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Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to cancel critics using fake arrests and SLAPP lawsuits.

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: THE FAKE ARRESTS, LAWSUITS, AND LIES OF JEREMY HALES & DANESH NOSHIRVAN

YouTube Conman and TikTok Narcissist Team Up to Destroy Critics—Then Implode Spectacularly

Richard Luthmann

By Richard Luthmann with Michael Volpe

The Unknown Podcast – Episode 41

FBI THREATS AND JAIL TALK: HALES BLOWS SMOKE, NOTHING HAPPENS

Jeremy Hales launched his latest smear campaign with a threat from a bad TV drama: FBI agents and jail cells.

“He emailed me saying my ex needed a good lawyer—one I can’t afford,” said journalist Michael Volpe on The Unknown Podcast. “He linked to doctored texts to make it look like I threatened her.”

Here’s how it went down according to Volpe:

Earlier today, Jeremy Hales threatened to team up with my ex-girlfriend to try and wrestle custody of our son.
The whole thing started innocuously when I sent him and others an email with a link to Richard Luthmann’s most recent article.
Hales has never responded to prior emails- including links to articles- but he responded to this one.
“Looks like she {my ex-girlfriend} could use an aggressive lawyer and someone who can afford that lawyer,” Hales said in the email, which had links to doctored text messages used by her in a failed protective order attempt earlier this year in Virginia.
From a police report about the fake messages Hales was implying he’d promote to his audience.
“You should go for it. You and my ex are a match made in hell.” I responded.
Hales continued with the veiled threats.

Oh no

You misunderstood

We’re going after you in court

You owe a tremendous amount of money

And there will be a significant amount more

See you in court

Hales wasn’t done. He continued with the empty threats.

Again, with your limited intelligence, you don’t understand

It’s not being gone for

The process has already began (sic)

“I don’t care. Go for it.” I responded.
Hales scurrilous threats come as I have been examining his divorce. Flipping the script by coopting my ex-girlfriend would be on brand, but it won’t deter my investigation.

Michael Volpe Investigates is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Already, I have learned that Hales was so abusive to his family that two of his kids developed Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
In another court document, he was accused of stealing inheritance money from his children to build a new house for him and his girlfriend.
More recently, another court filing accused Hales of telling his children their mother would go to jail while calling her a “useless bitch.”
I haven’t gotten through the entire divorce yet, however, I know it ends with Hales being barred from seeing any of his children, unless they initiate it.
Hales doesn’t seem to like his divorce scrutinized even though he has no problem turning his neighbors- John Cook and Michelle Preston’s- private life upside down: calling child protective services three times, driving by their house repeatedly, and filming into their backyard and home.
Screenshot from a YouTube video Hales shot in Preston and Cook’s backyard
Since Hales doesn’t like me telling the truth about him, he’s ready to tell lies about me.

Volpe reported the texts to the police. They dismissed the claim after confirming the timestamps and content didn’t match.

“No charges. No FBI. Nothing happened,” Volpe said. “It’s day five. I still have custody of my son.”

Then came Hales’s next move—an even dumber bluff. He emailed Volpe again: “Joey Camp has been detained. You’re next.”

Attached was a photo of Camp supposedly being arrested by INTERPOL agents.

“It’s a hoax,” said co-host Richard Luthmann. “INTERPOL doesn’t make arrests. That’s not how any of this works.”

Days later, Camp released a video calling the entire thing “bullshit.”

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: INTERPOL HOAX, FAKE NEWS

The photo Hales shared showed two guys in “Interpol” hats and vests labeled “Policia Interpol.” It looked official—until you actually understood how INTERPOL works.

Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to cancel critics using fake arrests and SLAPP lawsuits.
Joey Camp INTERPOL Hoax

“It’s a Photoshop scam,” said Luthmann. “Almost certainly cooked up by Danesh.”

TikTok operative Danesh Noshirvan amplified the hoax. He has a personal vendetta against Camp, who helped expose Antifa’s role in the 2020 riots.

Antifa-adjacent networks fund Danesh Noshirvan,” Luthmann said. “The money flows from Scott Dworkin, George Soros, and ultimately, the Chinese Communist Party.”

