
Horrifying Satanic paedo ring ‘764' groom girls as young as 11 into sex abuse & suicide…as sickos' vile boasts revealed
"GET them young and they're yours forever" - these are the chilling words from a twisted playbook to help Satan-obsessed paedophile abusers blackmail young girls online.
Blending sickening neo-Nazi ideology and harrowing sexual extortion, terror cult 764 is among a worrying new breed of evil online abusers.
8
Richard Ehiemere had Category A child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on his phone - the worst kind
Credit: NCA
8
The group share posts related to Satan, neo-Nazi ideology and child sex abuse images
Credit: PA
8
British 764 member Cameron Finnigan, 19, tried to get a girl to end her life on webcam
Credit: PA
Targeting girls as young as nine, they blackmail kids into stripping, performing degrading sex acts, self-harming, attempting suicide and committing violence against animals and the public.
At least four arrests have been made in the UK and according to the National Crime Agency (NCA), incidents have increased six-fold in the last two years and the membership is in the hundreds.
Among them was Londoner Richard Ehiemere, 21, who was collared with 29 indecent images of children (IIOC) including 10 Category A - the most severe - on his phone.
Under the alias 'Retaliate#1337' and then 17, his chilling boasts in online forums included sexual taunts to an 11-year-old girl.
This week, Ehiemere was sentenced to 12 months, suspended for 18months, and given a 10-year Sexual Harm Prevention Order for two counts of fraud - regarding data, password and username leaks - and three charges related to the horrifying photos.
An NCA cybercrime investigator tells us: 'In online groups, Ehiemere spoke about having 'e-girls' and would say things like, 'I own you from now on'.
'In one group chat, a young girl, who was invited to join, asked, 'I'm 11, is that OK?' and he replied, 'OK, you're my little c** sl**'.
'CVLT (764) is very focused on sexual exploitation, grooming and dominating young girls. Their main thing is to get them to take their clothes off on camera and do whatever the group asks.
'That could be self-harm or sadistic sex acts, these girls are mostly 15 or 16, and on a few occasions, non-UK members have claimed they made girls attempt suicide on camera.
'They seek out vulnerable girls on mental health boards. The leader of the group advised looking out for victims with personality and eating disorders.'
Mum's fury after paedo who lured her son, 6, into woods 'LET OFF with softer sentence'
Worryingly, the NCA - who are UK's answer to the FBI - tell us young female victims are groomed to the point that they 'end up becoming perpetrators themselves'.
They say: 'Just like you'd see with sex rings where girls are forced into it and then they get other girls into it too. The same thing is happening online.'
'Terror week' plot
At least five British teens have been arrested for crimes related to 764 - including Cameron Finnigan, 19, known as 'ACID' online, who encouraged a young Italian to livestream herself ending her life.
When asked about this sickening act in a police interview, he replied: 'The only risk I was concerned about is, if she went through with it and I got caught'.
Cops also found an 11-page PDF document detailing how to carry out a 'mass casualty' attack against the public and that he plotted a 'terror week' with other members.
Finnigan also planned to murder a homeless man living in a tent near his home and vowed online: 'I won't stop until he's dead.'
That could be self-harm or sadistic sex acts, these girls are mostly 15 or 16, and on a few occasions, non-UK members have claimed they made girls attempt suicide on camera
NCA cybercrime investigator
Police also found six Category A child sex abuse images and a video on his computer - something Rob Richardson, head of the NCA's fight against the group, tells us is all too common with 764 members.
He says: 'From what we understand, this group's motivation isn't necessarily around having a sexual interest in children or finance. Their motivation is notoriety and credibility online.
'The way they build that is by sharing child sex abuse material (CSAM), coercing vulnerable people to abuse themselves and others, or by shocking their peers.
'The occult (Satanism) is one method of that, another is sharing extreme right-wing ideology but what worries us more is extreme misogyny and what type of men will be made from this.
'The influence of the manosphere is breeding an entire community of misogynistic young men and we are very worried about what will happen in five or six years time.'
'X-Rated paedo hellscape'
The group - set up in 2021 - was named after the Texas postcode of teen founder Bradley Cadenhead who is serving an 80-year sentence on charges of child pornography.
