Friday, December 12, 2025

As online extremists push teens to self-harm, 2 senators join to propose new law making it a crime

 (In some cases these 764 cretins manipulate young boys and girls into thinking they are their boy friends or girl friends then get them to send nudes of themselves doing embarrassing stuff. Then the mask comes off, a bunch of the other cretins who have been silently watching come out of the woodwork and they blackmail the panicked victim into doing horrific things like harm themselves or kill family pets live on stream to the delight of the freaks who are watching. Several children have committed suicide already as a result of this demented shit while all the others have been scared for life either emotionally, physically or both. Much of this stuff is happening on Discord... just like the grooming for the Gen Z color revolutions. I wonder if the 764 folks aren't actually being run by the Gen Zers they claim run it but rather older folks looking to create just the right 'crisis' to get congress to pass sweeping bullying laws online. ?)

from ABC News

For several years, as U.S. authorities have struggled to stop online extremist networks like "764" from pushing teens to livestream acts of violence or self-harm, including their own suicide, the Justice Department has faced what authorities and victims both say is a vexing challenge: Such coercion is not a federal crime.

That could change if the Republican chairman and the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which oversees the Justice Department, have their way. 

Ahead of a committee hearing Tuesday on the evolving threat of online predators, Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, introduced a first-of-its-kind piece of legislation that would explicitly criminalize the intentional coercing of minors to physically harm themselves or others, including animals. 

Under their proposal, called the Ending Coercion of Children and Harm Online Act, some perpetrators could face life in prison.

"When offenders are eventually caught by law enforcement, prosecutors charge them with the most appropriate charges," Grassley said in the hearing. "However, there are no specific laws to address the terrible and shocking acts conducted by gore groups such as 764 and those engaged in sextortion."

Grassley and Durbin's proposed legislation comes in the wake of several recent reports from ABC News about the growing threat of 764, including an extended interview with the parents of Jay Taylor, a 13-year-old from outside Seattle who in 2022 took his own life -- and aired it live on social media -- after allegedly being manipulated by a member of 764 in Germany.

"It's almost biblical in its definition of evil, what happened," Jay's father, Colby Taylor, said in the ABC News interview. "Ten minutes of murder."...

read more here 

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