Danesh and Hales aren’t just online clowns. They’re digital arsonists, torching reputations with fake evidence, phony narratives, and manufactured outrage.

“They’re fake news factories,” Volpe said. “They lie to cancel people they don’t like.”

INTERPOL, meanwhile, confirmed what any real journalist already knew: they don’t arrest people. They don’t have a police force. Red Notices are just alerts—not warrants. Arrests must be made by local cops under national laws.

Joey Camp, alive and free, dropped a video debunking it all. The only thing Hales and Danesh managed to detain was their credibility.

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: LAWSUITS FROM HELL WEAPONIZED IN COURT

Hales and Danesh aren’t just keyboard bullies. They’ve taken their cancel culture crusade into federal courtrooms—filing lawsuits so frivolous, so procedurally defective, and so transparently retaliatory, they’re being laughed out of legal circles.

Hales filed one case against his neighbors in Otter Creek, Florida, claiming emotional distress after someone allegedly put up a sign labeling him a child predator.

The only witness to the sign? One of Hales’s YouTube fans. No photos. No corroborating testimony. Just Hales’s word—and a camera crew.

Even the handwriting expert says the writing looks suspiciously like Jeremy’s.

That lawsuit in Gainesville federal Court is going nowhere. But Hales wasn’t done.

Now in 2025, he’s filed another lawsuit in Gainesville federal court in Florida, targeting 11 people, including The Unknown Podcast host Richard Luthmann. The complaint accuses him of defamation, false advertising, tortious interference, and even violations of the Lanham Act and Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act.

Luthmann and Volpe agree that the filings are sloppy and legally incoherent.

“They can’t even allege a single false, verifiable statement,” said Luthmann, who hasn’t been served yet. “Under Iqbal and Twombly, this doesn’t even pass the pleading stage. But I want discovery so that I might answer.”

One defendant, Marlo Hughes—representing herself—filed a devastating motion to dismiss, arguing the complaint “relies on vague assumptions, imagined conspiracies, and subjective characterizations of YouTube videos.”

“There are no allegations of commercial speech, no consumer deception, and no business relationships identified,” she wrote. “This isn’t just weak—it’s legally impossible.”

Volpe called it what it is: “A textbook SLAPP suit—Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation. They’re trying to bury the defendants in legal fees because they don’t like what we say.”

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: ANTIFA-BACKED LAWFARE AND CCP PROPAGANDA IN THE FLORIDA COURTS

While Jeremy Hales wages his cancel war in the Gainesville swamp, “Iranian anchor baby” Danesh Noshirvan has imported the same lawfare tactics into the Sunshine State’s Southwest Gulf Coast.

Danesh is targeting respected white Republican surgeon Dr. Ralph Garramone and his wife, Jennifer Couture, with a federal defamation suit so absurd, it reads like Antifa’s PR team ghostwrote it.

The case is currently pending before U.S. District Court Judge John E. Steele.

Danesh claims Garramone and Couture stalked him and endangered his children.

Watch Danesh Noshirvan Lie: TikTok troll under fire for lies, lawsuits, and doxxing. Federal charges loom. Cincinnati Insurance pay out?
Danesh uses his son “Lil’ C” as a prop to promote child mutilation surgeries outlawed by President Trump.

The catch? Danesh constantly inserts his children into viral TikToks—often in politically charged content designed to bait critics.

“Danesh uses his kids as woke props and uses his cancel culture mob to hurt people while personally profiting in the process,” said Richard Luthmann.

“He’s the dictionary definition of a predator,” Luthmann continued. “But when anyone speaks the truth, he turns around and calls them a child-stalker. It’s textbook DARVO: Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender. Even federal judges are afraid after he doxxed the SCOTUS Justices and Justice Kavanaugh and his family were almost murdered.”

There’s no evidence that Garramone or Couture did anything but speak out truthfully and politically.

But that’s enough for Danesh, who treats disagreement as a criminal act. But Danesh has serious criminal exposure related to the production of commercial pornography and questions about the ages of the talent.