8
Finnigan planned a knife and firearm massacre
Credit: PA
8
He shared photos of the tent of a homeless man, who he plotted to murder
Credit: PA
They find vulnerable teenage girls on communication apps and specifically hunt down youngsters with eating disorders and mental health issues.
In the chilling 101 page "sexploitation playbook" recently seen by the Observer, they advised members how to target young victims online - headed with the quote: "Get them young, and they're yours forever."
But in their bid to find younger victims, they have also taken to the infiltrating online games like Roblox, as The Sun discovered.
Worryingly, just under half of UK gamers aged four to 18 play Roblox - making it the most popular title for minors - and a dream hunting ground for abusers.
Last year, a damning report from Hindenburg Research accused Roblox of prioritising profits over child safety and branded the game 'an X-rated paedophile hellscape'.
'[It was] replete with users attempting to groom our avatars, groups openly trading child pornography, widely accessible sex games, violent content and extremely abusive speech - all of which is open to young children,' the report claimed.
Roblox has introduced 30 safety updates limiting how kids under 13 communicate and banning under-nines from 'moderate' content.
Roblox consistently fails to remove communities trading child abuse material from its platform.
Online paedophile hunter RealSchlep
Despite this, The Sun has been made aware of a boy, aged 10, who was forced to strip on camera, carve a chunk of skin out of his thigh and livestream himself throwing up.
In another case, a 12-year-old girl was forced to carve the name of her abuser into her skin and was hounded for hours in an attempt to convince her to kill her mother, until she broke down in tears and tried to overdose on medication.
We also found T-shirts Roblox users could buy for their characters linked to the terror group, including one with the slogan: "He harm on my nation until I 764."
Others featured '764' in the design, made reference to harming animals, sexual activity with children and bestiality. Some depicted self-harm wounds too.
'Catfished, lovebombed & sextorted'
The predators will use the chat function in Roblox or find an online forum that talks about self-harm or bipolar disorder to find vulnerable children, who they call 'submits'.
They will then persuade them to join a free online communication app, which is where the full extent of the grooming begins.
Here they will catfish and lovebomb their victims, using fake photos and excessive displays of affection, to masquerade as the perfect romantic partner.
8
The founder of the 764 terror group Bradley Cadenhead
Credit: IMDB
8
One user linked to 764 sold Roblox T-shirts featuring self-harm cuts and encouraging animal abuse
Credit: Supplied
8
The Roblox in-game chat references twisted sexual fantasies, 764 and the age of a young gamer
Credit: RealSchlep
Once they have fully gained their trust they ask for sexually explicit photos or videos, which is when the truly sadistic stuff begins.
The abuser will 'sextort' them by threatening to send the explicit photos to the victim's school or parents.
Or they will threaten to 'swat' them by getting armed police officers to storm their address after making a hoax call or 'dox' them by publishing their private information online.
Scared and vulnerable, these children are pressured into performing degrading acts on camera for their abusers, which will then be circulated amongst 764 members.
A relative of one of the victims, who asked to remain anonymous, urged parents to monitor what their children do online.
She said: 'If you must let your children play Roblox make sure you disable the in-game chat. You may think they're safe and only talking to other children but these children are often the ones grooming them'.
'Predators' paradise'
YouTube paedophile hunter Michael, 21, from Georgia, US, who runs the channel RealSchlep, has drew in millions of viewers to his online stings on Roblox.
He tells us: "Roblox consistently fails to remove communities trading child abuse material from its platform.
'Sadistic groups fuled by melting pot of violence & extreme ideology'
As for what turns young men to commit such vile acts, Dr Simon Duff, of the Centre of Forensic & Family Psychology at the University of Nottingham, gave his verdict.
He told the Sun: 'For some people it might be through experiences where they have learned that certain tactics achieve goals.
'For example, if a child has been exposed to circumstances where they see that getting control of someone leads to positive outcomes they might learn to try to control others.
'It is possible that these behaviours develop from a child's experiences of trauma, which can impact how they understand and interact with the world.
