New Hampshire sees spike in online predators targeting children: 'Flooded with cases'
Just last week, Seabrook police officer John Giarrusso III, 48, was charged by the Haverhill, Massachusetts Police Department with possession of child sex abuse images. Police allege uploaded graphic videos on the social media chat app Kik and had explicit conversations with underage girls.
Last month, the Rockingham County Attorney's office indicted 25-year-old Shaun Beckwith of Higganum, Connecticut, on 12 charges alleging he used Snapchat to communicate with a 16-year-old girl in Seabrook. They said he coerced the girl into sharing sexual images and committing sex acts.
The charges allege he sent a picture of his genitals to the girl, as well as asked her to send photos of her breasts. Police allege he asked the girl to 'engage in sexual activity for the purpose of creating a visual representation,' according to indictments. That included performing 'oral sex' and engaging in 'sexual penetration,' they state.
Rockingham County Attorney Patricia Conway said technology has long been available to predators looking to meet and abuse children online. Still, she and others in law enforcement say there has been an uptick in those crimes recently.
Just last year, 57-year-old Todd Burnim, a former Kensington EMT, was jailed for 50 years for possession of child sexual abuse images. Prosecutors heard testimony from one alleged victim he met them on a Chatroulette-style website and led her to a chat on the app Kik.
'Unfortunately, we are seeing this type of criminal behavior more and more,' Conway said.
More: Seabrook police officer allegedly shared child sex abuse images on Kik, solicted minors
New Hampshire law enforcement officials from around the state say they are seeing an increase in internet crimes against children.
Portsmouth police Lt. Eric Kinsman, who leads New Hampshire's Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, said ICAC received just above 1,900 cyber tips reporting those crimes in 2023. Last year, the task force received more than 2,400.
The tips come from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which collects tips from around the country and forwards them to ICACs in each of the 50 states, depending on the location where they occur, according to Kinsman. He said the center for works with close to 2,000 electronic service providers, including popular social media networks like Facebook and Instagram.
Service providers are bound by law to report any traffic related to child sexual abuse images, Kinsman said. That includes monitoring keywords in chats, which allows authorities to determine if a predator is trying to set up an in-person meeting with a child.
Kinsman said the uptick in cyber crimes against children is in part due to the increased ability to report such crimes through what he called a 'massive collaborative effort' to identify them. He also said that technology in recent years has also improved to allow for increased anonymity online that did not exist in past years.
'You can have many different levels of anonymity online than you ever could before,' Kinsman said.
Kinsman also said authorities observed a rise in cyber tips after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic when more people stayed inside and spent more time online. Last year, he said in an interview with Seacoastonline that ICAC received an average of 35 to 50 cyber tips a month reporting acts of child exploitation. That rose to 150 to 200 per month after the pandemic began.
'We're so flooded with cases that as soon as we finish one, we have to immediately move on to the next,' Kinsman said. 'There are hundreds more.'
'They're just that good': Cryptocurrency scams on the rise in NH
Authorities recommend parents talk to their children about the dangers of the internet and the threat of predators. Kinsman said parents sometimes underestimate the dangers of social media. He said he is sympathetic to parents who may not know what age to allow access to social media or use of a cellphone.
'I think parents just simply aren't aware of all the dangers that are out there for our kids,' Kinsman said.
In York, police Lt. Luke Ernenwein said internet crimes are up involving not only children but also scams against elderly people. While he did not want to comment on how parents should raise their children, he suggested that parents monitor their children's social media activity.
'I think you would find, because of the knowledge and seeing it, most police officers' children probably get social media accounts at a later date,' Ernenwein said.
New Hampshire State Police Lt. Tamara Hester said parents should be aware that most apps contain a messenger feature that lets users communicate across the platform. She said they should check the privacy settings on apps that their children use and limit the information available to people viewing their profile.
'They definitely don't want to advertise where their location is,' Hester said.
'Predator in every child's pocket': What NH parents must know about child exploitation
Hampton Police Chief Alex Reno said parents need to realize strangers are not the only people who could be using the internet to communicate with their children.
'Sometimes these sorts of events can occur with known people,' Reno said. 'It's making sure you know what's going on with your children and having regular conversations about safety, not only with computers.'
