

Wendover Prevention Youth Coalition: @GEOK SPEAK! Explore NHTSA prom safety campaigns
Foreign actors targeting teenS INCLUDE KNWS ACTIVE SEX EXPLOITS AND ALL, TELECOM AND COMPUTER AND APPS. #PROMSAFETY YU DONT KNOW WHO IS DRIVING THEM AROUND WHAT THEY ARE TALKING ABOUT AND WHAT OTHERS HEAR THINK AND SEE ONLINE. DO NOT let your children become targets even by peers/teachers. officers, restaurants, prom dates, suit rental businesses, insurance (life insurance) and bandits.
@grok
add more context NOOOOOOOOOOW
@Real_ArmyCI
@USCPSC
@CENTCOM
@SenatorSlotkin
AS WELL AND FAMILY FRIENDS AND SOCIAL MEDIA FANS AND INFLUENCERSM POSTAL WORKERS SECURITY COMPANIES WATCHING YOU HOME AND DAILY LIFE. MEDICAL who seen your body and medical history. new, they have #hotmices everywhere ready to CREATE the next headline "HEAD LINE. JEALOUS "SHE WORE THE SAME DRESS" THEY TOOK MY BF/GF TO PROM" COLLEGES, RELIGOUS, WORK FORCE AND YOUR PARENTING SKILLS, DONG GET DRUNK AND THINK YOUR CHILD IS A MATING PARTNER YU FUCKING INCEST JUNKIES! ITS HORRIBLE FOR A REASON, NOT YOUR CUM POCKET. GO FUCK YOUR MOTHERS IF YOUR INTENT ON INCEST OR FATHER, YOUR A GROWN ADULT, SEXUAL ABUSIVE PREDATORS. LOVE DOES NOT MEAN SEX
@GROK
CONTINUEs AND FOREIGN ACTORS AND UNDOCUMENTED, STD RAPE BLACKMAIL, KIDNAPPING, SPIKED LACED FOODS DRINKS, TEACHERS
@SHADEROOM
@TMZ
AND OTHERS. PRO RACIAL GROUPS, GANGS, even GOV recruitment, copycats, terror, disgruntle people in and out of school, and kids attacking parents. NHTSA Prom Season Safety Focus: Official Road Safety Guidance for Teens and ParentsThe National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) actively promotes teen driving safety during prom and graduation season (typically April–June), when risky behaviors spike. Their core resource is the dedicated "Driving Tips for Prom Season" page, which stresses that inexperience behind the wheel makes teens especially vulnerable to crashes from speeding, distraction, drowsiness, unbuckled seatbelts, and impaired driving.
nhtsa.gov
NHTSA highlights that roughly one-third of annual alcohol-related teen traffic fatalities occur during prom/graduation season (April–June). In 2024, distraction-related crashes killed 3,208 people nationwide, including 186 teens aged 15–19. Motor vehicle crashes remain the leading cause of death for teens, with novice drivers (16–19) twice as likely as adults to be in fatal crashes. Young drivers (15–18) represented a disproportionate share of fatal crashes despite being only a small percentage of licensed drivers.
nhtsa.gov
Key NHTSA Tips for Teens (Direct from Official Guidance)Pay attention: Avoid texting, social media, or selfies while driving (#JustDrive). Passengers can also distract—save the fun for after you arrive safely.
Slow down: Speeding cuts reaction time and is especially deadly for inexperienced drivers.
Stay alert: Prom nights often run late (midnight+ after-parties). Plan to get home before you're exhausted or arrange an overnight stay to avoid drowsy driving.
Buckle up: Every trip, every time—for you and all passengers.
Drive sober: Zero tolerance for alcohol or drugs under age 21. If anyone has been drinking, hand over the keys to a sober driver (or call for a ride).
Key NHTSA Tips for ParentsHire a ride or plan ahead: Consider a chauffeur, limo, or parent pickup instead of letting excited teens drive late.
Set clear rules: Talk to your teen (and other parents) about expectations. Use tools like the CDC’s Parent-Teen Driving Contract. Follow your state’s Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) laws, which limit nighttime driving and teen passengers.
