ZeroDarkTony promises a new wave of lawsuits, subpoenas, and efforts to unmask anonymous online critics “no matter what happens” in his upcoming California court case against Krackhead Kenny. During the broadcast, D’Amato claimed additional “John Does” would be added to filings, threatened to expose chat participants and donors through subpoenas, and raised money for what…
A case involving the harassment of a minor ended in a plea deal without victim consultation. A formal complaint followed. The court was put on notice. And still, by the time of the restitution hearing, no corrective action came. In People v. D’Amato, Marsy’s Law wasn’t just overlooked—it was ignored.
Emily Hart AI Scam: How Algorithms Targeted MAGA Men and Monetized Nostalgia The Scroll In 1981, Merle Haggard released a song lamenting a lost America, a country that already felt out of reach, a place where money held its value and the culture still made sense. Around the same moment, Ronald Reagan entered the White…
A Los Angeles live streamer, ZeroDarkTony, returns to the same jurisdictional battlefield that destroyed his first case — this time with a lawyer. It may not be enough.
California’s Penal Code 1001.36 was designed to help the genuinely mentally ill avoid unnecessary incarceration. But its legal architecture — a mandatory presumption the prosecution can almost never overcome, combined with a complete erasure of the arrest record on completion — creates a pathway a sophisticated defendant can exploit. Here is how it works, step…
For more than a year, Mindy Willens pursued protection from ZeroDarkTony through a system designed to move quickly. Instead, the process dragged on. The outcome secured safety for her family—but not without concessions, and not without cost.
After approving the release of Gregory Vogelsang, a parole board delayed its final decision following public outcry and political pressure. The case has now triggered a wave of proposed reforms—and exposed how California’s parole system responds when its decisions are brought into the open.
A 355-year sentence was meant to ensure Gregory Vogelsang would never be released. Decades later, California’s parole system has approved his release, exposing a deeper contradiction in how the state defines punishment and risk.
ZeroDarkTony predicts arrests, witness testimony from his mother, and a courtroom confrontation during a livestream dispute tied to a restraining order case that was previously dismissed.
A former LAPD assistant chief spirals online after an activist calls him out, amplifies a video made by a man with a warrant for stalking a minor, then deletes it and blocks critics. Former Los Angeles Police Department Assistant Chief Alfred “Al” Labrada did not slip quietly into retirement after leaving the department in 2024.…