Beneath the glitter of gold chains, designer clothes, and TikTok braggadocio lies a dark and deeply troubling trend. A growing number of young Nigerian men—self-styled as the BM Boys (short for blackmail)—have built an online empire around a grim business: digital extortion.
Rather than promoting music, lifestyle, or fashion, these individuals are flaunting the proceeds of a cybercrime that preys on the vulnerable—primarily teenage boys from countries like the United States, Canada, the UK, and Australia.
Sextortion as a Career Path
The playbook is chillingly calculated. BM Boys pose online as attractive young women and initiate flirtatious conversations with unsuspecting teenagers. Once the target is lured into sending explicit content, the blackmail begins. Victims are told to pay—often between $500 and $3,000—or face public humiliation through the release of their images to friends, family, or social media platforms.
This exploitation isn’t rare—it’s growing at an alarming pace. In 2023 alone, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) logged over 26,000 cases of financial sextortion. That’s more than double the number from just the year before. Even worse, at least 46 teenage boys have taken their own lives since 2021 after falling victim to these digital predators.
How Social Media Fuels the Scheme
Despite crackdowns—including Meta’s removal of 63,000 Instagram accounts in 2024—BM Boys are evolving faster than the platforms can respond. Instagram serves as the recruitment hub, while TikTok is their billboard—showcasing expensive gadgets, new cars, and bundles of foreign currency under the guise of “BM Updates.”
These videos double as tutorials, offering step-by-step instructions for new recruits—called chatters—on how to create fake profiles, use VPNs to mimic Western locations, and edit fabricated news headlines. Even targeting strategies are shared, with scammers advised to focus on communities like sports fans or music fandoms.
According to Paul Raffile, a researcher on digital exploitation, these glamorized displays are strategic—they entice more young men to join the trade. In this twisted ecosystem, BM Boys treat blackmail like a corporate operation. Chatters bait the victims, while their superiors handle negotiations and collect payments via Bitcoin, gift cards, or Cash App.
Profiting from Pain
One self-identified scammer admitted to earning nearly $100,000 over eight years. He expressed no guilt, even when reminded that some victims died by suicide.
“I feel nothing when I get the picture,” he confessed. “I have to survive.”
His words echo the harrowing stories of families like the DeMays, whose 17-year-old son Jordan ended his life after being targeted. Although the individuals responsible were eventually caught and sentenced in the U.S., the emotional scars remain.
Tech Platforms Struggle to Keep Up
Social media companies say they are responding. TikTok claims it’s working to make its platform “inhospitable” for harmful activity, while Meta has rolled out new teen safety features such as private accounts by default and auto-blurring of explicit images.
Yet experts argue these changes are insufficient. Lloyd Richardson from Canada’s Centre for Child Protection notes that additional measures—such as hiding follower lists, limiting direct search visibility, and using AI to detect predatory patterns earlier—could make a significant difference.
“Teens are impulsive,” Richardson said. “Platforms can’t just rely on warnings. They need to take active steps to prevent harm.”
A Crisis Built on Algorithms and Exploitation
What began as isolated scams has grown into an industry powered by manipulation, secrecy, and algorithm-driven virality. The tragic cost? Lost lives, devastated families, and a generation of youth grappling with the fallout of digital exploitation.
While Nigeria is home to brilliant minds and untapped potential, this criminal network distorts that legacy. These aren’t clever entrepreneurs—they are digital predators thriving in the shadows of the internet.