Cyber SWAT Program Training Coming To W.Va. Students

The lessons focus on using social media and chat rooms safely and the risks of sharing personal sexual material.

A bill signed into law by Gov. Jim Justice this week creates enhanced cyber safety training for West Virginia students.

The educational program will soon be available to third through twelfth graders statewide. Senate Bill 466 is known as the Cyber SWAT program. That’s short for Safety While Accessing Technology. 

The lessons focus on using social media and chat rooms safely and the risks of sharing personal sexual material.  

Will Thompson, the U.S. attorney for West Virginia’s Southern District, said children in the state are becoming human trafficking, sextortion or financial crime victims on almost a daily basis.

“With some of them, you’re upset because somebody’s lost a couple hundred dollars,” Thompson said. “Add on even being more upset, because someone’s gotten sex trafficked or something of that nature.” 

Thompson said Cyber SWAT lessons include the same things he shares with his own children, especially his 13-year-old. He said cyber safety tips will create simple awareness.  

“You don’t chat with anyone that you don’t know in real life,” Thompson said. “If someone tries to friend you on a social media site that you don’t know, stay away.”

Thompson said he sees a lot of children who will be asked either by other children or by bad actors to share compromising photos of themselves. He said the wrong-doing for teens is not always obvious. 

“There’s a way of trying to teach that even though it’s a 17-year-old asking for a picture of a 15-year-old, that’s a federal crime, we can’t be doing that,” Thompson said. 

The program will teach students the legal and personal consequences of sharing sexually suggestive or explicit material. It also sets up potential collaborations between school districts, law enforcement and other entities.

The program provides student resources with contact information if encountering suspicious or dangerous activity.  

Thompson said the cyber safety program, with all of its facets, has lofty, yet reachable goals. 

“We might be able to stop somebody from being human traffic,” Thompson said. “We might be able to stop somebody from sending compromising photos, stop somebody from becoming a victim of the sextortion scam.”

The law requires school districts to implement the program for the 2025-2026 school year.

Senate Bill Aims To Keep Children Safe From Sextortion

Today the Senate passed a bill aimed at helping children stay safer from internet predators and cyberbullies. 

Senate Bill 466 would require the West Virginia Board of Education to create an annual safety course curriculum about accessing technology for children and teenagers. The program would be in collaboration with law enforcement and criminal justice agencies and other organizations that deal with human trafficking and child online safety issues. 

The program would focus on safe and responsible use of social networking including online messaging, the risks of transmitting personal information online, copyright laws, the importance of establishing open communication with adults like school counselors and teachers, and how to recognize and avoid suspicious or dangerous online communication or activities with cyberbullies and predators.  

Sen. Laura Chapman, R-Ohio, said the bill is in place to protect children from things like sextortion. That is when a minor communicates with a predator in an elicit or sexual manner and then is later extorted. She said the bill is also to open pathways of communication between minors and resources to help them if they have been a victim of online predation or cyberbullying. 

“This bill addresses online bullying, it addresses Human Trafficking Awareness, addresses child pornography dissemination,” Chapman said, “Because oftentimes children don’t realize when they take a nude photo of themselves, and then send it to a love interest, that they are actually committing dissemination of child pornography.”

She said this bill will help children know what to look out for if somebody’s trying to exploit them. She said keeping children safe online and having resources available for them if they are exploited can be a matter of life or death. 

“I recently came across an issue where children would send nude photos to someone that they thought was a love interest and ended up being somebody who just wanted to extort them,” Chapman said. “Oftentimes those children commit suicide.” 

Chapman said that children, their parents and teachers need to be aware of these risks and be able to recognize signs that a child is facing harm on the internet. She said it’s also important children know they have resources available to them in their communities if they do fall victim to cyber bullying or sexual exploitation. 

 Parents will have the option to opt children out of this training. 

The bill now heads to the House of Delegates for consideration.

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