The document discusses the issue of virtual kidnappings of children in Mexico through social media. It notes that there are an estimated 10 billion virtual kidnapping attempts per year targeting children ages 11 to 17. The victims unwittingly share personal details with fake accounts operated by kidnappers. In response, the Mexican president proposed life imprisonment for kidnappers who are or were members of public security institutions, as well as for those who kidnap minors or incompetent persons. However, the passage casts doubt on this response by briefly describing a 2005 case where a French woman arrested in Mexico denied knowledge of kidnappings carried out by her then-boyfriend's gang.
The document discusses the issue of virtual kidnappings of children in Mexico through social media. It notes that there are an estimated 10 billion virtual kidnapping attempts per year targeting children ages 11 to 17. The victims unwittingly share personal details with fake accounts operated by kidnappers. In response, the Mexican president proposed life imprisonment for kidnappers who are or were members of public security institutions, as well as for those who kidnap minors or incompetent persons. However, the passage casts doubt on this response by briefly describing a 2005 case where a French woman arrested in Mexico denied knowledge of kidnappings carried out by her then-boyfriend's gang.
The document discusses the issue of virtual kidnappings of children in Mexico through social media. It notes that there are an estimated 10 billion virtual kidnapping attempts per year targeting children ages 11 to 17. The victims unwittingly share personal details with fake accounts operated by kidnappers. In response, the Mexican president proposed life imprisonment for kidnappers who are or were members of public security institutions, as well as for those who kidnap minors or incompetent persons. However, the passage casts doubt on this response by briefly describing a 2005 case where a French woman arrested in Mexico denied knowledge of kidnappings carried out by her then-boyfriend's gang.
The document discusses the issue of virtual kidnappings of children in Mexico through social media. It notes that there are an estimated 10 billion virtual kidnapping attempts per year targeting children ages 11 to 17. The victims unwittingly share personal details with fake accounts operated by kidnappers. In response, the Mexican president proposed life imprisonment for kidnappers who are or were members of public security institutions, as well as for those who kidnap minors or incompetent persons. However, the passage casts doubt on this response by briefly describing a 2005 case where a French woman arrested in Mexico denied knowledge of kidnappings carried out by her then-boyfriend's gang.
In Mexico there are 10 billion virtual kidnappings per year, common age the victims are from 11 to 17 because they think they are making a new friend but they dont have idea that the fake account is a abductor and the victims give personal information with out knowing and the abductor can have a lot of information because the victims sometimes dont have their profile private, thats why the president Enrique Pea Nieto decided life imprisonment for kidnappers who are or have been members of public security institutions, life imprisonment for those who kidnap minors or incompetent persons.But I think thats not true because a french abductor woman was held in December 2005 at a ranch near the Mexican capital where several hostages were found. She denied knowledge of the kidnappings, which were carried out by the Zodiacs gang led by her then-boyfriend, who confessed.
INTERNET: ests en peligro? (INTERNET: ests en peligro?). (2011). Ahora, 168. Patricia Janiot Rey Rodrguez Mara Carolina Gonzlez Javier Doberti Sanie Lpez-Garelli Daro, K. (n.d). Presidente de Mxico propone cadena perpetua para los secuestradores; Evo Morales se muestra confiado frente al referndum revocatorio. Panorama Mundial (CNN En Espaol), Bo, W. (2013, January 24). Mexico frees French woman in kidnap case. Evening Standard. p. 22.