This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know has a suicidal idea, call 988 or 1-800-273-Talk (8255) to contact Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.
Five Americans have been linked to Nigeria’s one-seventh program, which led to the suicide death of a Michigan teenager.
Georgia resident Kendall Ormond London, 32; Brian Keith Coldmon, 30; Jarell Daivon Williams, 31; Johnathan Demetrius Green, 32, and Dinsimore Guyton Robinson, 29, of Alabama, pleaded guilty to using an online payment system to collect Sexttort proceeds and send them to Nigerians they called “plugs.”
Jordan Demay of Michigan is 17 years old Nigerian brother Samuel Ogoshi22, his brother, Samson Ogoshi, 20, used a hacker account to pretend to be a woman on Instagram and spoke to the teenager.
The brothers eventually used the account to blackmail the teenager to send money and threatened him to send more things until he earned his living in March 2022.
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John Demay, his 17-year-old son Jordan Demay, sent an alarm after his 17-year-old son Jordan Demay died of suicide after he became a victim of the one-seventh program last year. (Handout)
Federal officials extraditioned the Ogoshi brothers to the U.S. in 2024, and the judge ordered them to be sentenced to 17 years in prison and five years of supervised release for their role in the Sexttort program, which killed Demay and targeted 100 other victims.
“This is another layer of justice.”
“In a sense, our country and the FBI are taking this crime seriously and closing every gap in this crime,” Jordan’s father John Demay told Fox News on Thursday.
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Nigerian brothers Samuel and Samson Ogoshi conspired to blackmail the minor on Wednesday. (Economic and Financial Crime Commission)
The second time is a Social Media Crime Trends The FBI said bad actors can induce or solicit minors for sexual acts or send ransom money, and the FBI has received more than 13,000 reports of online financial occupations involving at least 12,600 victims between October 2021 and March 2023.
The Nigerian sixth-levelists in the Jordan case target young people and boys, while risking romantic interests and forcing them to send nude photos. Once they sent the images, the seventh-levelists threatened the victims, saying that if the victims did not send them money online, they would expose the images.
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In the Jordan case, for example, on the same night, Ogohes began to communicate with him via Instagram, and the teenager sent out his clear photos to an account he thought belonged to.

The young Pennsylvania man’s father died of suicide, and he became a victim of one in seven attempts, helping to bring the FBI to the Nigerian suspects charged in the case. (FBI)
Prosecutors said Samuel Ogoshi threatened to “viral” online if Jordan does not send money immediately. Jordan complied and sent out the suspect’s money, but the crime only escalated from there as Samuel Ogoshi asked for more and more money from the 17-year-old.
The exchange lasted for several hours one night until Jordan told Samuel Ogoshi that he was going to commit suicide.
Nigerians face our justice in the Seven-member Plan, leading to teenagers commit suicide
“Okay,” he wrote. “Do something quick. Otherwise I’ll let you do it. I swear to God.”

Jordan Demay started chatting with women under what he believed was the username “dani.robertts”. (Handout)
Ogoshi Brothers instructed victims like Jordan to send money to Apple Pay, Cash App and Zelle, which belong to Georgia and Alabama, who then kept about 20% of the money in Nigeria, converting the remaining money into bitcoin and converting bitcoin into a “plug-in”. The “Plug” also reserved some of the funds for itself and sent the rest to Sextaltist, in this case the Ogoshi brothers.
Demay pointed out that it is difficult to transfer the US dollar directly to the Nigerian currency, which is why Scammers chose Bitcoin. Bitcoin is also difficult for officials to track.
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Acting American attorney Birge noted that “Americans who profit from this terrible, heartbreaking plan” will now “face the consequences of their actions.”

John Demay also said that if he had a “opportunity” to threaten the six-innings, it wasn’t the end of his life, he would tell Jordan “every day.” (Handout)
“The conspiracy can be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison. The court will rule the judgment after consultation with federal sentencing guidelines and individual circumstances,” Bilger said.
“It’s still happening every day.”
Since then, DeMay has turned his heartbreak into an advocacy, traveling across the country and around the world not only educates Americans about what a seventh of what is, and how to prevent children from falling into the victims of these scams, but also promotes federal legislation aimed at protecting minors online.
“Unfortunately, there are still many septic cases across the country,” he said.

Samson Ogoshi, 20, the suspect who died in Jordan, was one of more than 100 young men online earlier this month on alleged hacking of Instagram accounts and sexually extortion or “six times”. (Handout)
The FBI said in a press release earlier this year that the average age of six to 17 years old is 14 to 17 years old, but the agency noted that any child can become a victim. According to the FBI, financially motivated serrates often originate in African and Southeast Asian countries. The FBI also saw a 20% increase in seven cases involving minors between October 2022 and March 2023.
Secondary can lead to suicide and self-harm. Between October 2021 and March 2023, most online financial ransomware victims are boys. The FBI said the reports involved at least 20 suicides.
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The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has created a free service called “Take It Down” that is designed to help Sexttort erase explicit images of victims or to let bad actors stop sharing them online. The tool can be found in https://takeitdown.ncmec.org.
Demay is a supporter of the Bipartisan Children’s Online Safety Act (KOSA), which received support from the House and Senate last year but ultimately did not enter the House to vote at a meeting at a lascivious. R-Tenn. Sens. MarshaBlackburn and D-Conn. Richard Blumenthal is expected to reintroduce the bill this year.