When you are a victim of blackmail and being bombarded with threats of exposure, it is hard to imagine that the predator who is scaring you to death will not send your photos to friends and family. The looming question is, do blackmailers expose victims of blackmail? Believe it or not, most do not expose victims. The threat of sextortion exposure is about the scammer getting paid, not destroying you. Some predators will expose victims, but these are more extreme situations. Your problem as a victim is you do not know which aggressor you are dealing with. Therefore, the strategy for stopping the scam is to battle as if your predator will expose you.
The saying, "Cooler heads prevail," does have merit. When combating an extreme privacy issue, you must be cool and keep your wits about you despite being scared to death. Fear gains nothing, and holding strong will help you through the fray. I say this because the first step in stopping things is stalling the payment. It is a hard fight; the predator will threaten you with the contact info of friends and family, but you must hold strong and tell them you have no cash and can borrow money in 24 hours.
Make up any lie to back them off. You cannot be weak and fold, but fight back. Because you attempt to stall the first payment, it does not mean they will expose you. Anyway, it is a risk you must take. If you pay, they will immediately demand more, and then you are stuck with the dirtbag, bombarding you endlessly for money. Stalling is the key.
Why stall?
There is no other way out when they turn the table and begin to threaten you. What are your other options? Block? That gets you nowhere, and you risk the extortionist contacting your family and friends. Refusing to pay gets you nowhere. You cannot play games and claim you called the police; they don't care. Nor can you say you told your spouse; they might send your pics. The blackmailer has been in the game much longer than you and has heard everything. They know victims try to stall, but that is realistic because not everyone has money.
When it comes to blackmail help, you must ensure the professional you hire protects your identity, prevents exposure, and removes the scammer from your life. It is important to know how the professional will accomplish these tactics. If you do not get a solid answer, end the conversation and find someone else.
When you contact me, you get me. We can speak on the phone or have a video conversation, so you know it is Frank M. Ahearn you are chatting with, not some half-wit employees, of which I do not have any. How good is a privacy service if they have an office full of people?
Using my three tactics, I will explain how to escape the scam. You can either work it yourself or hire me. When you hire me, you get 24/7 access and help. You do not have to do it alone.
Frank M. Ahearn explains about blackmail exposure.
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