reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: I know a little about human trafficking. The human trafficking portfolio fell underneath me in the counterterrorism shop where I was ahead. I worked with Tim Ballard at the White House to stamp out human and child sex trafficking. He was doing incredible work back then. Speaker 1: I'm the bad guy in the story. Last week, I got a call from some of the accusers, and what they're accusing him of is really not just—they're just really bad stuff. Really, really bad things. At first, because I've been friends with Tim for so long, I thought, that's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. Blew by them. Ridiculous. Until they persisted, and I started hearing more. I just heard somebody had filed in the HR complaints or something. Like, that's not possible. Well, the more the complaints come out, the worse it gets. These women called last week, and they wanted to do a show with me. That's not something I've even offered Tim. And I don't want to be the one making the calls on this. I'm not a journalist, and I'm also involved. Tim has been a friend of mine. OUR is a great organization, but I also stand up for victims. And I don't feel remaining silent on this or neutral if I know is acceptable. I don't know what they've done, but I've passed the women's number onto Leon Wolf, our news director, and said, put a journalist on this if you want. And I told him at the time, take it where it leads. I just want the truth. I just want the truth. So he put our best investigative reporter on it, and I heard last night that they are close to finishing the story. I was hoping that it was gonna be released today because this is yeah. If if if if it's true, I can't believe how many of us were duped. Speaker 2: Got pearlized. But it's still some guy who got fried and cried by the side. We gonna steal, slide, slide, slide until they all die. These niggas ain't seeing me because these niggas be small fry. I got big dude status, k l

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A bar owner in LA is accused of trafficking young women for personal assistant jobs, leading to assault and rape. Victims claim the establishment is a front for serving the elite, with spiked drinks and GHB-laced glasses. Despite lawsuits, the billionaire remains untouched while victims suffer. The FBI is aware, but no investigations are ongoing. The truth may come to light this year.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The former CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch, Mike Jeffries, was arrested in connection to a sex trafficking case. Rapper and music executive Sean Combs may be linked to a sex trafficking investigation. Jeffrey Epstein may have been the most prolific pedophile this country has ever known. The speaker claims to have had the story and an interview with Virginia Roberts for three years, but it was not aired.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The fight with Lewis Bacon weakened Nygard's power and encouraged others to speak out about their experiences. Victims were brought forward to share their stories, revealing that Nygard surrounded himself with young women who were kept under his control through threats, intimidation, and money. Many of these women came from difficult backgrounds and were brought into his circle at a young age. Despite their fear, they bravely spoke to the FBI, police, and journalists, even though they knew that influential figures, including politicians and police officers, supported Nygard. Despite the risks, they continued to come forward, creating a snowball effect of momentum against Nygard.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard's sexual assault trial began in a Toronto courtroom. Crown Lawyers accused Nygard of using his status to lure young women to a private bedroom at his headquarters. The bedroom had a giant bed, jacuzzi, and keypad-operated locks controlled by Nygard. The women, aged 16 to 28, were offered jobs or Rolling Stones tickets but ended up in the private bedroom. One 16-year-old victim was allegedly assaulted after being disoriented by a drink. Nygard, now 82, pleaded not guilty to five counts of sexual assault and one count of unlawful confinement. Witnesses testified about the bedroom's architectural details, and the Crown expects the victims to testify as well.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The fight with Lewis Bacon weakened Nygard's power and encouraged others to speak out about their experiences. Victims were brought forward to share their stories, revealing that Nygard surrounded himself with young women who were kept under his control through threats, intimidation, and money. Many of these women came from difficult backgrounds and were brought into his circle at a young age. Despite their fear, they bravely spoke to the FBI, police, and journalists, even though they knew that influential figures, including politicians and police officers, supported Nygard. Despite the risks, they continued to come forward, creating a momentum that grew stronger against all odds.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Teenage girls are being groomed for underage sex by Asian men, while the victims are white. Investigative reporter Andrew Norfolk initially hesitated to cover the story due to concerns about its potential use by the far right. However, as more cases emerged across the North and Midlands, he noticed a recurring pattern: Pakistani men were predominantly involved. In 2010, Norfolk alerted his newspaper and began investigating further. The first story on this hidden crime pattern was published in January 2011. Norfolk faced accusations of racism, which he found strange and deeply unpleasant, as it was the first time he had been accused of such.