#Teen jailed after hacking women's Snapchat accounts and using nude photos to blackmail their friends
A "caring" teenager who hacked a woman's Snapchat account and threatened her friends with nude photos was sentenced to two years in prison.
18-year-old Jasin Bushi from December 2020 to last year Over February, it "completely compromised" the victims' privacy by hacking at least seven women's accounts and changing and locking their passwords.
Then the 18-year-old boy pretended to be a victim and sent a message to his friend to pay the rent so that he would not be evacuated, from £ 200 he demanded £ 300.
Some friends noticed something was wrong and called him, but the teenager then took all the nude photos of the victim unless money was credited to his PayPal account. Threatened to send to your contact information.
Intimate images and videos of the victim have been published multiple times and viewed by family, friends and colleagues.
Samurai denied publishing them, and the judge admitted.
‘I couldn’t face the people who have seen those private images’
Police in the Cybercrime Division of the London Police Department were first involved in May 2021 when they discovered a fake PayPal account containing fictitious personal information and an email account linked to the victim's name. Detective
associated Bushi with a fake account through his two mobile numbers used by Bushi.
Police officers looked up the address of his home in Camden, north of London, and found the victim's personal bank account details, email, password leaks, and notes such as:
"I'm literally cramped and may be kicked out if I can't pay. I'll refund you on Monday."
Victims who saw posts by friends, family and colleagues have had different psychology since their accounts were hacked. He states that he was influenced by the situation.
She said she felt humiliated and embarrassed when facing her family, socially withdrawn at work, and felt that her employees had lost respect for her.
She added: "Snapchat was a social media platform that used to store precious memories of children's photos and videos for years, but now I feel nauseous when using the app.
" To me, she helped me I had a friend who lost a fair amount of money in this incident, hoping that he would do it. I am grateful to her.
"I'm lucky I didn't get physically injured as a result of this incident. But the long-term psychological consequences weigh heavily on me every day, and I think it will probably continue for a long time. "
Another victim posted to Snapchat a private, intimate photo of her learned from a colleague. While working on it, I felt like I couldn't face the people who saw these private photos.
"The feeling of seeing these pictures for the first time in my public history still bothers me. I don't want anyone to feel that feeling."
Jailed for two years
Mr. Bushi pleaded guilty to three charges: unauthorized access to a computer to encourage crime, fraud by false information, possession of items used for fraud, and blackmail on the Wood green Crown Court. ..
He pleaded not guilty to his three counts of publishing private sex photos and movies for the purpose of causing trouble, but these charges were withdrawn. Detective
Constable Ed Seamer, an investigator in Met's cybercrime unit, said, "Bushi completely violated the victim's privacy in order to make quick money.
His deception goes wrong. When he wasn't, he resorted to intimidation. He was very brutal, cold-hearted, and very devastating to the victims whose intimate photos were published.
"We would like to thank the victims who bravely helped us in our investigation, and hope that Bushi's conviction can bring them some comfort.
"This type of crime is
"If this happened to you, I would come forward to everyone and report it to the police."
Detective Sehemer advised people to use two-factor authentication to protect their social media accounts from abuse, and said don't reuse passwords for different accounts.
He added, "Good password hygiene includes changing passwords regularly, making passwords long, alphanumeric, and containing special characters in upper and lower case."
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