Michael Duff took his own life after being branded a paedophile online
At least eight men have taken their own lives after being branded paedophiles by vigilante groups, it has emerged.
In the past six years, eight men committed suicide in the wake of being shamed on the internet and social media in 'paedophile hunter stings', according to the Victoria Derbyshire show.
Groups including Dark Justice, Guardians Of The North, Huntz 2 Exposure, The Guardian Angels and Catching Online Predators often post videos - some broadcast live - of the men they 'snare' to thousands of followers online.
The daughter of a man who took his life after being exposed by such a group told the BBC programme that she and her daughter have received rape threats.
She was also forced to bury her father hundreds of miles away, without a funeral, amid fears vigilantes would turn up.
The Victoria Derbyshire show also highlighted the case of married Robert Pearson, from Honley, West Yorkshire. The 56-year-old took his own life last year after he was jailed for sending sexually explicit texts to what he thought was a 14-year-old boy
The BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme spoke to Lesley, whose father took his life without any charges being brought by police.
She told the show vigilante groups are hindering justice.
Her father Michael Duff was questioned by police after footage allegedly showing him attempting to meet a 15-year-old for sex was posted online.
It is understood the 67-year-old was filmed in July 2015 by a paedophile vigilante group known as 'True Justice'.
Mr Duff was questioned on suspicion of attempting to meet a girl under 16 following grooming and was later released on bail.
His body was found two days later at his home in Tyne and Wear.
The case was later referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission and officers contacted those who uploaded the video and asked them to remove it as it 'formed part of a live investigation'.
The True Justice website later deleted the video.
Lesley told the BBC that 'paedophile hunters' needed to be made aware of the consequences of uploading such footage.
She said: 'My friend said, 'look, I don't really know how to say this to you Lesley, but there's a video going round on Facebook - it's your dad'.
'It was on Facebook and I could already see mutual friends had viewed it, so there was nothing I could do.'
She told her daughter, then 15, 'your grandad's a paedophile' - something she later regretted.
Someone she knew then posted a video of him being carried from his house to an ambulance in a body bag on Facebook.
Jamie Lee, 29, who describes himself as a 'child protection enforcer' told the BBC he is performing a public service
The Victoria Derbyshire show also highlighted the case of married Robert Pearson, from Honley, West Yorkshire.
The 56-year-old took his own life last year after he was jailed for sending sexually explicit texts to what he thought was a 14-year-old boy.
Vigilante groups command massive support and have formed a volunteer online taskforce, linked by Facebook groups and private mobile phone chat groups.
In 2017 evidence from vigilante groups was used to charge more than 150 suspects, a seven-fold increase in two years.
But police officers working in child protection have warned that vigilante activity puts both hunters and targets at risk.
But hunters defend their actions, arguing they are helping to bring criminals to justice and expose offenders in communities.
Jamie Lee, 29, who describes himself as a 'child protection enforcer' said he is performing a public service.
Craig Kelly, a lecturer in Criminology at Birmingham City University, told MailOnline it was a ‘matter of time’ before someone is murdered by a vigilante but argued we ‘must not lose sight of the realities of these crimes’.
He said: ‘Poor children are being victimised and it child abuse the most abhorrent crime we can comprehend. This subject is one of the things the public find most abhorrent, it is the biggest taboo in society and rightfully so.
'But it is a matter of time before somebody is murdered by someone from one of these groups, not necessarily one that is active at the moment.
'It is unfortunate that eight men have died, no matter what offence they committed, this should not happen. But at the same time six police officers have killed themselves in recent months because of PTSD.
'Under austerity in the Conservative government in last six years, there has been a reduction in police numbers, forces are understaffed, so there is no possibility to combat the issue of child sex offenders on the internet - even if they have the numbers, they don’t have the training.
'That leaves a deficit in what the police can manage. The Conservatives are on the back foot on trying to get these offenders before paedophile hunter groups emerge.
'Paedophile hunters groups are going to hinder live investigations and it undermines the criminal justice system and innocent until proven guilty. It is a trial by media.
'But it is shining spotlight on a greater problem- the onset of social media and societies’ propensity to push social media and our inherent unpreparedness to deal with the realities of these technologies.
'My main worry is while the offenders are going out and trying to groom children on the internet should be brought to justice, what are the ramifications on their family and friends people losing loved ones – father, uncles, brothers?
'The stigma doesn’t just stick on the person who committed the offence. There needs to be a support system for family members directly affected. If they’re on an estate in the middle of somewhere like Birmingham, for example, they’re at risk from public taking things into their own hands.
'The sex offence treatment programme to treat offenders in the UK has been proven to have increased number of sex offences. It is proven not to reduce it, but if anything it is exacerbating the problem.
'People in these groups are likely to have been victims, had traumatic life experiences or have relatives who have been victims.
'Taking it in this context is it any wonder people are taking it into their own hands?'
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News Pictures Eight men have killed themselves after being 'snared by paedophile-hunting vigilantes'
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