Cancel Culture

Believe the Accuser: The Legal Weapon That Hit Trump in the Carroll Case and OneTaste in Brooklyn
The Carroll verdict against Trump and the OneTaste convictions rest on the same legal theory: believe the accusation first.

The Carroll verdict against Trump and the OneTaste convictions rest on the same legal theory: believe the accusation first.

It began the way most things do—small and stupid. A quarrel in a parking lot. Two people. Two tempers. One phone. It should have ended there, with engines starting and doors slamming. But it didn’t. The camera stayed on. And in the age we live in, that means the story was just beginning.

This story is the first in a series on cyberstalking. I am publishing unedited exchanges with online harassers.

The Denton County, Texas District Attorney’s office is expected to convene a grand jury this month to investigate the suicide of a High School football coach last October.

A client has hired me to investigate and report on “cancel culture” and related issues. The goal is to clarify this subject for a potential documentary series.

The Measure of Success