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Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: TikTok Doxxer Turns Florida Lawsuit into Weaponized Content Farm

Federal Case Implodes as SCOTUS Doxxer Targets Google, Gets Trolled by Anonymous Internet Army

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
TikTok Doxxer and Cancel Culture Killer Danesh Noshirvan
Joey Camp
Joey Camp

Richard Luthmann

By Richard Luthmann

TikTok “activist” Danesh Noshirvan built his online persona by doxxing conservatives.

After the Dobbs decision, he published the home addresses of sitting U.S. Supreme Court justices, putting them and their families in danger.

Now, he’s turned a federal lawsuit in Florida into a circus—and Fort Myers Magistrate Judge Kyle Dudek’s courtroom is the stage.

Journalists Richard Luthmann and Michael Volpe discussed the case on a recent episode of The Unknown Podcast.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: From SCOTUS Doxxing to Federal Disaster

The case began as a harassment suit in the Middle District of Florida against Jennifer Couture and her plastic surgeon husband, Dr. Ralph Garramone.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Dr. Garramone and Jennifer Couture with Florida U.S. Senator Rick Scott

But instead of presenting facts and witnesses, Noshirvan and his attorney, Nick Chiappetta, have transformed the docket into a bizarre spectacle fueled by conspiracy theories, nonsense filings, and unprovable claims.

The latest farce? Noshirvan served Google with a subpoena demanding account data linked to internet personality Joey Camp, a man Noshirvan previously labeled a “Nazi” and “racist.”

Recent court filings have Noshirvan’s “racism” claims falling flat.

The subpoena, which named eight different email addresses—many outside Google’s domain—was a fishing expedition from the start.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Danesh Noshirvan’s Google subpoena

It seeks years-old records, even though Google only stores account data for 270 days.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: Subpoena Backfires, Internet Explodes

The Google subpoena triggered a flurry of legal responses—from anonymous John Does who say they aren’t Camp and who call Noshirvan’s subpoena a gross abuse of the judicial process. At least five John Doe motions have been filed to quash the subpoena.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Google’s Notification of the Subpoena

One mocked the proceedings as a “mockumentary,” complete with sarcastic demands that Attorney Chiappetta be ordered to take a pop quiz on the rules of evidence.

Another came with vacation photos of Camp and his Black girlfriend to dispute the Nazi label.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control. Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control. Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control. Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control. Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.

Noshirvan says that Joey Camp is “John Doe 2.” But that allegation, like the “racist” claim, is falling apart, begging the question of whether anything Noshirvan says can be believed.

Court filings by the Does demand sanctions under Rule 11, saying there’s no evidence to connect Camp to any of the anonymous motions.

Camp, who is not a party to the case, has formally denied involvement. Meanwhile, Noshirvan continues to insist he’s being harassed by “Nazis” without offering credible proof.

Even worse, much of what Noshirvan and Attorney Chiappetta seek is already known to be obsolete. Some accounts listed in the subpoena, like those from @ucmo.edu and @facebook.com, were deactivated over a decade ago.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Attorney Nick Chiappetta

Others are hosted by companies Google doesn’t even control.

It’s legal clown work at its worst.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: Doxxing Gone Wild

This is not the first time Noshirvan has weaponized the legal system. In Texas, high school football coach Aaron De La Torre was falsely accused and doxxed by Noshirvan after a viral misunderstanding.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Aaron De La Torre with wife Lori

The backlash led to online threats and a full-blown investigation. De La Torre was cleared—but Noshirvan never retracted anything.

Days later, De La Torre took his own life. Death resulted from the AI-fueled harassment. Danesh Noshirvan has earned the moniker “Cancel Culture Killer.”

Now, he’s bringing the same tactics to federal court. In a slew of videos posted online, Noshirvan claims Couture and Garramone are criminals and bad parents. He accused them of threatening his children, then told his followers to mass-report them to law enforcement in Florida and Pennsylvania.

Danesh published a link to a Google Drive folder of “evidence” and encouraged viewers to flood officials with complaints.

He even threatened to doxx the presiding Magistrate Judge, Kyle Dudek, if he didn’t get his way.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: SCOTUS doxxer Danesh Noshirvan turns Florida lawsuit into content circus as Fort Myers federal court loses control.
Court filings claim that Danesh Noshirvan threatened to doxx a federal magistrate judge.

It’s the same playbook: smear, doxx, incite outrage—and monetize the chaos through content.

Attorney Chiappetta, far from reining in his client, has become part of the problem. His filings have triggered a courtroom revolt.

One anonymous movant compared his legal work to “a Buzzfeed article,” and another said his pleadings would “be graded in crayon” if submitted in law school.

Despite mounting ridicule, Attorney Chiappetta continues to press forward with a case that has no remaining credibility, as the lawyer becomes a punchline in the legal community.

Cancel Culture Courtroom: A Judge in the Hot Seat and Federal Courts in Crisis

The bigger issue now is the court itself. Magistrate Judge Kyle Dudek has allowed this clown show to flourish. Despite over a dozen bizarre and often abusive motions, many filled with insults and conspiracy-laced accusations, the case has not been dismissed.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Kyle C. Dudek
U.S. Magistrate Judge Kyle C. Dudek

The docket is a legal landfill. Orders are slow, and hearings are rare. The case has no center, direction, or judicial control.

Meanwhile, Noshirvan and his followers have begun targeting the judge himself. One filing hinted at a threat to expose Judge Dudek, and anonymous movants claim Noshirvan’s tactics amount to intimidation.

The court has done little to stop it.

Each day this case remains open, the federal judiciary looks more and more like a clumsy accomplice to chaos. The rules of evidence are ignored. Non-parties are dragged in without cause. Subpoenas are issued without legal merit.

The case is being used not to pursue justice but to build clout and drive traffic to TikTok and other social media accounts.

The court should have shut this down months ago. Instead, it let a known internet doxxer turn federal litigation into a personal content farm.

Now, it’s too late for quiet corrections. The spectacle is public. The damage is done.

And the Middle District of Florida is starting to look just as foolish as the man behind the lawsuit.

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