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker describes their initial impression of Peter Nygard as arrogant and serious. Nygard invites the speaker to his warehouse to pick out outfits for a photoshoot in the Bahamas. While at the airport, Nygard asks to hold onto the speaker's ID. Upon arriving at Nygard's property, the speaker is introduced to a woman who reveals that having sex with Nygard is expected. The speaker refuses, but the woman insists. Reluctantly, the speaker witnesses Nygard and the woman engaging in intercourse. The next night, the speaker is forced to have sex with Nygard against their will. Feeling trapped and unable to escape, the speaker complies. This pattern continues for another night.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The recent lawsuit alleges that Nygard paid law enforcement and government officials in the Bahamas for protection. It is known that he funneled millions of dollars into the ruling party's campaigns. A video shows Nygard celebrating the party's election win and shaking hands with cabinet members. The level of corruption in the Bahamas is significant, allowing individuals like Nygard to get away with illegal activities by giving money to the right people. Nygard had a plan and invited politicians from both parties to achieve his goals. He even requested that money be hidden in fish and delivered to a parliamentarian's house. It is difficult to report these activities as police officers and politicians are involved.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard has been found guilty of 4 counts of sexual assault, but acquitted of a 5th count and charged with forcible confinement. Five complainants testified that they were invited to Nygard's Toronto headquarters and sexually assaulted in a top floor bedroom suite. Nygard denied all allegations. One witness mentioned seeing him inappropriately touch a child in 2019 and facing backlash within the company for speaking up. Seeking justice has been a challenging journey for the witness, who felt emotional upon seeing Nygard after his guilty verdict. The witness emphasizes that this is a significant day for many survivors.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The two speakers discuss the media coverage surrounding a high-profile case. The second speaker says the media coverage has been absolutely unfair and biased. They’ve done many interviews and are reaching a point where they won’t do them anymore, trusting the media less. They note a preference for live interviews because edited pieces distort their message. A concrete example is CBC’s Karen Pauls: she interviewed Russ Harald, Sudhoo, and several families who forgave. The second speaker claims Harald told them Pauls didn’t include half of what he said, and that she did the same to Andrea and Shauna Nordstrom (Logan Hunter’s mother). They allege that Nordstroms were given a bit part in a story that portrayed the subject as loving and forgiving, downplaying negative aspects, making it seem like the subject was sympathetic. The second speaker claims Karen Pauls twisted the narrative, and contends that much of the media has done this. Consequently, they’ve declined numerous interviews and no longer trust mainstream media regarding this story. The second speaker adds that there are people with no vested interest who want to express approval or forgiveness to feel good about themselves and to allow the subject to stay in the country. They contrast this with others who are deported for other offenses, such as those who steal $5,000 cars and are permanent residents who get deported. They have listened in on immigration and refugee board hearings to learn more about the process. They claim that because the case is so prominent, some people want to excuse the subject, even if it means allowing criminals or poor drivers to stay, thereby harming the system. The first speaker asks what precedent would be set if the subject were allowed to stay in Canada. The second speaker replies that it would imply that 16 lives mean nothing and questions how many people one would have to kill to be deported, underscoring the idea that the mere possibility of killing someone is central to the debate. They insist that raising the question of whether the person killed anyone is itself “crazy.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The recent lawsuit alleges that Nygard paid law enforcement and government officials in the Bahamas for protection. It is known that he funneled millions of dollars into the ruling party's campaigns. A video shows Nygard celebrating the party's election win and shaking hands with cabinet members. The level of corruption in the Bahamas is significant, allowing individuals like Nygard to get away with a lot by giving money to the right people. Nygard had a plan and invited politicians from both parties to achieve his goals. He even requested that money be hidden in fish and delivered to a parliamentarian's house. It is difficult to report these activities as police officers and politicians are involved.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Three women filed complaints with the Human Rights Commission about sexual harassment at Nygard. The newspaper published a package of stories on the issue, which generated a strong response. Yanda Hundreup, one of the women, shared her experience of being raped by Peter Nygard in a Hong Kong hotel room. The investigation revealed a pattern of misconduct and raised questions about the company's HR department and widespread knowledge of the issue. The publisher, Rudy Redekopf, considered stopping further stories due to pressure from advertisers, costing the newspaper $1 million. This decision was a disappointment for the newsroom, as it prevented them from exposing the truth and identifying those who supported Nygard.