TikTok Cancel Culture King Implodes on Stand in Explosive Fort Myers Courtroom Showdown
By Rick LaRivière with Richard Luthmann
CRASH AND BURN IN COURTROOM 6A
FORT MYERS, FL – On Monday, Cancel Culture King Danesh Noshirvan—known to millions as “ThatDaneshGuy” and the SCOTUS Doxxer—watched his $5 million federal lawsuit implode under the fluorescent lights of a Fort Myers federal courtroom. The man who made a name doxxing judges and defaming dissenters got roasted on the witness stand in front of U.S. District Judge John E. Steele.

The case, Noshirvan v. Garramone et al., was supposed to be about defamation. But by the end of the day, it looked more like a criminal referral.
Danesh admitted he never obtained model releases for explicit OnlyFans content involving himself, his swinger wife Hannah Noshirvan, and a third unidentified female.
Danesh Blows Federal Case: Cancel Culture TikToker implodes in court, admits to illegal porn production and lies. Criminal referral coming?
That admission triggered a chilling legal reality: under 18 U.S.C. § 2257, failing to document and verify performers’ ages in pornography can carry up to five years in prison per offense.
“Attorney Patrick Trainor asked him about 2257 consent, and he crumbled,” said Zach Bonfilio, the Misfit Patriot, who was present in the courtroom. “Danesh got grilled like a cheap steak.”
DANESH BLOWS FEDERAL CASE: THE CANCEL CULTURE KING’S MELTDOWN
TikToker Danesh, who boasts 2.5 million followers, said with a straight face: “I do not do Cancel Culture.”
This is from the man who doxxed six U.S. Supreme Court Justices after the Dobbs opinion, and helped push Aaron De La Torre to suicide in Texas.
Worse, Danesh admitted under oath that he hadn’t reviewed the expert report from his paid tech witness, Brad LaPorte, a document calling him a “Mega Influencer.”
Danesh tried to deny the label: 1 million+ followers, national reach, celebrity status, and mass influence.
Meanwhile, Danesh’s attorney Nick Chiappetta, an ambulance chaser from Lake Worth, sat silently as the courtroom flipped against his client.
Observers say the final nail may have come from James McGibney, the man behind Bullyville.com.
James McGibney, a former Marine who has falsely claimed aspects of his military record, is reported to have ties to attorney Nick Chiappetta, also a Marine veteran.
McGibney didn’t show up, but Danesh confirmed that he and the user “@CREDIBLEINTEL” are protecting him and even admitted knowing they were behind fake sockpuppet accounts like “@JOEYSCRAMPS2020.”
WITNESS TAMPERING, AI THREATS, AND A GAGGED PRESS
Danesh also accused journalist Richard Luthmann of federal witness intimidation. But Luthmann came prepared.
“They tried to accuse me of a federal crime for journalism,” he said. “So, of course, I took the Fifth and asserted the Reporter’s Privilege. I kept my f—ing mouth shut, and they made it easy. Total lightweights.”

He continued: “Danesh and Chiappetta are filthy rats. Soros and the Chinese Communist Party fund this garbage. I’ll die before I give up my sources.”
Luthmann wasn’t the only target. According to court records, Julian Jackson Fannin, a partner at Duane Morris LLP, received multiple threats, including calls to his law office threatening his life.
Fannin is expected to testify Tuesday.
Danesh’s side offered no credible rebuttal. Instead, they focused on a mystery package, allegedly mailed to a relative. The rub is that the package was never photographed, tracked, or confirmed to have even reached Danesh.
“Foundationless hearsay,” said one attorney present.
“Adderrall-fuled bullshit,” said a court oberver.
DANESH BLOWS FEDERAL CASE: ONLYFANS ADMISSIONS, SWINGER CLAIMS, AND THE SUBSTACK SMEAR
Danesh would not admit that no court-issued protective order existed when Luthmann published LaPorte’s redacted report in December.
He claimed emotional harm but offered no facts showing a conspiracy by Garramone or Couture.
Meanwhile, Chiappetta spent courtroom time pushing hearsay, including vague allegations about packages and conspiracy theories.

He also tried to resurrect claims from James McGibney’s bogus affidavit. Trainor stunned the court by revealing that Chiappetta had bodycam footage that disproved McGibney’s sworn claims—but filed them anyway. Twice.
“He knew [the affidavit] was false when he filed it not once, but twice. He had to because he had the bodycam footage the whole time,” Attorney Trainor told the judge.
The trial also revealed that Danesh set up a Substack account solely to attack Couture, Garramone, Camp, Luthmann, and others related to the litigation.
“He posted ten stories and defamed at least ten people,” Luthmann said. “He even called me a pedophile. That’s defamation per se.”
Luthmann has filed a separate case against Danesh in Fort Myers federal court seeking $20 million.
THE PEOPLE TURN OUT. DANESH STANDS ALONE.
Over 40 friends, family, and supporters of the defendants packed the courtroom.
Zach Bonfilio, the Misfit Patriot, called it “a reckoning years in the making.”
The admin of the “Victims of Danesh” TikTok page flew in for the hearing.
Danesh? He sat alone, flanked only by Chiappetta’s paid paralegal, who tried to use her pocketbook to block his face from cameras outside the courthouse.

Tough-guy journalist Luthmann confronted them:
“Are you and your swinger wife having sex with underage talent in OnlyFans commercial pornography?”
“Did you just admit to violating commercial pornography model releases?”
“Are you exploiting women and children?”
Neither Danesh nor Chiappetta responded.
DANESH BLOWS FEDERAL CASE: THE CONSEQUENCES MOUNT
The hearing will continue on Tuesday. Judge Steele is expected to hear from Julian Jackson Fannin and review audio recordings of death threats to Fannin left at the Duane Morris LLP Miami office.
Court insiders say that if the evidence points to Danesh’s network—or his AI-run cancel culture mob—criminal referrals are on the table.

A Couture and Garramone family friend said, “They wanted to bring down Jen and Ralph. Now the truth is bringing them down, and it’s about time.”
Danesh’s legal strategy? Delusion and denial.
He denies cancel culture. Danesh denies doxxing. He denies his own OnlyFans obligations under 18 U.S.C. § 2257.
But the facts, the testimony, and the meltdown on the stand tell another story.
As another courtroom observer put it: “Danesh brought cancel culture to federal court—and canceled himself.”
Stay tuned. Tuesday could be the end.
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