Sworn Deposition Testimony Confirms TikTok Killer Weaponizes Followers — and Denies It All the Way Down

By Richard Luthmann
Danesh Noshirvan wants you to believe he’s a man under siege, defending his children and reputation. But in his world, he alone decides guilt.
There is no presumption of innocence, no due process. There is only his TikTok narrative—and the wrath of his followers.
He uses the system when it suits him. When it doesn’t, he substitutes it with spectacle.

In a sworn deposition connected to a companion Florida federal court case where he demands $26.5 million for “emotional distress,” he said:
“I have no shame about putting pressure on police… That was the purpose of this. To save my family’s safety.”
But what happens when Danesh gets it wrong? What happens when someone is falsely accused? When lives are ruined? When other families have their safety destroyed?
He doesn’t answer that.
Make This Go Viral: The King of Cancel
Danesh Noshirvan, better known as @thatdaneshguy on TikTok, swears he’s not running a digital inquisition. But under oath in a July 2024 deposition in Couture v. Noshirvan, he let the truth slip.
“I think she’ll get arrested only because I’m going to make this go viral… Instead of calling the police on a weekly basis to pressure them, my followers will,” Noshirvan said in a post marked as Exhibit P-5 in the federal court record.
Asked directly what he meant, he insisted:
“This is not one of my regular videos… This is now desperation because my family is in danger because of your clients.”
But his words tell a different story. He tagged law enforcement in videos, declared that “pressure” needed to be applied, and accused the local police of ignorance—”They didn’t know what Twitter was,” he mocked.
Danesh is dishonest in his deposition statements and “accountability content.” While others are held to right and wrong, true and false, Danesh is exempt—and he tells you this.
This isn’t accountability. It’s escalation.
And Danesh knows exactly what he’s doing.
Judge, Jury… and TikTok Executioner
When asked under oath whether his followers act on what he posts, Noshirvan claimed:
“There is no call to action whatsoever… This is putting pressure on police not following through with their jobs, which is something I’m comfortable admitting to.”
He even invoked Dr. Phil:
“When I was on the show… he recommended that sometimes in cases where police don’t follow through… you should pressure police.”
Danesh isn’t just nudging his audience. He’s mobilizing them. He tells them where to aim. Then he retreats behind denials of intent.
This tactic isn’t new. He targets individuals, brands them as abusers or racists, and then lets the mob loose.
And when real-world consequences follow—doxxing, swatting, job losses—he denies responsibility.
“What will your followers do?” he was asked.
“Clearly nothing… Absolutely nothing it seems like,” he replied.
That dodge only works if you ignore his own words, strategy, and the predictable results of his viral condemnations.
FBI, CPS, and the Fog of Fear
Noshirvan paints himself as a victim, overwhelmed by stalkers, false CPS reports, and threats. He claimed his children were harassed and said he feared for their safety.
But he and his wife Hannah don’t even like kids. Danesh is not a minor-attracted person.
Nonetheless, Danesh must shape his narrative. He must rake in his clicks and his dollars.
In one TikTok caption, he urged:
“Make this go viral so they can’t keep ignoring it”.
Asked about FBI complaints, he became evasive.
Q: “Since January 2022, how many complaints, reports have you filed with the FBI?”
A: “I don’t know… Any reports that I make to emergency services are valid concerns”.
He admitted filing online and over the phone. But, he could not say what field office he called. He did not recall how many times. But he just knew it was “valid.” He just knew.
In another moment, he testified:
“I stopped calling. I don’t believe they helped me in any way.”
Despite filing complaints and going public with accusations, he distances himself from responsibility for consequences.
That’s the Danesh Doctrine: Hurl accusations, escalate pressure, then walk away.
He’s even trying to walk away from his own earlier statements about “supporting” his children.
More “WOKE ornaments” than little ones, Danesh promised his son he would be his biggest supporter if he wanted to dissolve his penis as part of a gender transition.
But that video, like many others, has been “sanitized” from social media.
Make This Go Viral: Danesh’s Broken System
Danesh’s entire model depends on the power of the viral video, yet he claims it’s harmless.
When asked if his followers would act:
“Not that I know of. Nothing happened to Jennifer, even though I would have loved for her to be arrested.”
He blames the system for not arresting his targets quickly enough and then sets himself above the system.
Some, like X (formerly Twitter), are wise to the danger he poses.
He doesn’t seek justice through due process; he pursues it through public shaming. He doesn’t want evidence weighed—he wants a mob to respond in real time.
His answer to lawful systems not moving fast enough? Bypass them. Pressure police. Tag departments. Tip off NBC. Blast names, faces, and accusations across the internet.
And when called out?
“No. You can’t change the context, sir,” he told the lawyer questioning him.
“There is no call to action… They can’t ignore it once it’s publicized.”
The truth is simpler. Danesh doesn’t trust the law, and he doesn’t want its slow, deliberate process. He wants obedience—to his story, his edit, his justice.
However, his ‘system’ is hollow. It is devoid of truth. He has no answers.
He has no answers for Lori De La Torre, widow of Texas high school football coach Aaron De La Torre.

Her home and her heart are empty. Aaron is dead, driven to suicide after becoming one of Danesh Noshirvan’s online targets.
De La Torre’s name and image were broadcast to Danesh’s massive following, triggering relentless harassment, doxxing, and reputational destruction.
If there’s still such a thing as Texas Justice, Denton County District Attorney Paul Johnson must act. Danesh didn’t just destroy a man—he took out one of the Lone Star State’s own.

Under Texas law, anyone who “solicits, encourages, or directs” conduct leading to a death can face criminal responsibility. The evidence is there. Now it’s up to Johnson to prove that no one, not even a TikTok kingpin, is above the law.
He built a kingdom on viral judgment and then told the court he was not responsible for what happened after he passed sentence.
Danesh isn’t God. But the internet—along with some courts, cops, and platforms—treats him like one.
That should terrify all of us.
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