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2001, one of the most sought after models in the world goes on a talk show. Karen Mulder frantically starts name dropping everyone who had either assaulted her or sold her to be assaulted. This list would include royalty, politicians, cops, and her own family. But before she’d be done, she’d be taken off the stage and eventually put into a psych ward paid for by the very person she claimed started selling her in the first place, her agent and owner of Elite Paris, the man who signed her at just 15 years old, Gerald Marie. He would be prosecuted years later with an insurmountable amount of rape and sexual assault claims, only for the case to be closed in 2023 due to France’s statute of limitations, which could have been avoided if anyone in the French courts had taken her seriously at the time she reported them because, yes, she did report them. And if that wasn’t enough, I have something even more infuriating. One of the names she dropped during that talk show was Jean Luc Brunel. He was an Epstein associate who was found dead in his cell in 2022. He was jailed on suspicion of rape and trafficking of minors. Sorry. Hold on. After Karen’s 2001 interview, numerous publications would come out claiming that she was going through a psychotic episode. Her parents would publicly blame this outburst on drugs, and her sister Saskia would go on that same talk show just to discredit her sister, which may sound surprising. But remember, part of her desperate plea for someone to listen and do something included the abuse she endured in her childhood. So it’s safe to say Saskia was also a victim. It’s complicated, but it fueled the media and it fueled the tabloids to call her crazy, and she tried to take her own life in 2002. Thankfully, she survived and she’d returned to that same talk show to confront the host, heard this desperate plea, pulled her from air, and then deleted the tape. So the video of her speaking her truth would be scrapped altogether. The reason that we know this exists is because of his testimonies in the tabloids, hers, and audience members. Everyone called her crazy until the Epstein case started coming out. I read someone here on TikTok, a female influencer with a lot of followers, comment once on a video and say that human trafficking was like the new satanic pan. I remember it had a lot of likes, and I was so disturbed then, and I’m even more disturbed that comment lives in my head when I read the story because that interview could have saved twenty years of children. Twenty years. And to be put in a psych ward by the very man who first did it, who by the way was the ex husband of Linda Evangelista. Feel free to go down that rabbit hole. This isn’t satanic panic. This is real. And the idea of it being satanic panic, like this huge, silly conspiracy everyone’s talking about is actually so destructive. And I feel like the desensitization that we have towards the Epstein files is becoming more and more rampant because when something is so devastating and so traumatizing and we’re not getting a conclusion, the go-to is to turn it into humor, which I do get. I’m not villainizing anyone for that. But if we’re gonna do that, we still have to keep this level of anger. Karen is 55 years old now. She is still a person in this world. Her only mistake was not doing that interview on a live television show.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Disney employees are facing jail time after being caught in an undercover sex sting. Eleven Bay Area men, including Disney workers, were arrested and accused of possessing child pornography. A 73-year-old former Disney vice president was sentenced to 7 years, prompting questions about his actions during his time at Disney. The speaker claims this story is not covered by mainstream media. Brian Peck, who was convicted of raping a child on set, was later hired by Disney to work on "The Suite Life of Zack and Cody." In 2012, he was hired by Charlie Sheen to work on "Anger Management." The speaker claims it was common knowledge that producers would sleep with actresses or that certain people "like little boys."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I had a story for 3 years about an interview with Virginia Roberts. Initially, no one knew who Jeffrey Epstein was, so we couldn't air it. Then the palace got involved and threatened us because of her allegations against Prince Andrew. We were scared of losing the opportunity to interview Kate, so we dropped the story. Alan Dershowitz was also implicated. Virginia had evidence and was in hiding for 12 years, but we convinced her to come forward. Our story had everything, including connections to Clinton.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard was charged in the United States with sex trafficking, racketeering, and other crimes involving dozens of women and underage girls, in a case spanning three countries and nearly three decades. The 79-year-old was arrested by Canadian police and extradited to the US to face trial. Federal prosecutors say Nygard, who owns a namesake clothing company and is among Canada’s wealthiest people, recruited and maintained victims for sex in the US, Canada, and The Bahamas since 1995, and that some victims were drugged. He allegedly targeted vulnerable women from disadvantaged backgrounds, taking them to company-funded “pamper parties” with food and spa services and to swingers clubs, then intimidated them to have sex with him or other men. He used threats of arrest, reputational harm, and lawsuits to silence potential accusers, according to the indictment. The lawsuit alleges that when