Luthmann says the only reason he believes Danesh isn’t in jail right now is because he has powerful backers funding the WOKE charade.

“Danesh’s influence isn’t organic,” said Michael Volpe. “It’s Astroturfed.”

Luthmann says it’s far worse.

“He’s backed by Antifa-adjacent groups and funded by the same activist pipeline that runs through Scott Dworkin, George Soros, and into CCP propaganda circles,” Luthmann said.

Indeed, Danesh’s content overlaps neatly with Chinese Communist Party narratives—anti-police, anti-Republican, anti-free speech, and anti-Trump—while his lawsuits mirror tactics used by authoritarian regimes: use the courts to crush dissent.

“These aren’t real lawsuits. They’re political hit jobs dressed up in legalese,” said Luthmann. “The federal courts legitimize it just by letting the cases proceed.”

The Garramone case relies on vague social media interactions, political smears, and imagined slights. There are no specific threats, credible allegations, or evidence of stalking.

“What Danesh is doing isn’t legal—it’s ideological warfare,” said Volpe. “It’s cancel culture by lawsuit.”

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: THE UNHOLY ALLIANCE

The alliance between Jeremy Hales and Danesh Noshirvan didn’t emerge from shared values—it was born in 2025 out of shared hatred. Specifically, their mutual obsession with silencing investigative journalist Richard Luthmann and, disturbingly, their open contempt for Jews.

“They weren’t subtle about it,” Luthmann said. “They went public with it—mocking me, lying about legal process service, and coordinating their efforts to destroy me.”

Hales and Danesh publicly and falsely claimed Luthmann had been served with legal papers in a bogus federal lawsuit filed by Hales in Florida.

He hadn’t been.

Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to cancel critics using fake arrests and SLAPP lawsuits.
Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to parrot lies.

But that didn’t stop them from trying to sell the narrative to their respective audiences.

The goal wasn’t legal justice—it was cancel culture warfare.

At first, their cooperation was overt. Hales mentioned Danesh and his legal team in his videos.

But the backlash was immediate. Media and critics pointed out how bizarre—and hypocritical—it was for a self-styled progressive like Danesh to partner with a YouTuber known for shouting homophobic slurs at neighbors.

As the heat rose, they pulled back from public alignment. But the alliance remained intact, just underground.

“They’re still coordinating behind the scenes,” said Luthmann. “And it’s happening through their lawyers.”

Those lawyers—Nick Chiappetta, who represents Danesh, and Randy Shochet, who represents Hales—have allegedly been in direct contact to synchronize legal attacks on Luthmann and others.

Shochet Shotgun Sham: Jeremy Hales' lawsuit blasted by legal experts. Volpe & Luthmann predict dismissal, sanctions, and counterclaims.
Shochet Shotgun Sham: Jeremy Hales’ lawsuit was drafted by Attorney Randy Shochet of Trenton, Florida.

“Their coordinated conduct smacks of conspiracy,” said Volpe. “And when attorneys participate in a fraud, the attorney-client privilege no longer applies. That’s the crime-fraud exception. Shochet already has a track record.”

That legal exception opens the door for discovery. If the courts determine the Hales-Danesh axis is operating as a bad-faith campaign using legal process as a weapon, the entire communication record—emails, strategy memos, and call logs—could be exposed.

“This is bigger than a couple of clowns filing lawsuits,” said Volpe. “It’s cancel culture with a racketeering flavor. And it’s unraveling fast.”

CANCEL CULTURE COUPLE COLLAPSES: HARASSMENT HYPOCRITES

Few figures embody projection more than Jeremy Hales and Danesh Noshirvan. Both have built their brands by publicly attacking, filming, and humiliating others, only to scream “harassment” the moment anyone pushes back.

Case in point: Hales’s girlfriend, who alternates between the names Martha and George depending on the day.

Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to cancel critics using fake arrests and SLAPP lawsuits.
“GEORGE” aka “MARTHA”

She recently claimed that journalist Michael Volpe was “harassing” Hales by email.

Volpe wasn’t having it.

