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Amanda Todd
Amanda Todd: millions have viewed YouTube video. Photograph: .
Amanda Todd: millions have viewed YouTube video. Photograph: .

Netherlands arrest in Amanda Todd webcam blackmail case

This article is more than 9 years old

Canadian teenager committed suicide in 2012 after posting YouTube video detailing harassment and bullying

An arrest has been made in the Netherlands in the case of the Canadian teenager Amanda Todd who was blackmailed to expose herself in front of a webcam, Canadian police confirmed on Thursday. The 15-year-old later committed suicide after detailing her harassment on a YouTube video watched by millions around the world.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police Inspector Paulette Freill said a suspect had been arrested in the Netherlands and charged with extortion, luring and criminal harassment and possession of child pornography for the purpose of distribution. Police did not release the name of the 35-year-old man and declined to release specifics of the case.

Dutch prosecutors said the man was suspected of blackmailing girls in the US, Britain and the Netherlands.

Amanda Todd brought the problem of cyber bullying to international attention after she posted a video on YouTube in which she told her story with handwritten signs, describing how she was lured by a stranger to expose her breasts on a webcam.

The picture ended up on a Facebook page made by the stranger, to which her friends were added.

She was repeatedly bullied, despite changing schools, before finally killing herself weeks after posting the video. It has now been viewed more than 17m times.

"This is truly a day we have been waiting for," said Carol Todd, Amanda's mother. She wiped away tears as she thanked police.

Dutch prosecutors said they filed indecent assault and child pornography charges against the man. Lawyer Christian van Dijk earlier confirmed to the Associated Press that one of the charges against his client involved a 15-year-old girl from British Columbia.

The suspect, who has dual Dutch and Turkish nationality, has been in detention since he was arrested in January in a vacation house in the town of Oisterwijk. He lived alone.

Prosecutors first publicised his case after a preliminary hearing on Wednesday at which his detention was extended for three months.

"The suspicions against the man are that he approached underage girls via the internet and then seduced them into performing sexual acts in front of a webcam," prosecutors said in a statement.

"He is suspected of subsequently pressurising them to participate in making new material."

They noted the suspect is also thought to have blackmailed adult men in a somewhat similar way, by convincing them that he was an underage boy, inducing them to perform sexual acts on camera and then threatening to turn the images over to the police.

Van Dijk said he didn't believe prosecutors had sufficient evidence to convict his client, and said that even if there was evidence of unlawful activity on his computer, it may have been hacked.

"Prosecutors seem to think they have a big fish here, but if I see the evidence, it's not much," he said. "Lots of references to IP addresses and such."

Dutch prosecutors said they were co-operating with other national authorities, including the British.

Van Dijk said US and Norwegian authorities were also involved in the case.

He said no country had sought to have his client extradited, and so far he had entered no plea.

"He's exercising his right to remain silent."

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