that they can go to someone," she said.
"Showing interest is the best thing that someone can do because a large portion of their lives are spent online… So we have to lean into that in order to support them."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stony Mountain inmate, 80, dies
Stony Mountain inmate, 80, dies

Winnipeg Free Press

time10 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Stony Mountain inmate, 80, dies

A Stony Mountain Institution inmate died of apparent natural causes while in custody Saturday, the Correctional Service of Canada said. Gordon Kornelson, 80, was sentenced to four years on May 5. The Carillon newspaper in Steinbach reported in April that he had pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a relative for eight years starting when she was about four years old, between Jan. 1, 2012 and Jan. 31, 2020. The abuse ended when the COVID-19 pandemic prevented her visits to Kornelson's home, the Carillon reported. The girl's mother reported the crime in June 2022 after her daughter told her what had happened. Judge Kael McKenzie granted the victim's request that there be no publication ban in the case and called the sentence low. The defence, pointing to Kornelson's declining health, had asked for his sentence to be served under house arrest. Kornelson worked as a loans manager at Steinbach Credit Union for 29 years until 1995, court documents stated, and then worked as an accountant. He served on the board of the Steinbach Mennonite Central Committee Thrift Shop from 1974 to 2019. An online obituary stated Kornelson was formerly a longtime Hanover School Division trustee and that he died in a Winnipeg hospital. DAVE BAXTER / CARILLON FILES

Charlottetown Farmers' Market warns local businesses of email scam targeting vendors
Charlottetown Farmers' Market warns local businesses of email scam targeting vendors

CBC

time13 hours ago

  • CBC

Charlottetown Farmers' Market warns local businesses of email scam targeting vendors

Social Sharing The Charlottetown Farmers' Market is warning local businesses that someone is impersonating the market's email account in an attempt to run a scam. Polina Puchkova, the market's executive director, said someone has created an email address that looks nearly identical to the market's real one, but ends in @ instead of @ The scammer is using Puchkova's name to contact businesses — both those that have previously applied to be vendors at the market and others that staff have never communicated with — offering pop-up space at an upcoming event in exchange for an up-front payment. "It's very sad because such businesses don't make a whole lot of money already, and we're all struggling," Puchkova told CBC News. "I would be very honest, I'm embarrassed about the situation because it's coming from my name." She said the market's staff know of at least two businesses that have been scammed for between $50 and $100. Saturday morning, some individuals showed up at the market expecting to set up a booth they believed they had paid for, but the market had no record of the transactions, Puchkova said. Staff eventually decided to let them set up. "We obviously also sympathize with the fact that this is a difficult situation," she said. "They've already paid a fee. I'm just hoping that if they are able to set up that day, if we have the space available, maybe they can make up that money." She said the fraudulent emails asked the victims to send money via e-transfer or to provide their credit card information, including security codes. The vendors... can definitely reach out to the banks to let them know that this is happening. — Polina Puchkova, Charlottetown Farmers' Market While the market does have an email address for e-transfers, Puchkova noted that it never asks for credit card information. She added that the market never asks for up-front payment from vendors. The exception is when vendors put down a $25 deposit to apply to join the market. More than a dozen report scam emails Puchkova said the market has received between 30 and 50 vendor applications, and at least 15 of those applicants have reported receiving scam emails. She noted that market staff only discovered the scam after one of the approved vendors received suspicious messages and reported them. She suspects the scammer might have gained access to the list of applicants through a new third-party program the market started using to handle applications and vendor communications, though Puchkova said no definitive connection has been established. Staff are continuing to look into the matter. Staff have reported the incident to Charlottetown police, and also posted a warning on social media to encourage vendors and businesses to stay vigilant. "The police said that… the vendors themselves who have been scammed can definitely reach out to the banks to let them know that this is happening," Puchkova said.

