They're trying to get her to reveal the pass code on her phone
http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/03/us/miami-sextortion-phone-security-trnd/index.html
An extortion case involving bikini-clad models, social media celebrities and racy images has sparked an intriguing legal debate over phone security and the Fifth Amendment.
The big question: Can authorities access potentially incriminating information on your phone by compelling you to reveal your passcode? Or is access to your phone's secrets protected under the Constitution?
The answer, at least in this case, is that phone passcodes are not protected, a judge ruled Wednesday.
The case stems from the arrest of Hencha Voigt, 29, and her then-boyfriend, Wesley Victor, 34, last July on charges of extortion. Voigt and Victor threatened to release sexually explicit videos and photos of social media star "YesJulz" unless she paid them off, according to a Miami Police Department report.