“She said I was emailing him daily,” Volpe said on The Unknown Podcast. “But I pulled the records. Since May 19, I’ve sent exactly seven emails—almost all were replies to Hales threatening me.”

One of those threats included a fake warning that Volpe would be arrested and lose custody of his child, based on doctored texts from his ex-girlfriend.

Cancel Culture Couple Collapses: TikTok’s Danesh and YouTube’s Hales team up to cancel critics using fake arrests and SLAPP lawsuits.
Jeremey Hales is apparently into “Gator Kink.”

Meanwhile, Hales roams his neighborhood with a camera like a budget TMZ, recording his neighbors’ backyards, following them in his vehicle, and posting the footage to YouTube for clout and cash.

“He’s got hundreds of videos where he’s filming people without consent,” Volpe said. “But I send a few emails responding to his threats, and suddenly I’m the problem?”

The hypocrisy is impossible to ignore.

“You get seven emails and cry harassment?” Volpe asked. “You’re literally stalking people for profit on your YouTube channel.”

Danesh follows the same playbook. He floods TikTok with content, often inserting his own children into the frame, then calls anyone who criticizes him a stalker or child abuser.

“He hides behind his kids to dodge criticism,” said Richard Luthmann. “Then weaponizes the outrage to silence his opponents. It’s manipulative. It’s DARVO.”

DARVO—Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender—is the tactic both men deploy with surgical precision. And they don’t just aim it at critics—they file lawsuits based on it.

“These people are dangerous,” said Luthmann. “They exploit the court system, weaponize fake victimhood, and turn public sympathy into a bludgeon to destroy truth-tellers.”

They’re not victims. They’re aggressors in influencer camouflage.

DARVO, DECEPTION, AND THE LAWYERS WHO ENABLE IT

In the final minutes of The Unknown Podcast Episode 42, Volpe and Luthmann didn’t just expose the grifters—they named the attorneys making it all possible.

“These lawsuits don’t exist without lawyers willing to file garbage,” said Volpe. “And in this case, the enablers are Randall Shochet and Nick Chiappetta.”

Luthmann calls Attorney Nick Chiappetta an “ambulance chaser” in filed court documents.
Luthmann calls Attorney Nick Chiappetta an “ambulance chaser” in filed court documents.

Shochet represents YouTuber Jeremy Hales. Chiappetta represents TikTok’s cancel culture enforcer, Danesh Noshirvan.

Together, these two attorneys are helping weaponize the court system to suppress speech, destroy reputations, and drag innocent people through costly and meritless litigation.

“Shochet and Chiappetta aren’t just bad lawyers,” Luthmann said. “They’re co-conspirators. They’re actively furthering a fraudulent enterprise under the guise of legal representation.”

The lawsuits they’ve filed aren’t grounded in facts. They’re built on conspiracy theories, subjective opinions, and wildly implausible legal claims.

In several cases, the pleadings appear to be impermissible “shotgun complaints,” which violate the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure by lumping unrelated allegations into incoherent legal claims.

But the bigger issue may be ethical.

“Once lawyers participate in a coordinated scheme to abuse legal process, their emails, strategy memos, and communications can all become discoverable,” Luthmann said.

The pattern is clear: Hales and Danesh coordinate attacks, then run them through the courts to give their smear campaigns the appearance of legitimacy.

Their lawyers act as the delivery system, dressing up vengeance and censorship in the robes of due process and litigation privilege.

“It’s not about defamation. It’s about desperation,” said Volpe. “And anyone supporting this, like Megan Fox—who used to claim she was a First Amendment warrior—is betraying the very principles she once defended.”

From Reporter to Retaliator: The Unknown Podcast discusses Megan Fox's recent actions and debates free speech and journalistic ethics.
Megan Fox: Former First Amendment Defender

Luthmann pulled no punches: “This isn’t lawyering. This is laundering cancel culture through the federal courts.”

Their message was blunt, final, and aimed at every hypocrite pushing these bad-faith lawsuits:

“If you want to play the cancel culture game,” Luthmann said, “then get ready to fight in the mud. Because we’re not backing down.”

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