This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: NH sees spike in online predators targeting children
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Alberta boy escapes alleged abductor's car in 'catch a predator scheme' police call 'amazingly dangerous'
A 12-year-old boy escaped from the car of an alleged abductor that he and a group of other children arranged to meet as part of a "catch a predator scheme" they had devised on the Snapchat app, according to Alberta RCMP, who are strongly discouraging this type of vigilante activity. The boy was allegedly abducted on Monday evening after getting into the suspect's vehicle in the Coopers Crossing neighbourhood of Airdrie, just north of Calgary. Police said he and a group of at least six other children in the same age range, possibly as many as 10 in total, started a conversation with the suspect and arranged to meet him via Snapchat, without the knowledge of any parents, in an attempt to expose the man as a child predator. "Unfortunately, it didn't go as planned," said RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney. The 12-year-old boy voluntarily entered the suspect's vehicle so the other youth could record the interaction on video, police said, and the suspect then drove away. The boy later escaped from the vehicle while it was stopped at a red light and called 911. The suspect fled in the vehicle, southbound on Highway 2 toward Calgary. With help from a Calgary police helicopter, he was later located at a home in the city's northeast. Suspect has 'history with police' Airdrie RCMP have now charged a 37-year-old Calgary man, who cannot be named due to a publication ban, with numerous offences including abduction of a person under the age of 14, sexual interference, invitation to sexual touching, kidnapping and forcible confinement, and three counts of breaching a prohibition order. Cpl. Christopher Hrynyk with the Airdrie RCMP's specialized investigation unit said the suspect has "a history with police" and the breach charges relate to "previous investigations which did encapsulate minors being involved." "We've had more than one investigation and file with this offender," added Staff Sgt. Mark Auger with the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team's internet child exploitation unit. Social media trend 'dangerous,' police say Auger said the children's attempt at vigilante justice is part of a "growing trend" on social media that began in the United States and has migrated to Canada. "In my opinion, this all came from the television program To Catch a Predator," he said. Auger said the difference between that long-running American reality show and what people have been doing on social media is that the show involved police officers from the get-go, whereas the social media versions are typically amateur operations that put people at significant risk of harm. "A lot of these setups and these stings will end in violence, in suicide, in sexual assault," he said. The evidence gathered by vigilantes "ad-libbing" their way through online conversations with potential predators also presents "horrendous" challenges for actually prosecuting any alleged crimes, Auger said. "A lot of that will be what we consider tainted evidence because we don't how the script went, how the conversation went. Was it entrapment? Who started the conversation down that road?" Police also urged parents to have conversations with their kids about online behaviour like this. "It's amazingly dangerous what happened with this incident," Auger said.


CBS News
18 hours ago
- CBS News
Michigan orthodontist accused of sexually exploiting teens on Snapchat
A West Michigan orthodontist is accused of sexually exploiting teens on Snapchat. According to a criminal complaint, Thomas Shannon, 43, was charged after a therapist reported that a 16-year-old had been sexually exploited on Snapchat. Investigators identified Shannon as a suspect using Snapchat and Cash App records. Federal prosecutors allege that Shannon hired a private forensic examiner to review his cellphone to prove that he did not have child pornography. The forensic examiner, however, found child pornography on the phone, prosecutors say, and turned the phone over to police. While investigators were reviewing Shannon's phone and Snapchat record, they found additional underage victims, including one who is 12 years old. Another minor also came forward and said she met Shannon online and that he allegedly asked her to video chat with him while he engaged in sexually explicit conduct. Shannon was arrested in Frankfort, Michigan, and is charged with attempted receipt of child pornography, receipt of child pornography, possession of child pornography, attempted sexual exploitation of a minor, and sexual exploitation of a minor. Attorneys say Shannon's case is being investigated by Homeland Security Investigations, the Kent County Sheriff's Office, the Fuquay-Varina Police Department in North Carolina and the Prince George's County Police Department in Maryland. The case is part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative aimed at protecting children from online exploitation and abuse.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Grandville orthodontist facing federal child exploitation charges
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — An orthodontist who formerly practiced in Grandville is now facing federal child exploitation charges. Thomas Shannon, 43, was arrested in Frankfort, Michigan, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Michigan announced Wednesday. He is charged by criminal complaint with sexual exploitation of a minor, attempted sexual exploitation of a minor, possession of child pornography, receipt of child pornography and attempted receipt of child pornography, according to the attorney's office. According to a criminal complaint filed in federal court Monday, a therapist reported in 2021 that a teenager had been sexually exploited. The victim told police that she had received money in exchange for sending illicit images, the complaint continues, and investigators traced the Snapchat and CashApp accounts to Shannon, who lived in Byron Township. Sex offender, busted in sting but not arrested, snagged again In 2022, amid a Kent County investigation, the complaint says Shannon hired a private forensic investigator to search his phone 'in an attempt to prove that he did not possess any child pornography.' 'The examiner, however, found child pornography and turned it over to police,' the U.S. Attorney's Office wrote in a release. Authorities found evidence that Shannon possessed and received child pornography, according to the complaint. Investigators found that Shannon had communicated with multiple minor victims whom he met online, the complaint alleges. One was just 12 years old. The complaint placed most of the victims out of state. Shannon was in January 2023. But according to the federal complaint, he was released on bond. Investigators found that he was on bond for those charges while communicating with one victim — a 13-year-old — in 2024, the complaint alleges. The state case against Shannon is pending. A status conference in that case has been set for early October. In the federal case, a detention hearing is scheduled for Friday. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword