An Oklahoma parent is opening up after he said he discovered teens using the Snapchat app to buy and sell drugs.

The parent, who chooses to remain anonymous because he still has children attending local high schools, said a friend of one of his children called him to express concern that people on his child's Snapchat account were selling drugs on the app.

He said he investigated and found pictures of marijuana, Xanax and guns, along with messages advertising prices and personal conversations about buying mushrooms and marijuana.

Then, he reportedly warned other parents and turned the photos over to police in Bixby, Jenks and Sapulpa.

The Snapchat app allows users to send messages that usually disappear within 24 hours, but officials say the things they post there could have longer-lasting consequences.

Officer say selling drugs is a crime, regardless of the sellers' ages, and using a phone to do so is a felony charge.

Snapchat has a policy regarding that type of behavior on the app.

The terms say users "will not use the Services for any purpose that is illegal or prohibited in these Terms."

About the Author

Keep Reading

Chairman Jason Shaw presides over a meeting of the Georgia Public Service Commission in Atlanta on Tuesday, July 15, 2025. (Ben Gray for the AJC)

Credit: Ben Gray for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Featured

Prosecutor Skandalakis has previously suggested that pursuing criminal charges against President Donald Trump may not be feasible until after he leaves office in 2029. (Craig Hudson/Politico/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images