For five years, Danesh Noshirvan used TikTok to target individuals, publishing personal information and harassment campaigns.
He picked targets, doxxed them, and deployed automated systems that created the illusion of mass outrage.
Some targets lost employment, families were harassed, and one man died by suicide. Several attempted suicide. People were arrested based on his reporting.
TikTok permanently banned him on January 28. X had banned him earlier for doxxing Supreme Court justices.
The Method

Noshirvan sought out moments when people were caught on someone’s cell phone. He carefully removed everything that might explain them.
His operation was to find a video of someone’s worst moment—a parking lot argument, a frustrated outburst, an indiscreet word—and edit it to a narrative in which the subject was the sole aggressor.
The Synthetic Mob
He was a bully with the synthetic mob, a manufactured outrage. It was not a crowd. It appeared as a crowd.
Auto-dialers with spoofed caller IDs flooded employers with calls demanding terminations. Or calling the police, demanding arrests. AI-generated voices left threatening voicemails. Hundreds of sock puppet accounts. Fake one-star reviews destroyed businesses. Emails swamped HR departments. Machines made the calls. Machines delivered his threats. Machines pretended to be people. Online, hundreds of identical strangers appeared, making accusations, posting reviews, and sending the same letters. The phones rang. The emails poured in.
The reviews appeared. The targets believed thousands of people wanted them dead.
In one forensic analysis, 90% of the “outrage” was automated. It was one man with software. He called it “accountability culture.” He even sang a “Consequences Song” when announcing the destruction of his targets—a fiendish howl of self-righteous triumph. An anthem to consequences always meant for someone else.
The Victims
The number of individuals affected by Noshirvan’s campaigns is in the hundreds, maybe a thousand people who experienced harm.
Jennifer Couture received 728 abusive messages after a parking lot incident where no one was injured. Strangers showed up at her mother’s home. She was arrested on charges later reduced to misdemeanors—the arrest driven by what her lawyer called manufactured public pressure.
Someone reportedly paid Danesh $5,000 to target her. He created a fake account, “Erica Sabonis,” to befriend her—then mocked her replies on video.

Evan Berryhill, a woman alone in a dark parking lot, confronted by two men who warned her, “this will not end well for you,” was charged with a hate crime after she called her stalkers names.
Danesh’s campaign generated 500 fake one-star reviews in two hours on her business and a flood of rape threats. The charges were eventually dropped. Her business suffered lasting damage.

Dr. Poneh Rahimi, an Iranian immigrant and gastroenterologist, asked masked men filming her at a post office to speak English as they taunted her in Spanish. Danesh labeled her a racist, doxxed her, and ended his video with a fart noise.
“I have spent my entire life in education and in service to my fellow humankind,” she said. “When I’m dead, I don’t want that stupid Danesh video out there saying ‘she was a racist.'” When she Googles her own name, that lie appears before her medical credentials.
Now his video of her is gone.
Jen Welch attempted suicide on December 31, 2021, after weeks of his bot-driven attacks. Danesh called it a hoax.

Rebecca Martin went under a Danesh attack, where he accused her, without evidence, of lying about her military rape. His bots repeatedly encouraged her to take her life. She tried to hang herself.

The Body Count

Aaron De La Torre, a Texas high school football coach, took his life ten days after Danesh’s campaign began. Police had investigated the incident that Danesh publicized in a distorted fashion.
Police found no probable cause for arrest. The school declined to fire him. Danesh responded by intensifying the attacks. When De La Torre died, Danesh blamed the school for not firing him faster, and the police for not arresting him sooner—as if destroying the man’s career and freedom quickly would have spared his life.
A Denton County grand jury is reportedly investigating whether Danesh bears legal responsibility for De La Torre’s death.

Those Who Fought Back

Some refused to comply.
Dr. Ralph Garramone and Jennifer Couture sued in federal court. A judge sanctioned Danesh $62,320 for misconduct, finding he acted in “subjective bad faith” and made communications “intentionally designed to incite harassment and intimidation.”
Rebecca Martin, a Navy veteran and military rape survivor, fought back by documenting his tactics and alerting authorities. Hours after her story was published in the Frank Report, she sent Judge Steele’s sanctions ruling to TikTok’s US administration. The next morning, Danesh woke up permanently banned.
Jeremy Wilson, another victim suing Danesh, claimed his username @ThatDaneshGuy the moment it became available.
Fraud
When the federal judge sanctioned Danesh $62,320, he launched a GoFundMe, raising over $45,000 by portraying himself as a marginalized victim. He did not tell donors that, as his lawyer later disclosed, he receives income from a trust fund established by his late father. He doesn’t work. He lives off inherited wealth and his wife’s income as a schoolteacher while sitting at home making attack videos.
“Oppressed brown man” was the brand. Trust fund heir was the reality.
By January 26, defense attorneys revealed Danesh still hadn’t paid a dime. When pressed why, Noshirvan went silent.
The Meltdown
After TikTok banned his account, Noshirvan publicly rejected responsibility and intensified his rhetoric.
Danesh claimed TikTok deplatformed him because “the Jews and the IDF” objected to his Charlie Kirk video—in which he portrayed Kirk being killed, arguing that Kirk’s words were a metaphorical “gun” pointed at his audience, and therefore his literal death was justified.
Sources revealed that TikTok’s legal department received Judge Steele’s sanctions ruling and recognized the associated liability risk.
Section 230 does not provide blanket immunity to social media platforms that knowingly host or facilitate such conduct. Once a platform is on notice—especially through a federal court order—it cannot claim ignorance. Faced with that reality, TikTok may have made a legal decision.
Reckoning