'We also have to consider that some of it will be opportunistic, that someone sees an opportunity and takes advantage of it.'
Andy Burrows, Chief Executive of Molly Rose Foundation added: "It is sickening that children are being groomed into such incredibly distressing and disturbing acts online by sadistic groups fuelled by a melting pot of violent and extreme ideologies.
"The urgency and depravity of these risks requires the Prime Minister to act. After multiple warnings by global law enforcement about these groups we need stronger online safety laws to keep our children safe."
"I publicly called out one of these groups in response to the CEO of Roblox and my post got more likes than his.
"The chances someone at Roblox saw it? Extremely high. And yet, the group is still up."
With the Online Safety Act 2023 coming into force this month, Roblox will have to carry out a Children's Risk Assessment by July 2025.
This would check the risks of children being exposed to harmful content within the game and whether additional safety measures are necessary.
A spokesperson from Roblox told the Sun: 'These allegations are deeply troubling and not the kind of experience we want our users to have.
'We have a zero-tolerance policy against child exploitation and in November, we announced a number of changes to restrict chat functions for users under age 13.
'For example, users under 13 can no longer directly message others on Roblox outside of experiences.
"Moreover, users under 13 are unable to directly message others within games and experiences unless the default setting is changed using Verified Parental Controls.
'We monitor 24/7 for inappropriate content, partner with law enforcement around the world, and are working tirelessly to enhance our systems, processes and policies.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Brit caught in Iran's revenge strike in Israel says she was buoyed by her ‘blitz spirit'
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BRITISH woman caught in Iran's revenge strikes after the US atom plant attack told how she was buoyed by her 'blitz spirit' yesterday. Nicola Simmonds, 58, was rocked by the biggest ballistic missile to blast Tel Aviv early yesterday. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Nicola Simmonds, 58, was rocked by the biggest ballistic missile to blast Tel Aviv Credit: Doug Seeburg 5 Israeli emergency teams work at the site of an Iranian missile strike on a residential building complex in Tel Aviv Credit: EPA 5 Israeli emergency teams arrive at the scene and launch search and rescue operations Credit: Getty The tour guide told how fellow shelter dwellers gasped in terror as the explosion wrecked a low rise housing block and sent a blast of air through her bunker. Nicola - who grew up in Mill Hill, North London but now lives in the Ramat Aviv suburb 10 miles north of the city centre - said: 'I've heard blast before in recent days but nothing like this. 'There was an enormous boom followed by a rush of air and we knew this was big and very close. 'But I'm British and my grandfather was a volunteer ambulance driver in the London blitz - so I strangely didn't feel as afraid as everyone else. 'It was against all advice but I, kind of, crawled out of my hole and found myself heading straight for the site of the explosion. 'It's strange but it really did feel like the blitz - what my grandfather had braved in London, I was now experiencing in Tel Aviv.' A five storey block 600 metres from Nicola's home was devastated at 8am yesterday by an enormous Iranian missile strike. Bedding, clothes and belongings hung from the blown out shell of a block with other buildings blackened, cars wrecked and glass and debris strewn across the neighbourhood. The Sun's team took cover in a hotel shelter at 7.30am yesterday when sirens and alerts signalled the first revenge attack after Operation Midnight Hammer. Walls of our shelter in the city centre hotel shook violently as a series of explosions ripped through the air above. Wounded Iran immediately lashes out at Israel launching volleys of ballistic missiles causing 'large-scale destruction' Ramat Aviv took the biggest hit of the attack in the bustling coastal city as families across the country cowered bomb shelters. Gran-of-three Shevi Lahav - an 84-year-old holocaust survivor - told The Sun: 'I live on the fourth floor of a nine story block but don't know if I have a home to go back to now. 'I fled from the Nazis in Russian for two years in World War II and it's hard to believe I'm being attacked again. 'I was in the shelter but god knows what would have happened to me if I hadn't reached the shelter. 'But we won't give in - we didn't give in then and we won't give in now.' 5 Tel Aviv residents shelter in a hotel bunker as Iranian missiles hit the Israeli city Credit: Doug Seeburg

Rhyl Journal
5 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
Swinney urged to increase powers for authorities in bid to tackle knife crime
