Online grooming
Online Grooming By Predators. Photo By Canva

What is online grooming? And what are the stages of online grooming?

Grooming online happens when someone (usually an adult) ‘befriends’ and succeeds in gaining a  child’s trust in order to take advantage of the child for sexual purposes. Grooming allows sexual predators to slowly overcome natural boundaries long before sexual abuse occurs.

When children connect and communicate on the internet with strangers, they put themselves at great risks indeed. Internet predators intentionally comb sites where children are sure to visit, they may search for their victims by interests, location, gender and so on. 

Predators are able to piece together clues from their seemingly innocent communications with children and find out where a child lives, who their parents are, their school, closest landmarks or store and what their family situation is like.

Online grooming can take place either over a very short period of time or over a long stretch of. Predators are master manipulators who dedicate time and intentional effort to their craft. Initially, an online sex predator’s communication will appear innocent, they will present a kind and helpful posture, and then it progresses into dangerous territory, directed by the predator.

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There are some red flags that should pique your interest and make you want to investigate your child’s online activity and communications further. Here are the stages and signs a child may be a victim of a predator’s grooming process:

Friendship Stage: Targeting And Gaining Trust

At the friendship forming stage, a predator establishes contact with their target. More often than not, predators target needy children – those who are abused and unable to tell, those with minimal or no parental oversight, those experiencing bullying and/or depression. Online predators are able to glean enough information from their victim’s social media posts to know a potential victim is vulnerable enough to be targeted. At this stage, a predator will appear helpful and harmless, will pretend to be a child themselves, will feign concern by asking the child details about their life and family structure. At this stage, a child would eagerly give information, happy to have made a friend, whiles the predator will only be gathering vital information to further advance their plans.

What to look out for :

  1.  When your child has a new best friend out of the blue, and cannot wait to connect online after school. 
  2. When the supposed friend is not known in person – an online bestie.
  3. Spends more time alone in their room with phones, laptops or tablets.
  4. When your child isn’t forthcoming about the new friend ( predators often coax children into secrecy).
Stages of online grooming
Know The Stages Of Grooming. Photo By Canva

Relationship Forming Stage: Filling Child’s Emotional Needs

After establishing contact and gaining access to the child the predator will begin strengthen their ‘bond’ by getting personal and asking personal and private questions. Then they will empathize, offer helpful suggestions or tell a sob story of their own to identify with the child and create familiarity.

Predators will take things further by ingraining themselves into their target’s life. This may include monetary gifts, toys, offering to take a child places and promising things like acting and modeling careers. In cases where a predator wants to groom parents or a family to make access to a child easier, the may offer to help the family as a whole. Example a predator may offer to help a single mother with bills, chauffer kids and so on.

What to look out for:

  1. Gifts (expensive or not) from other adults
  2. Be especially wary of electronic device gifts from adults – it may come with location tracking software and proxy bypass installations. These installations will allow a child to access websites and other applications banned on your network.
  3. Be wary of overly generous offers from new friends
  4. When your child begins to ask questions out of the ordinary- it may be to feed the predator’s enquiries.

Risk Assessment Stage: Gauging Level of Threat

At this stage an online predator will begin to assess the level of threat parents and caregivers pose to them. They will begin to enquire about family bonds. They may ask such questions as how much time a child gets to spend alone or how much monitoring and supervision a child has. This is the stage a predator tries to see how close a child is to their family. And gauge whether their actions may be reported and if the child will be believed at all.

This is an interview with two child sex offenders. One of them happens to be a highly regarded school teacher. In the interview they indicate that a top deterrent to online sexual predators is a child whose electronic devices are religiously monitored by parents and guardians. When a predator realizes that a child has a close relationship with the adults in their life, is closely monitored, and aware of online predator tactics and activities, they quickly disconnect and channel their energies elsewhere.

What to look out for:

  1. Child begins to enquire about your home internet security setup
  2. Child begins to request more liberties online (e.g. begs to use their laptops in their room, requests to stay online longer)
  3. Child disconnects from WIFI and begins to use cellular data at home.

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MissKorang

I am a mom, wife, believer in God and a lover of stories. I love storytelling because I believe it is a potent means to inspire and educate.

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