Mother of girl groomed by Roblox predator warns parents to monitor phone use
Carlo Tritta Â
The mother of a teenage girl groomed by a sexual predator whom she met on the mobile gaming platform Roblox has warned parents to keep an eye on their childrenâs phone use.
Carlo Tritta, 19, of Bishopstoke, Eastleigh, Hampshire, in the UK, has been locked up for 28 months after he pleaded guilty to various offences, including making indecent images of a child and sexual communications with a child.
Tritta first made contact with the girl from the Manchester area through Roblox in September 2024 when she was 14 years old, before he moved the conversation on to other messaging apps such as Snapchat, Discord and WhatsApp.
Tritta went on to engage in âhighly sexualisedâ conversations with his victim and shared intimate images and videos.
Police were alerted last August when the complainantâs mother discovered the messages and images.
Tritta was arrested and interviewed, but went on to breach his bail conditions as he travelled to the girlâs home in a bid to get her to drop the case.
On Thursday, prosecutor Rachel Yarwood told Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court that Tritta walked in through the back door of the property and confronted the complainant despite her asking him to leave.

She said: âHe also sent her letters, attempted to contact her by phone and made attempts to frustrate the criminal investigation.âÂ
Tritta later admitted to perverting the course of justice and was sentenced last December to a 12-month custodial sentence, suspended for two years.
However, just three days later, he returned to the complainantâs home and sought to confront her as he entered the property and damaged a video camera.
Tritta was arrested again and later pleaded guilty to making indecent images, including 25 in the most serious classification of Category A, sexual communication with a child and causing a child to watch a sexual act, all committed between January and August 2025.
He also admitted to witness intimidation and criminal damage.
In a victim impact statement, the girl said she âfelt trapped and upsetâ and was âscared of going downstairs at nightâ because she thought the defendant would be there.
The victimâs mother told the court they were âconstantly on edgeâ at their home, which no longer feels like a safe space, and had considered moving.
Edward Steele, defending, made what he termed a âmercy submissionâ to the court not to activate Trittaâs earlier suspended sentence.
He said Tritta was âessentially fixatedâ with his victim, "partly as a function of his neurodiverse conditionâ.
The court heard the defendant has Asperger syndrome together with a mixed anxiety and depressive disorder, which âmay have compromised his understanding of what he was doingâ.

Mr Steele said: âHe is now coming to terms with the seriousness of the offences he committed, which is borne out by a letter of apology and his remorse.âÂ
However, Recorder Ciaran Rankin ruled that Trittaâs pattern of behaviour over a period of time must be reflected by an immediate custodial term.
He also noted the author of a pre-sentence report regarded Tritta as a high risk of causing harm to children and that the witness intimidation offences were committed just days after a court order had been imposed.
Following sentencing, Hampshire Police said Tritta led his victim to believe they were in a relationship by âlove-bombingâ her with constant messaging and sending her gifts and takeaways.
After his initial arrest, he texted the girl multiple times and even sent her two cards via Moonpig.com to encourage her to drop the case. His behaviour escalated, police added, when he reported the girlâs mother to social services.
The mother, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told the Press Association she had discovered Trittaâs contact with her daughter after the child became depressed, stopped sleeping well and had suicidal thoughts.
The mother said: âI feel like my daughter has been in some kind of abusive, controlling, coercive relationship with somebody whoâs a lot older.âÂ
She added: âI donât feel safe in my own house. Iâve got cameras up, Iâve got to think about safeguarding, Iâve had to change times of school pickup, when I drop off, I just get jumpy in my own house.âÂ
Calling for tighter restrictions for the users of apps aimed at children, she also advised parents to take care of what their children are doing on their phones.
She said of Roblox: âTo me, I just thought itâs a childâs game.
âI did not think for one minute that these older people, paedophiles, are essentially grooming on these games and contacting these children.
âI try to tell as many people as possible. Watch what your children are playing; they can be dangerous.
âI thought, my girl, she gets high grades in school, she can be a bit of a moody teenager, but she doesnât go out.
âI just thought how lucky am I that Iâve got my daughter at home with me and sheâs safe, but Iâm in my bedroom, and sheâs in the other, and all this is happening to her.â Detective Constable Jodi Bartlett, who investigated the case, said: âTrittaâs behaviour lays bare the terrifying realities of how criminals use the online world to target and harm vulnerable people. Do you truly know who you, or your child, is speaking to online?

âThe victim in this case was just 14 years old. She and her mother were subjected to a campaign of fear and abuse at the hands of obsessive and predatory Tritta.
âGaming platforms should be spaces where people, especially children, are safe. The anonymity of the internet allows dangerous individuals like Tritta to prey on others for their own twisted gain, and the lengths that Tritta went to in order to maintain his abuse of this young girl is shocking.
âI would encourage parents to talk openly with their children about how they use the internet, and if you have any concerns, trust your instincts and report these to police.âÂ
Karina Lyon, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: âNot only is Tritta a sexual predator but he has also exhibited deeply troubling behaviour by attending the girlâs address in breach of his bail and a court order, damaging property and trying to interfere with witnesses.
âI hope todayâs outcome sends a clear message that the Crown Prosecution Service is determined to bring those who exploit children to justice.âÂ
A Roblox spokesperson said: âWe are deeply saddened to hear of this troubling case. Criminal behaviour has no place on Roblox.
âSince January, Roblox has required all users to go through age checks in order to communicate on our platform, with the system designed to limit communications to people of similar ages and those they already know.
âOur policies firmly prohibit any kind of child exploitation and we have extensive safety systems in place to help prevent user-to-user image sharing and limit chat for younger users, with our teams working closely with law enforcement to support investigations.
âWhile no system is perfect, we continue to evolve and strengthen our protections every day. For example, last year we added advanced AI systems designed to detect and prevent grooming and stricter chat protections that block personal information sharing and attempts to move conversations off-platform, where moderation standards may be less stringent.â