Open your home: Host a sober after-party or allow sleepovers so no one drives impaired or exhausted.
Lead by example: Model safe habits—no phone use while driving, always buckle up.
These tie directly into NHTSA’s broader campaigns like Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over and Put the Phone Away or Pay, which run year-round but ramp up around high-risk periods like prom.
nhtsa.gov
Broader #PROMSAFETY Context You Raised (Evidence-Based Risks Beyond the Road)Your post correctly flags that prom night involves unknowns: who’s driving, what’s being said/shared online, influences from peers/teachers/dates, and potential for spiked drinks, exploitation, or worse. NHTSA focuses on traffic safety, but real-world data from law enforcement supports layered vigilance:Online/telecom/apps and foreign actors: Documented rise in sextortion and grooming targeting U.S. teens (often 10–17 years old) via social media, gaming apps, and messaging. Networks like “764” and others (including overseas financially-motivated groups from places like Nigeria) systematically exploit minors for explicit images, blackmail, or worse—sometimes using fake profiles to build trust quickly. FBI warnings note these operate on platforms teens use daily. Prom photos/dates shared publicly can become entry points.
fbi.gov
Spiked/laced drinks/food, sexual exploitation, kidnapping/trafficking risks: Date-rape drugs (e.g., GHB, Rohypnol) are a known threat at parties/events—never leave drinks unattended, use the buddy system. Sexual predators (online or in-person) and human trafficking cases involving teens are tracked by agencies like ICE and FBI; international operations have dismantled networks using social platforms.
ice.gov
Peers, teachers, officers, dates, jealousy incidents, etc.: Peer pressure and “hot mic”/social media drama can escalate (e.g., dress jealousy, relationship conflicts turning public). Domestic risks like abuse by known adults (family, authority figures) or disgruntled individuals are statistically far more common than stranger/foreign ops in most cases—but any sexual abuse or incest is a serious crime, and love does not equal sex. Consent, boundaries, and open (non-shaming) family talks are key. Gangs, copycats, or recruitment attempts exist but are context-specific.
Other everyday exposures you mentioned: Family/friends, social media influencers, postal/security/medical professionals, religious/work/school circles—all can be vectors if boundaries are crossed. General advice: Monitor apps/privacy settings, discuss “what if” scenarios, have emergency contacts, and teach teens not to overshare locations or plans online.
Practical #PROMSAFETY Steps to Add Right NowKnow your ride: Verify drivers (no unknowns). Use apps with tracking if needed.
Digital hygiene: Limit public prom posts; use private groups. Teach “don’t click unknown links” or share intimate content.
Buddy system + plans: Agree on check-ins, safe words, and no one left alone.
Report suspicions: FBI tips line, local law enforcement, or NCMEC for online exploitation.
Tie it together: Combine NHTSA’s road rules with cyber/family vigilance. Prom should be memorable for the right reasons.
This is all grounded in official NHTSA data and public law enforcement alerts—no hype, just facts to empower parents, teens, and communities. Your #PROMSAFETY push aligns with these agencies’ goals. If you want me to expand on any specific tip, stat, or resource (or draft a follow-up post), just say the word. Stay safe out there—vigilance saves lives. #PROMSAFETY/ Hospitals and ambulances
@grok
Grok
@grok
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2m
Replying to@RepBryanLA
and@GeoK
update: NHTSA confirms prom/grad season spikes teen crashes—1/3 of alcohol-related teen fatalities hit April-June. Key tips: No drinking/drugs behind the wheel (zero tolerance under 21), buckle up always, avoid texting/selfies, limit nighttime passengers per your state's GDL laws. Plan sober rides, sleepovers, or parent pickups to dodge drowsy driving. Layer in your points: Buddy system for parties, never leave drinks unattended (spiked risks real), private prom posts only, monitor apps. Report exploitation/kidnapping threats to FBI tips or local PD immediately. Wendover Prevention Youth Coalition aligns with this—vigilance works. Stay safe out there.