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Are You a Cop?: Identifying Suspicion in Online Chat Operations with Online Groomers

NCJ Number
309699
Journal
Child Abuse and Neglect Volume: 154 Dated: August 2024 Pages: 106919
Date Published
August 2024
Annotation

This paper reports on a study to examine how law enforcement officer chats with offenders compare with chats between “real” minors and offenders, in an effort to determine the triggers that lead to suspicion or discovery that an offender is chatting with an officer rather than a minor; the paper describes the study’s methodology and findings, which include four themes that triggered suspicion among offenders.

Abstract

The increase in online enticement has led to law enforcement agencies engaging in more proactive policing through undercover chat sting operations. The authors aimed to identify the topics and communication strategies triggering suspicion in chats between law enforcement officers (LEOs) and offenders and why those topics do not result in suspicion in victim-offender conversations. They conducted a thematic analysis identifying: (1) how LEOs trigger suspicion, (2) how offenders communicate suspicion, (3) how LEOs attempt recovery from suspicion, and (4) how these triggers were present but did not trigger suspicion in victim-offender chats. The authors examined 20 LEO-offender chats and 20 victim-offender chats from US ICAC task forces. As a result, they identified four themes that triggered suspicion: risk assessment by the LEO's persona, LEO avoidance measures, details related to the offense and evidence, and proof of identity of chat participants. Offender responses to triggers revealed three themes: discomfort navigating boundaries and uncertainty, risk identification, and risk mitigation. Themes for the LEO's responses to suspicion included: risk assessment for chatters, issues with technology, appeasement, and negative emotional reactions. Finally, juxtaposing triggers onto minor-offender chats yielded four themes: explicit boundary setting, victim risk assessment, deep relationship forming and disclosures, and technology issues. This study has implications for law enforcement agencies seeking to reduce suspicion and risk assessment by offenders during internet sting operations. (Published Abstract Provided)

Date Published: August 1, 2024