
A 22-year-old man has pleaded guilty to hacking into social media accounts and extorting hundreds of teenagers and young adults by threatening to expose their private images and videos.
According to documents filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Jamarcus Mosley, 22, of Mobile, Alabama, admitted to targeting Snapchat, Instagram and other platforms to gain access to victims’ accounts — including accounts of minors —from April 2022 through May 2025.
Once inside, he stole private and explicit content and used it to coerce victims into sending additional explicit material, providing him with control of their accounts, or giving him money under threat of public disclosure or permanent lockout.
Mosley’s tactics were manipulative and predatory, often posing as a trusted friend to trick victims into revealing account recovery credentials, prosecutors said.
In one documented incident, Mosley accessed a woman’s Snapchat account by pretending to be a high school friend and then threatened to post a sensitive video unless she complied with his demands, prosecutors said.
In another instance, they said Mosely tricked a 17-year-old Illinois victim (identified in court as Victim-4) into sharing her “My Eyes Only” passcode, which allowed Mosley to take control of her Snapchat account.
“Mosley then demanded that Victim-4 create a new Snapchat account to chat with him, or he would post everything in Victim-4’s ‘My Eyes Only’ folder,” according to the US Department of Justice.
“Although Victim-4 created the new account, Mosley was angry that she would not use it and continued to threaten her. Mosley continued to threaten Victim-4 and used her real Snapchat account to communicate with Victim-3’s 13-year-old sister, telling her he knew where she lived by sending an image of a Snapchat map with her location.”
Sentencing is scheduled for May 27, 2026, before U.S. District Judge Michael L. Brown, who will determine Mosley’s punishment under federal sentencing guidelines for offenses including computer fraud, extortion and cyberstalking.
The case underscores growing concern about cybersecurity threats tied to social media exploitation — a form of criminal conduct that federal agencies have increasingly categorized as part of wider trends in online extortion and digital abuse.
In a similar trial, an Illinois man recently pleaded guilty to a phishing and hacking scheme that targeted the Snapchat accounts of hundreds of women, resulting in theft, distribution and sale of their private photos.
These cases underscore persistent cybersecurity threats on social platforms and the need for vigilance against social engineering. Attackers often exploit trust and platform mechanisms to bypass security protections designed to safeguard user accounts.
According to the Bitdefender 2025 Consumer Cybersecurity Survey, young people are twice as likely as their elders to fall victim to a scam (20% vs 9.7%). The reason? Younger generations are omnipresent on social media — now the top attack avenue for scammers.

Exercise these best practices to keep yourself and your loved ones protected from online predators:
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Filip has 17 years of experience in technology journalism. In recent years, he has focused on cybersecurity in his role as a Security Analyst at Bitdefender.
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