She came to Canada for university, but she'd never been accepted. The scam cost her $7K

time2 days ago

She came to Canada for university, but she'd never been accepted. The scam cost her $7K

With an admission letter to a Quebec university in hand, Aminata flew from Benin, west Africa, to Montreal with $2,000 in her pocket to fulfil her dream of pursuing higher education in Canada. Back in 2022, she'd connected with a man who she says positioned himself as a consultant who could process her documents and submit her university and immigration applications. But not long after she landed in Montreal and made her way to Chicoutimi, Que., she realized it was all a scam. She had not been accepted to university. She did not have a scholarship. Her immigration papers were fraudulent and based on a falsified acceptance letter. My dream turned into a nightmare, Aminata said. CBC is using a pseudonym to protect her identity because, due to her falsified immigration papers, she is without legal status in Canada. Clasping her hands while sitting in her apartment in Chicoutimi, nearly two years after the ordeal, the 30-year-old Beninois still doesn't feel settled or safe. I'm living with the fear that at any time I can get deported, she said. This is not a life. Aminata doesn't want to go back home now, saying she would have to completely start again in Benin. CBC News is using a pseudonym to protect her identity because of her immigration status. (CBC) Photo: CBC / Rachel Watts Aminata was not the only victim of the scam. CBC News has spoken to another woman who says the same man who presented himself as a consultant took her money after he was hired to submit her university applications. According to an expert, not only is this type of fraud becoming common, but prospective students in Africa are among those targeted by scammers in high numbers. 'I gave him all my money' For Aminata, it all started when she came into contact with the consultant through her uncle. She said the pair agreed on $4,000 before the price for the agent's service went up. I gave him all my money, she said, adding that it totalled about $7,000 in the end. She sent along the required documents — her birth certificate and diplomas. Within a few months, she was emailed an acceptance letter into the master of organization management program at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi. She says the man also managed to get her the Quebec Acceptance Certificate (new window) (CAQ) — the province's mandatory document which permits international students to apply for a study permit. Although she considered deferring her acceptance to stay in Benin to save up money, she says the agent, who is also from Benin and studied in Chicoutimi, pressured her to book the flights and start school immediately. He asked me to not worry. [That] everything is under control, she said. But something was off. She arrived in Montreal on Aug. 28, 2023, and in mere days, the whole scheme unraveled. WATCH | Aminata says her dream turned into a nightmare: Début du widget Widget. Passer le widget ? Fin du widget Widget. Retourner au début du widget ? They paid a consultant thousands to help them go to university in Canada. It was a scam Two women who came from West Africa to study in Quebec say they found out after they arrived that the university acceptance letters arranged for them by a consultant, which their immigration papers were based on, were fraudulent. She says the consultant suddenly informed her he was deferring her acceptance. A fellow Chicoutimi student in whom she confided about her situation told Aminata she needed to go to the administration to sort out her status as a student. She says the consultant wouldn't answer her calls but when she finally got him on the line, he became defensive, started shouting, and told her not to give the school the documentation and acceptance letter he provided. They told me that they feel like I have been scammed, she recalled the school's administration saying, adding that she found out her real application file was open but incomplete. She says the consultant had submitted fraudulent paperwork. That day, I was feeling like this is not true, she said. Another victim, same story Fatim only realized she was a victim of a scam after seeing Aminata's story in a Radio-Canada report. (new window) Her story was the same as mine, said Fatim, who travelled to Quebec from Benin in July 2023. CBC News is also using a pseudonym to protect her identity because of her concerns over her immigration status. She arrived with the intention of starting university in Chicoutimi after receiving an admission letter and documentation from the same consultant as Aminata. Aminata pictured with her university acceptance letter. She believed it was authentic until she approached the school's administration. Photo: Radio-Canada / Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette Upon arrival, she says the consultant abandoned her despite promises to help her defer her acceptance. I didn't know it was fraud but I had felt that something was not normal, said Fatim, who says she still feels overwhelmed and imprisoned by her situation. Her father, who was responsible for connecting with the consultant, sent him thousands of dollars to help secure the university applications — even selling a property to afford it. Knowing the effort and money he put into helping her, Fatim says she tried