Nygard became aware of the investigation into his sex-trafficking activities, he resorted to violence, intimidation, bribery, and payoffs to silence victims and continue the scheme. It also claims Nygard kept a database of potential victims maintained by the Nygard Companies Corporation IT Department on a corporate server, mostly in the United States, containing information on over 2,500 underage girls and women by the mid-2000s. The case notes the death of Nygard’s head of IT, Dane Clifford, shortly after The New York Times began investigating the story, at age 44. The accusations surrounding Nygard and his “Pamper Party Island” have drawn comparisons to allegations against Jeffrey Epstein, prompting questions about similar networks. Separately, a class action suit filed in Manhattan includes 57 unnamed women accusing Nygard of sexual misconduct. In Toronto, a sentencing hearing began for Nygard. He was found guilty last fall of four counts of sexual assault. Victims testified about lasting harm, including panic attacks, ruined self-esteem, and thoughts of suicide; testifying in court was described as horrendous. The Crown asked the judge to sentence Nygard to fifteen years in jail, arguing that given his age (83), declining health, and ongoing proceedings in Manitoba, Quebec, and the US, there is little chance he will reoffend or be rehabilitated.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
What's new about misinformation is that narrative trumps the truth, and stories against the narrative get killed. Organizations like Media Matters for America tell reporters what to report, or they will smear them as haters and go after their advertisers. Before being fired, the speaker received instructions on framing stories, like the one about the Algerian boxer in the Olympics, advising to portray anyone against the boxer as part of the hateful right and providing specific language to use. NewsGuard ranks reporters and news outlets, influencing where advertisers spend money. Deviating from their approved narrative results in a lower grade, similar to a credit rating, and fewer advertisers. They rank and rate stories, providing direction on the "right" course.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Mary Morgan Ariel, who goes by Morgan Ariel on X, claims that Josh Hammer is now calling for Candace to be involuntarily committed to a mental institution. A clip is presented to illustrate this pattern, followed by the assertion that others are calling for people to be put in mental institutions. The text then references a statement: “In a in a just society, she'd be in a mental ward right now. She would have been in an immense award a while ago. I personally am a big proponent to bringing back the involuntary commitment laws of nineteen sixties. In my view, she should be involuntarily committed to a mental asylum.” This is linked to parallels drawn with how Epstein victims were treated. The narrative moves to 2001, focusing on Karen Mulder, one of the most sought-after models at the time, who on a talk show frantically names people who assaulted her or sold her to be assaulted, including royalty, politicians, cops, and her own family. Before finishing, she is taken off the stage and eventually put into a psych ward funded by Gerald Marie, the agent and owner of Elite Paris, who signed her at 15. Marie would later be prosecuted for rape and sexual assault claims, but the case was closed in 2023 due to France’s statute of limitations, which could have been avoided if her reports had been treated seriously. The account continues with Jean Luc Brunel, an Epstein associate who was jailed on suspicion of rape and trafficking of minors and was found dead in his cell in 2022. After Mulder’s 2001 interview, numerous publications claimed she was going through a psychotic episode. Her parents publicly blamed drugs, and her sister Saskia appeared on the same talk show to discredit her, suggesting Saskia was also a victim. The media and tabloids labeled Mulder crazy, and she attempted suicide in 2002. She later returned to confront the host, who pulled her from air and deleted the tape, erasing the video of her truth. This information is inferred from tabloid testimonies, Mulder’s accounts, and audience members. The narrative notes that a TikTok commenter, a female influencer with many followers, described human trafficking as “the new satanic pan,” a statement the speaker found disturbing. The speaker emphasizes that the story behind Epstein is not satanic panic, but real, and expresses concern that the desensitization to Epstein files is growing as a conclusion is not reached. The speaker asserts that victims have become perpetrators, highlighting the severity of the issue. Karen Mulder is described as 55 years old now and still a person in this world, with the sole mistake being not doing that 2001 interview on live television.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discovered disturbing information about a website and immediately reported it to the Exploited Children tip line and various news stations. However, the news stations were not allowed to report on the illegally obtained material. The speaker tried to raise awareness about the website without revealing any illegal content, but their efforts were disregarded. Law enforcement also did not take action. The owner of the website, a Democratic politician named Nathan Larson, was eventually arrested for kidnapping a 12-year-old girl. The speaker believes that there are more individuals involved in such activities and intends to expose them. Nathan Larson later died in prison, allegedly due to starvation.