On Sunday, a march against knife violence took place throughout the streets of Glasgow. The Parents Against Knives were joined on the march, which started at 1pm, by the family of Kory McCrimmon, who died after an attack involving a bladed weapon on May 31 2024. His family previously said the 16-year-old's life 'will not be in vain' as they urged others to join the march. The 16-year-old died after he was found seriously injured in Greenfield Park in the east end of Glasgow. A 14-year-old was last month sentenced to five years' detention after admitting culpable homicide. Speaking from Barrowfield Community Centre in Glasgow, Kory's father, Neil McCrimmon, told the PA news agency that knife crime has always been a problem in Scotland, but said it has changed in recent years, and that the Scottish Government must act to address the problem. He said: 'Knife crime has always been here, there's no getting away from that. If you go back to the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s, but it's different today. 'This is our children we're talking about, and this is where Mr Swinney needs to make changes. 'They say we should protect children, and by all means we have. 'We've got to safeguard them in every manner, but my point to Mr Swinney is, who is saving the children from the children?' He added: 'And this is the thing, we've not got any deterrent, and the courts, they're no deterrent.' He said the Scottish judicial system's 'hands are tied' with current sentencing guidelines for minors who have committed serious offences, and that the penalty served his son's killer is 'not justice'. He added: 'In my day, you did the crime, you did the time, and that's all we ask for: justice, and justice hasn't been served in our case. 'The other matter is the police. Mr Swinney will tell you the police have got their powers, but the police will tell you they haven't. They've not got the powers when it comes to children. 'So Mr Swinney, give the police their powers, make a difference, that is all we ask.' The march was organised by Kory's aunt, Jackie McTaggart, who says she wants to set up a meeting with the First Minister as a starting point to tackling knife crime, particularly among youths. She said: 'We want to speak to the First Minister and the Justice Secretary, so we're hoping we'll get that soon, and now we've said it publicly in the media. 'We're hoping that's the next step, so we can sit and speak to them and get everybody involved, like the police, the social work department, the youth workers, the school teachers, everybody. 'If we get them all working with our youth, then hopefully we can make a change and make a difference.' The march came in the wake of the deaths of teenagers Amen Teklay and Kayden Moy in separate incidents in recent weeks. Two boys aged 14 and 16 have appeared in court charged with murder following the death of 15-year-old Amen in the Maryhill area of Glasgow on March 5. Kayden, 16, was found seriously injured on Irvine beach in North Ayrshire after police were called to the area at about 6.45pm on May 17. A 14-year-old boy and two 17-year-old boys have appeared in court charged with murder following his death. The Parents Against Knives march set off from Rangers' Ibrox stadium and those taking part were walking to Celtic Park in the east end of the city. Kate Wallace, chief executive of Victim Support Scotland, said: 'Too many lives are being devastated by knife crime in Scotland. 'Behind every statistic, hundreds of lives are irreversibly impacted with tragic consequences for everyone involved: family, friends, siblings, school mates and the wider communities in which we all live. 'We support the Parents Against Knives walk, organised entirely by the McCrimmon family in memory of their son Kory, which will undoubtedly help draw attention to this growing crisis. 'These are complex and sensitive situations which require a multi-agency response from the Scottish Government, victim support organisations, police, social work, youth work and others to work together to tackle knife crime and the devastation it causes. People across Scotland deserve to feel safe in their own communities.' Mr Swinney said: 'We stand in solidarity with all those who took part in the Parents Against Knives march in Glasgow and my heartfelt condolences go to Kory McCrimmon's family and every family who has suffered unimaginable loss due to knife crime. 'As a father, I find the thought of any parent having to endure the grief and trauma of losing a child to knife crime utterly heartbreaking. Glasgow is united and Scotland is united in wanting these horrific incidents to stop. 'We owe it to every family affected to take meaningful action. That's why we have increased investment in prevention, support and enforcement; from record funding for Police Scotland to vital work by Medics Against Violence and the Scottish Violence Reduction Unit. We stand with the families marching and we are committed to driving the change that keeps our young people safe.'