Danesh built his empire on a reported two million TikTok followers—the overwhelming majority of which were bots. He built his engagement on automated harassment. He built his reputation on the destruction of humans. The crowd was artificial. The harm was not.
Everything about Danesh Noshirvan was fake. The followers? Bought. The outrage? Automated. The mob? Software. The race? A con. The poverty? A lie. The accountability? A shakedown.
Everything was fake except the suffering.
The $62,320 federal court sanction remains unpaid. His case faces dismissal.
Danesh Noshirvan spent years singing his “Consequences” song to people whose lives he destroyed.
A scourge has been lifted. The consequences have arrived. The song is playing for him now.
Frank Parlato is an investigative journalist, media strategist, publisher, and legal consultant.

Fraud



Please leave a comment: Your opinion is important to us!
Frank his account was restored. I contacted him after I arranged with my good friend Larry Ellison to ban his account. Well he started crying and begged me to have it restored. I offered to do it for 10% of whatever he gets from his lawsuit floored at $50,000. He agreed.
He expects to get $10s of millions but honestly I think he will get $250,000 tops.
Trial starts in March and I will be doing a live blog from inside the courtroom and streaming at the end of each day.
make sure if you get video of him
I will admit, some of the people Danesh Noshirvan posts on his accounts are real jerks, however, some of them may appear to be jerks on video, but often times these videos are taken out of context, and we don’t know what led up to that moment. Danesh was notoriously one sided when presenting his rage baiting videos. More focused on views rather than trying to take into consideration that the individuals in the videos may be unfairly portrayed.
But I think his ban from Tik Tok is the absolute least of his worries. In fact, him getting banned is very good news for all those interested in pursuing legal actions against him, as it sets a precedent. And I’m not talking about suing him, I’m talking about actual prison time. He could definitely face some serious time for harassment, cyber stalking, even be held responsible for the suicide of one of his victims. I honestly don’t know how this guy even sleeps at night. He was the poster child of the cancel culture movement, but ironically, his actions eventually led to the cancelling of himself. He’s definitely facing a grim future.
When I spoke with him and agreed to have his account restored his future is looking good. I mean I think he will get little from this lawsuit and after he pays the lawyer he will have very little but Hollywood wants to buy his story and is offering mid six figures. Hold up is he wants to star in the movie for a percentage. The studio wants an established actor but agrees that he has the character down cold.
Yeah that’s narcissistic personality disorder at its finest
I don’t understand why he would use the bots to harrass people though. He could still get plenty of clicks without doing that. ???
Has Danesh explained where the 1.5 million followers went?
🤣
Now we need YouTube,twitch,threads,Instagram and Facebook to do the right thing and have this guy remove from their platforms since he is a clear and present danger to everyone. He represents a extremist threat that needs to be crushed.
Frank, I have asked several times, is Danesh a pedophile? I keep hearing people say this.
I have no evidence either way.
I have looked closely at this issue and concluded that it is very unlikely. He has never joined NAMBLA, never associated with Jeffery Epstein and his OnlyFans site was strictly him and adult males with one scene shot on a sheep farm.
Bro needs to get off the internet. Never seen a sadder looking man in that picture of his upscrolled. Nobody upscrolling that Buffoon. Imagine all the money he wasted on buying following and engagement on TikTok 🤣 lord have mercy he’s lost some money. Mommy dearest should cut him loose before it costs her everything and admit that her husband was right about the entitled lay about.
Funny how in the Middle East dictators tend to keep the terrorists at bay but when they die that’s when they rise up. Similar story to Danesh and his rise. Father passes.. he becomes an asshole on the internet to strangers. Weird world we live in.
Can’t stop laughing at how sad Danesh looks promoting his upscroll account 🤣💀
Lisa Waddell was the victim of a schizophrenic woman named Jackie McDowell aka Jaxiflash on TikTok. Jaxiflash has a long history of stalking and harassing people. She’s an elderly woman in a group home in Scotland due to her mental illness. She was convincing vulnerable people like Lisa that they were being stalked by people like Rebecca. It wasn’t true. Jaxi was doing it all herself. When Lisa killed herself Jaxi had a meltdown and left the app, she thought she might get arrested by the police. It never happened. Jaxi is a staunch supporter of Danesh and she will harass the victims in his videos and anybody exposing him as a con artist. She is one of only a handful of these type of nut jobs that have latched themselves to Danesh. Sick individuals who get off on inflicting pain on others.
In this Insta video Danesh claims he was banned bc he criticized Trump + ICE https://www.instagram.com/p/DUD1iPikfpm/