This Cyber Crime Complaint Is Just the Beginning
This Cyber Crime Complaint Is Not Going Away
This morning I got a message that I’ll add to my cyber crime complaint. No profile and no context. Just a location pin sent through an app. I clicked it. The map opened to a spot directly across the street from my home. I opened the location. Like the coward that he is, he blocked and deleted the profile, which is classic behaviour for someone with a dark tetrad personality type.
It wasn’t a mistake because it was a statement. This is the cyber stalker’s calling card.
This wasn’t someone wanting to talk to me. It was someone trying to intimidate me. He still thinks stalking is subtle when it’s wrapped in silence. A malignant, vindictive narcissist who doesn’t realise they’re already being investigated.
This is now part of a formal cyber crime complaint.
When Harassment Turns Into Cybercrimes
For ten months, I’ve been stalked online by someone who lost control of the narrative. He’s been trying to hijack mine ever since. Initially, it was just impersonation, catfishing etc. But it quickly spiralled into identity theft, revenge porn, and eventually full-scale digital and psychological warfare. I’ve had to deal with coordinated spam attacks, psychological abuse, and targeted harassment designed to destroy my business, my sanity, and my reputation.
This isn’t just toxic behaviour. It’s digital violence and harassment dressed up in tech-savviness and carried out behind cowardly screens.
These are cybercrimes, and they’ve been treated that way since the day I reported them.
Reporting a Cyber Crime Isn’t Optional Anymore
I filed the first cyber crime complaint the moment I saw what he was capable of. Since then, I’ve kept reporting every new offence. Law enforcement responded eventually and is now involved. But boy… did I have to fight for that attention. Law enforcement in most countries treat cyber crimes like sci-fi. Finally, my phone activity is being mirrored. Every email, every screenshot, every anonymous message submitted through my site is stored and timestamped.
He is not anonymous and his phone provider is cooperating. And his history is traceable. The location he dropped this morning confirmed more stalking, and that data now exists on a report with law enforcement.
There’s an arrest warrant. It’s not hypothetical. It’s active. And it doesn’t expire. Whether that happens today, next year, there will be consequences.
From Cyberstalking to Identity Theft: The Pattern Is Clear
This isn’t about one message, one pin, or one act of impersonation. It’s about a pattern. A campaign of control carried out digitally. And now it’s being compiled into something much larger.
These are the charges being actively considered:
- Cyberstalking
- Digital impersonation
- Identity theft cyber crime
- Distribution of revenge porn
- Theft
- Fraud
- Unlawful access to personal accounts
- Emotional and psychological abuse
- Harassment
- Filing false reports
- Violations of existing restraining orders
- Coordinated online attacks
- Threatening behaviour using GPS and tracking tools
What happened this morning wasn’t a scare tactic. It was simply more evidence.
Why I’m Leaving This Cyber Crime Complaint Public
This post is staying live because this is what fighting back looks like in 2025.
Digital abuse doesn’t always come with bruises. Sometimes it comes through fake profiles and location pins. Sometimes it wears a friendly tone, or hides behind “jokes,” or masks itself as a coincidence. But the damage it causes is real. And it doesn’t stop until someone forces it to.
That’s what this post is: part of a public record.
I’m not afraid of him. He should be very afraid of what’s coming.
The arrest is going to happen. It might be today. It will come. And I’m telling you that if you’re going through any form of online abuse, cybercrime or digital terror, then force law enforcement to protect you.
When it does, this will be just one more record. This will continue to prove exactly what he’s been doing.
That’s why I’m documenting everything. Psychopaths and narcissists don’t just ruin lives: they try to erase the evidence.
Not this time.
He thought he could stalk, harass, impersonate, and vanish behind fake profiles and thought law enforcement wouldn’t act. And he thought I’d stay quiet.
He was wrong.
I’m writing a memoir called Good Luck Getting Rid of Me. And under Memoirs & Real Life, I’m exposing him piece by piece. This isn’t a story. It’s a takedown.
You want to know how to make them pay? I’ll show you.
Let me show you what happens when a victim refuses to shut up. Keep reading.
Together, we drag them into the light.
Together, we teach them accountability.
One by one. Until they’re all gone. Light vs the dark.