A months-long investigation by CNN has revealed alarming online spaces where men allegedly share guidance and materials on how to sexually abuse women, in what experts and lawmakers have described as an “online rape academy.”
The report found that these networks operate across websites and encrypted messaging platforms, where participants exchange advice on how to drug women, often their own partners, and carry out assaults without their awareness.
Some of the groups, including chatrooms reportedly hosted on Telegram, were said to encourage users to upload videos of assaults and discuss strategies for avoiding detection. In several cases, victims were allegedly drugged and abused while unconscious.
The investigation also connects the rise of such communities to earlier criminal cases, including a widely reported incident in France, where a man was accused of repeatedly drugging his wife and enabling others to assault her. That case exposed how online forums can facilitate coordinated abuse among perpetrators.
Authorities said some individuals linked to these networks have been identified, arrested, and convicted, with prison terms handed down in multiple instances.
However, enforcement continued to face significant hurdles due to anonymity, encrypted platforms, and the persistent underreporting of drug-facilitated sexual abuse.
In response to the revelations, technology companies said they have taken measures to address the issue. Telegram stated that content promoting sexual violence violates its policies and is removed when detected. Some of the identified groups have since been dismantled, although reports indicate that similar communities were re-emerging on other platforms.
Experts said the findings highlighted a growing global concern over the misuse of digital platforms to enable sexual violence. Encrypted messaging services, while designed to safeguard user privacy, have increasingly come under scrutiny for allowing criminal activities to thrive in hidden networks.
Lawmakers and advocacy groups have called for stricter regulations, enhanced monitoring systems, and stronger collaboration between tech firms and law enforcement agencies to tackle the problem.
The report underscored the difficulty of policing online spaces, particularly as perpetrators quickly adapt, moving to new platforms and using coded language to evade detection, raising fresh concerns about the scale and persistence of digitally enabled sexual exploitation.
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