to keep the truth from him after her schooling fell through. One day my dad said, 'my girl, tell me what's really going on?' said Fatim. I remember it like it was yesterday. She said once her father found out what happened, his health took a turn for the worse. He felt responsible for getting his daughter into trouble without even knowing it. He died in December 2024, and Fatim couldn't get back home. Although she considered returning to Benin to her family and husband — whom she hasn't seen in nearly two years — she says she wants to build a life for herself in Canada and prove to Immigration Canada that this was truly not her fault. She says the agent had previously told her she could apply for asylum in Canada to secure her immigration status — a step she said didn't feel right. She says she didn't want to abuse Canada's system. Fatim recalled telling the consultant, I want another way out of this mess you've gotten me into. CBC News contacted the man who Aminata and Fatim say scammed them. In a brief phone call, he denied allegations that he is an agent who helps people submit applications to university. He also denied having taken any money. CBC has not been able to reach him for follow up questions or an interview. His number has since been deactivated. Dozens of fraudulent admission letters The way things are, victims of immigration fraud often have little recourse, says Richard Kurland, an immigration lawyer and policy analyst based in Vancouver. He says it's also more difficult for people to do their due diligence because they are less familiar with the Canadian college system. The communication infrastructure is not the same, he said. And literally some people have sold the farm to get to Canada to study. Now those are tragedies. In his career, he says scams for immigration foreign study permits have become as common as Vancouver rain. The Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC) says 44 cases of fraudulent admission letters were identified by the registrar's office between June and December 2023. While most of the individuals who received these letters did not show up on campus, 12 did, said a university spokesperson in an emailed statement. In cases where individuals showed up on campus with a CAQ document and study permit obtained through the falsified letter, UQAC says they took the necessary precautions to advise the authorities. UQAC says several calls were made to Quebec's Ministry of Immigration, Francization and Integration to question the validity of the CAQ paperwork obtained by these students. In an emailed statement, the ministry told CBC that in the past few years, admission letters containing irregular elements and inauthentic parts have been detected in several files. The Université du Québec à Chicoutimi says between June and December 2023, 44 cases of fraudulent admission letters were identified by the registrar's office. Photo: Radio-Canada / Julien Gagnon Although these situations remain marginal in relation to the overall volume of requests processed, they are rigorously monitored, read the statement. The ministry also confirmed that in order to act as an immigration consultant, an individual must be recognized as such by the government. When an immigration consultant obtains this recognition, his or her name is entered in the register of immigration consultants (new window) . The name of the consultant both women used is not part of the province's list. 1,550 study permit applications linked to fraud In 2023, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) announced that investigations uncovered nearly 1,550 study permit applications were linked to fraudulent letters of acceptance. This number also includes those that were detected two to three years prior, it says. These applications were intended for designated learning institutions (new window) (DLIs) — a school approved by a provincial or territorial government to host international students, read the statement. In most of these cases, the fraud was detected and subsequent applications were refused, it said. IRCC says the verification process for acceptance letters requires that DLIs verify the authenticity of all letters. To date, the improved letter of acceptance verification system has intercepted more than 10,000 potentially fraudulent letters of acceptance, IRCC says. 'Nobody is doing anything' Both Fatim and Aminata have blocked the consultant's number and are being represented by the same lawyer in their attempt to find a solution for their cases and move forward. Aminata says when she was first informed about the scam, she told UQAC that the agent who falsified her acceptance was a student. UQAC confirmed to Radio-Canada that he was then expelled from his university program. Aminata applied to the university again, contacted the prime minister, the federal minister of immigration, provincial politicians, the anti-fraud service and local police. After that, there was a silence, she said. Saguenay police confirmed to Radio-Canada that they could not take on Aminata's file because the fraud happened overseas. In an emailed statement, it says the victim was referred to her embassy and local police force. They asked me to talk and I talked and nobody is doing anything, Aminata said. I still have that little bit of light … hope that things will change. Rachel Watts (new window) · CBC News

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store