How drill culture, 'trapping for clout', and county-lines recruitment operate on Snapchat and Telegram, and how grooming language overlaps with gang-loyalty language.
Drill is a music genre with a global teenage audience; most listeners are not at risk of harm. However, organised criminal groups use drill aesthetics, 'trapping for clout' culture, and the social-media reach of drill creators as a recruitment funnel — particularly into county-lines drug supply and street violence. Recruitment typically moves through Snapchat, TikTok, and Instagram into Telegram, Signal, or private group chats. The pattern is closely aligned with online grooming: a build-up of attention, status, gifts, and belonging, followed by pressure, isolation, and threat. Parents, schools, and youth workers can recognise the early warning signs and intervene before exploitation deepens.
An older teen or young adult in a peer's network identifies a child who is seeking belonging, money, or status. They send clips, money transfers, designer items, and 'opportunities to earn'. The young person is invited to a closed Telegram or Snapchat group, given small errands ('go-getter' tasks), and then asked to deliver packages, hold money, or travel out of area on county lines. Loyalty is enforced through shared content, debt bondage ('you owe us'), and threats to friends and family if they leave.
1. Keep belonging at home stronger than belonging in a group
Most children who are recruited say they were chasing respect, money, or family they felt they did not get at home. Time, food, sport, and consistent boundaries do more than any single internet rule.
2. Notice the grooming overlap, not just the gang label
Recruitment uses the same playbook as sexual grooming — gifts, secrecy, isolation, debt, threat. If you would worry about a 30-year-old buying your child trainers and asking them to 'go on a trip', worry just as much when it is a 19-year-old.
3. Build a relationship with the school and youth services early
Speak to the designated safeguarding lead, school police officer (SPOC) where one exists, and local youth services before there is a crisis. Many areas have specialist child criminal exploitation (CCE) teams who work with families on a voluntary basis.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-22