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker's first impression of Peter Nygard was that he was arrogant and serious. Nygard invited her to his warehouse to pick outfits for a photoshoot in the Bahamas. While at the airport, he asked to hold onto her ID, which she didn't think much of. Arriving at Nygard's property, she was shown around by a woman who revealed that having sex with Nygard was expected. The speaker refused, but the woman offered to take her place for the first night. Reluctantly, the speaker listened to Nygard and the woman engaging in intercourse. The next night, she was forced to have sex with Nygard against her will. Feeling trapped and unable to leave, she complied.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A reporter recounts being sexually assaulted by a mob after reporting for over an hour without incident. The attack began after a camera battery change, when an Egyptian crew member overheard the crowd saying, "let's take her pants off" in Arabic. The reporter says she was grabbed and groped by multiple people. Screaming only intensified the assault. Someone in the crowd yelled that she was an Israeli, a Jew, which further enraged the mob. Her shirt, sweater, bra, pants, and underwear were torn off. She saw people taking pictures with cell phones. She says she was being raped with hands from the front and back, and beaten with flagpoles and sticks. She held onto a colleague, believing he was her only hope of survival.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A father posted a photo of his child in the bathtub, leading to disturbing comments about the child's safety. The speaker, who had access to the server, consulted an attorney who warned about the risk of reporting the incident due to breaking federal law. However, the speaker decided to take their chances and reached out to news stations and attorneys. Despite the interest in the story, no one posted it when it reached the legal stage. Later, the speaker learned about the arrest of Nathaniel Larson, who had kidnapped and raped a 12-year-old girl. The speaker had evidence of Larson's activities and those of 3,000 others, but nothing was done about it.

Tucker Carlson

The Great Gold Scam
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In 2025 gold prices surged, a trend the episode ties to a weaker dollar and persistent inflation fears that conservative media personalities have long highlighted. The narrative centers on how prominent hosts and figures promoted gold investments through gold-backed IRAs, often amid warnings of stock volatility and an impending recession. An investigation reveals a pattern: paid endorsements directed audiences toward gold companies whose practices harmed investors. The whistleblower Dale Whitaker, a former Augusta Precious Metals employee, describes misleading pricing—hidden spreads, inflated markups, and an ability for companies to manipulate coin prices because they control inventory. The piece details cases where sales tactics leveraged trust built over years of media exposure and promised fiduciary care that failed in practice, with investors losing substantial sums. The story traces a cycle of lawsuits and company spin-offs, showing how new firms arise soon after others are sued, each repeating similar charges and targeting vulnerable demographics, particularly seniors and conservative listeners.

Shawn Ryan Show

Elizabeth Phillips - Camp Kanakuk: Exposing One of the World’s Largest Summer Camps | SRS #272
Guests: Elizabeth Phillips
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Elizabeth Phillips recounts a decades-long fight to uncover and topple a sprawling Camp Kanakuk network accused of enabling extensive child sexual abuse and trafficking. She describes how her family’s personal tragedy—her brother Trey’s abuse, NDA-driven settlements, and his subsequent suicide—spurred a broader campaign to hold the ministry and related entities accountable through policy reform, litigation, and public exposure. The interview traces the timeline from Pete Newman’s arrest and Kanakuk’s initial response to the subsequent discovery of a wider pattern of abuse, a crisis-management apparatus, and a philanthropic structure that some survivors say shielded predators and minimized offenses in the name of safeguarding souls. Phillips details the investigative work that spanned years, including whistleblower tips, court records, and an IRS-led probe into Kanakuk’s nonprofit status and overseas funding, which she argues reveals misaligned incentives and large-scale money flows that may have enabled harmful practices. She explains how NDAs, once deemed routine in settlements, silenced many victims and impeded accountability, prompting her to champion Trey's Law in Texas and Missouri to void NDAs in certain abuse cases and to reform civil timelines. The conversation then shifts to legislative victories and ongoing advocacy: Texas’s Trey's Law with retroactivity considerations, Missouri’s NDA provisions via a special court order, and plans to broaden protections in other states. Phillips also critiques the broader camp industry as underregulated, with regulatory gaps affecting licensing, background checks, and safety protocols, which she says leaves children at risk. Throughout, the host and guest emphasize the emotional toll on survivors, the importance of independent investigations, the role of media in catalyzing reform, and the pursuit of systemic prevention—ranging from improved child protections to insurance-based requirements for safeguarding best practices—to ensure that the welfare of children takes precedence over organizational prestige or profit. The episode closes with a sense of determined forward momentum, solidarity among survivors, and a call for continued public accountability and legislative action to protect kids in youth-serving settings.
View Full Interactive Feed