A Growing Cyber Menace
Jammu and Kashmir is witnessing a disturbing rise in sextortion cases, prompting police to issue a high alert across the Union Territory. Cybercriminals are increasingly exploiting digital platforms, using fake social media profiles and video calls to trap unsuspecting victims before blackmailing them for money.
Police officials describe the trend as “alarming and fast-spreading,” warning that sextortion has become one of the most common forms of online fraud in the region.
Anatomy of the Scam
Cyber experts outline a chilling pattern:
- Initial contact: Victims receive friend requests from attractive but fake profiles, often posing as women.
- Casual engagement: Fraudsters initiate friendly chats to build trust.
- Video calls: Victims are lured into private calls where explicit content is secretly recorded or manipulated using AI.
- Extortion begins: Threatening messages follow, demanding ransom payments in cash or cryptocurrency.
- Relentless pressure: Even after victims pay, scammers often continue demanding more, exploiting fear and shame.
People are trapped through video calls or friend requests on social media from unknown individuals, their private moments are recorded, and then money is demanded by threatening to make them viral.
This is called a sextortion scam.#CyberDost#SextortionScam#OnlineBlackmail… pic.twitter.com/WwABKJESY1
— J&K Police (@JmuKmrPolice) January 11, 2026
Police Advisory: Don’t Suffer in Silence
The Jammu and Kashmir Police have issued a strongly worded advisory urging citizens to:
- Avoid unknown friend requests and suspicious online interactions.
- Refrain from sharing personal information or engaging in private video calls with strangers.
- Preserve digital evidence such as chats, call logs, and screenshots.
- Report incidents immediately to the nearest police station or cybercrime unit.
“Silence only strengthens the blackmailers. People must not panic or pay money, but report the matter immediately,” the advisory stressed.
Why Victims Stay Quiet
Despite repeated warnings, many victims hesitate to come forward due to social stigma and fear of embarrassment. Police say this reluctance emboldens cybercriminals, allowing them to operate with impunity.
Experts add that sextortion disproportionately targets middle-aged men, who are often more vulnerable to manipulation and less likely to report crimes.
Organised Gangs & AI Manipulation
Investigations suggest that organised gangs are behind many of these scams, running networks of fake accounts across platforms. Increasingly, fraudsters are using artificial intelligence tools to morph or fabricate explicit content, making the blackmail even more convincing.
Police records reveal that sextortion, along with “digital arrest” scams, now accounts for the majority of online fraud cases in J&K.
The Hidden Toll
- Psychological trauma: Victims often suffer anxiety, depression, and social isolation.
- Financial ruin: Continuous extortion demands drain savings and destabilize families.
- Underreporting: The actual number of cases is believed to be far higher than official figures.
A Call for Vigilance
Authorities emphasize that cyber safety is a shared responsibility. Citizens must remain alert, informed, and cautious to avoid becoming the next target.
The police have also urged social media companies to strengthen verification mechanisms and privacy safeguards, noting that platforms are often exploited by fraudsters to launch these attacks.