Leader Live
5 hours ago
- Leader Live
Swinney urged to increase powers for authorities in bid to tackle knife crime
On Sunday, a march against knife violence took place throughout the streets of Glasgow. The Parents Against Knives were joined on the march, which started at 1pm, by the family of Kory McCrimmon, who died after an attack involving a bladed weapon on May 31 2024. His family previously said the 16-year-old's life 'will not be in vain' as they urged others to join the march. The 16-year-old died after he was found seriously injured in Greenfield Park in the east end of Glasgow. A 14-year-old was last month sentenced to five years' detention after admitting culpable homicide. Speaking from Barrowfield Community Centre in Glasgow, Kory's father, Neil McCrimmon, told the PA news agency that knife crime has always been a problem in Scotland, but said it has changed in recent years, and that the Scottish Government must act to address the problem. He said: 'Knife crime has always been here, there's no getting away from that. If you go back to the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s, but it's different today. 'This is our children we're talking about, and this is where Mr Swinney needs to make changes. 'They say we should protect children, and by all means we have. 'We've got to safeguard them in every manner, but my point to Mr Swinney is, who is saving the children from the children?' He added: 'And this is the thing, we've not got any deterrent, and the courts, they're no deterrent.' He said the Scottish judicial system's 'hands are tied' with current sentencing guidelines for minors who have committed serious offences, and that the penalty served his son's killer is 'not justice'. He added: 'In my day, you did the crime, you did the time, and that's all we ask for: justice, and justice hasn't been served in our case. 'The other matter is the police. Mr Swinney will tell you the police have got their powers, but the police will tell you they haven't. They've not got the powers when it comes to children. 'So Mr Swinney, give the police their powers, make a difference, that is all we ask.' The march was organised by Kory's aunt, Jackie McTaggart, who says she wants to set up a meeting with the First Minister as a starting point to tackling knife crime, particularly among youths. She said: 'We want to speak to the First Minister and the Justice Secretary, so we're hoping we'll get that soon, and now we've said it publicly in the media. 'We're hoping that's the next step, so we can sit and speak to them and get everybody involved, like the police, the social work department, the youth workers, the school teachers, everybody. 'If we get them all working with our youth, then hopefully we can make a change and make a difference.' The march came in the wake of the deaths of teenagers Amen Teklay and Kayden Moy in separate incidents in recent weeks. Two boys aged 14 and 16 have appeared in court charged with murder following the death of 15-year-old Amen in the Maryhill area of Glasgow on March 5. Kayden, 16, was found seriously injured on Irvine beach in North Ayrshire after police were called to the area at about 6.45pm on May 17. A 14-year-old boy and two 17-year-old boys have appeared in court charged with murder following his death. The Parents Against Knives march set off from Rangers' Ibrox stadium and those taking part were walking to Celtic Park in the east end of the city. Kate Wallace, chief executive of Victim Support Scotland, said: 'Too many lives are being devastated by knife crime in Scotland. 'Behind every statistic, hundreds of lives are irreversibly impacted with tragic consequences for everyone involved: family, friends, siblings, school mates and the wider communities in which we all live. 'We support the Parents Against Knives walk, organised entirely by the McCrimmon family in memory of their son Kory, which will undoubtedly help draw attention to this growing crisis. 'These are complex and sensitive situations which require a multi-agency response from the Scottish Government, victim support organisations, police, social work, youth work and others to work together to tackle knife crime and the devastation it causes. People across Scotland deserve to feel safe in their own communities.' Mr Swinney said: 'We stand in solidarity with all those who took part in the Parents Against Knives march in Glasgow and my heartfelt condolences go to Kory McCrimmon's family and every family who has suffered unimaginable loss due to knife crime. 'As a father, I find the thought of any parent having to endure the grief and trauma of losing a child to knife crime utterly heartbreaking. Glasgow is united and Scotland is united in wanting these horrific incidents to stop. 'We owe it to every family affected to take meaningful action. That's why we have increased investment in prevention, support and enforcement; from record funding for Police Scotland to vital work by Medics Against Violence and the Scottish Violence Reduction Unit. We stand with the families marching and we are committed to driving the change that keeps our young people safe.'