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BackExtortionists Use AI Image of Missing Man to Demand Ransom
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ABC Top Stories2h agoCrime3 min readAustralia

Extortionists Use AI Image of Missing Man to Demand Ransom

Quick Look

  • Extortionists sent parents of a missing West Australian man an AI-generated image and demanded $6,000 within 24 hours.
  • The 23-year-old, who has autism, was later found safe.
  • Experts warn AI is making scams more sophisticated.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Extortionists have used an AI-generated image of a missing West Australian man to demand a ransom from his parents. The man has since been found safe.

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Extortionists have sent the parents of a missing West Australian man an AI-generated image of their son and demanded thousands of dollars in exchange for his safety.

Rakoia Battensoli, who has autism, was missing for about two weeks before his mother, Montina Delamere, pleaded for members of the public to look out for her son in a social media post on Monday.

In the hours after the post went live, Ms Delamere said both she and her son's father received an AI-generated image of Mr Battensoli, accompanied by a message:

"You gonna wire us $6,000 within 24 hrs or we cut off his neck and sell his body parts."

The 23-year-old has since been found safe and well in Perth, 168 kilometres north of his home in Bunbury.

Ms Delamere, who lives in New South Wales, said she could not believe scammers would go so far as to target the families of missing people.

"How could you do this to anybody?" she said.

"I was worried for my baby, but I had a feeling he was OK.

Scams on the rise

According to Scamwatch, 61,400 scams have been reported across the country so far this year, tricking Australians out of more than $94.5 million.

University of New South Wales cognitive psychologist James Dunn said AI growth has removed many barriers for online scammers.

"There are criminal organisations in Australia doing scamming, and there's criminal organisations internationally," he said.

"It's a very lucrative market ... for anyone who thinks this is a great way to make a buck."

Dr Dunn said the ease with which scammers could weaponise personal information and manipulate images was shifting the online scamming landscape.

"There are approaches which involve sending more generic things to lots of different people … we used to have Nigerian Prince scams in the past,"

"Now, with just a bit of information scraped from social media … that can be fed into AI and generate text that then they can send to you that creates that fear."

New levels of sophistication

Retired Bunbury detective and e-safety expert Kristi McVee said scammers exploiting people in vulnerable situations was a "massive issue."

"Many people are going to be secondary victims of it because that poor mother was already a victim of having lost her child and trying to find him,"

"And now she was a secondary victim of someone trying to extort money out of her.

Ms McVee said a collaborative approach was the only way forward.

"It's only getting more sophisticated because the AI is so much better,"

"It's going to come down to obviously working together with our companies and our apps developers."

A WA Police spokesperson warned people to be alert to the tactics used by scammers.

"Members of the public should be aware that AI-generated content can appear highly realistic and should not automatically be accepted as genuine,"

"Offenders use [AI] material to pressure victims into providing money, personal information or access to accounts and devices."

Open Questions

  • Where was the man for the two weeks he was missing?
  • Who are the extortionists and their international connections?
  • How was the AI image generated and distributed?

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This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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