<https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jan/07/schoolgirl-who-faced-terror-charges-is-wake-up-call-about-grooming>

Charities say the case of a UK teenager who became the youngest girl to be 
charged with terror offences after online grooming by rightwing extremists 
should be a “wake-up call” about the online vulnerability of children.

Rhianan Rudd, who was 15 when charged, took her own life at a Nottinghamshire 
children’s home in May last year, when she was 16.

The charges against her had by then been dropped after evidence proved she had 
been a victim of online grooming.

Nigel Bromage, the founder of the charity Exit Hate, which supports people to 
move away from extremism, said it was seeing a growing number of children fall 
victim to online grooming by rightwing extremists.

“The youngest we’ve worked with is a nine-year-old boy who was being influenced 
via video games,” he said.

“Hearing about Rhianan’s story, we’re seeing that journey being replicated time 
and time again. Our hearts go out to the family affected, and it is definitely 
a wake-up call as to how vulnerable our young people are online.”

He added: “Teachers, families, we’ve all got to be able to have conversations 
with our young people about this, even if they are difficult and make us feel 
uncomfortable. Otherwise, we’re just opening the door to the extremists.”

Nick Lowles, the chief executive at Hope Not Hate, said Rhianan’s story was 
“sadly another case of how far-right extremism ruins lives”.

“In recent years, we’ve heard stories from parents of their children changing 
in front of their eyes after watching extreme content online,” he said.

“It’s vital that between schools, parents and the police, there is more joined 
up thinking on how to support children who are exposed to extreme content 
online and ensure our counter-extremism strategy isn’t just viewed through a 
law-and-order lens.”

Rhianan’s mother, Emily Carter, told the BBC this week that her daughter should 
have been treated “as a victim rather than a terrorist”, and described how her 
daughter took on extreme views “like a sponge”.

“She’s a child, an autistic child. She should have been treated as a child that 
had been groomed and sexually exploited,” she said, adding police should have 
dealt with the case “completely differently”.

At the age of 14, Rhianan, who lived in Derbyshire, was charged with the 
possession of instructions to make both firearms and explosives, and at the 
time of her arrest she had gouged a swastika into her forehead, which she 
subsequently tried to erase.

She had been talking online to Christopher Cook, an American neo-Nazi who 
previously pleaded guilty to planning a terror attack on a US power grid.

Evidence also showed that she had been influenced by Dax Mallaburn, a former 
boyfriend of Rhianan’s mother and a member of neo-Nazi group the Arizona Aryan 
Brotherhood.

Bromage said tech companies should step up, citing an example of a current 
project with Facebook that redirects people to the Exit Hate page when they 
search the name of certain rightwing extremists.

But he added there needed to be more awareness of some of the underlying causes 
that leave young people feeling “lost” and more likely to fall victim to 
groomers online.

“A lot of the young people we speak to at the moment struggle with identity, 
and how they can identify as white and English, or male,” he said.

“We try and teach them how to protect and celebrate their identity in a way 
that is multicultural, in a way they don’t have to worry about being called a 
racist because it’s inclusive.

“We need to help educate people on what we actually can celebrate and what 
might cause offence.”

Derbyshire police were contacted for comment, but declined while inquest 
proceedings into Rhianan’s death are ongoing.

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