Ali Alexander and Alex Jones on Jan. 6 |
Ali Alexander, the right-wing extremist tied to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, faces a police report alleging that he sought "d--k pics" from teen boys. Per a report at the Daily Dot under the headline "EXCLUSIVE: Police confirm ‘active’ case after report filed against Ali Alexander, who has been accused of soliciting nudes from teen boys; The alleged victim was 15 at the time":
Rumors about Ali Alexander soliciting explicit images and videos from teen boys have been bubbling up for months. The whispers recently broke into the open when two men came forward and claimed that Alexander asked them for nudes when they were minors.
In his first comments to media, on Thursday, one of those men told the Daily Dot that he reported Alexander to authorities in Johnstown, Colorado. The Johnstown Police Department confirmed to the Daily Dot that a case against Alexander is currently “active.”
Aidan Duncan also confirmed that screenshots of his communications with Alexander circulating online are authentic. Duncan, known online as Smiley, is a member of white nationalist Nick Fuentes’ orbit.
Alexander, who infamously organized the Stop the Steal campaign that preceded the Capitol riot, has insisted he didn’t do anything illegal.
Nick Fuentes, a longtime Alexander ally and white supremacist, has said his friend is "bowing out of public life."
Alexander has longstanding ties to Alabama (where my blog originated), partly because of his alliance with Montgomery lawyer Baron Coleman and reported connections to the hideously corrupt Alabama State Bar,
Alexander has made it a practice to attack and threaten progressive voices in the state, including retired attorney/activist Dana Jill
Simpson -- plus Legal Schnauzer and me.
The allegations against Alexander originated with a fellow right-wing provocateur, writes Daily Dot reporter Claire Goforth:
In messages published by Milo Yiannopoulos and Duncan, Alexander complained to Duncan, “You don’t even send me videos anymore. No good jack off material. Don’t even wanna be my side piece. But I understand.” He also offered Duncan an internship if he came to Texas to “hang out” for a week and said he was willing to travel to Colorado to see Duncan “if you’re game.”
The messages are reportedly from 2017, when Duncan was 15 years old. A screenshot of one of the messages shows Duncan telling Alexander his age and that he was in the tenth grade. Alexander was in his thirties at the time.
The messages suggest that Alexander was offering to exchange his political connections and influence for explicit images and video and possibly even sex.
In one message, Alexander allegedly said that Duncan was free to say no. “However, the less you deprive me of, the less I deprive you of,” he reportedly wrote. “I’m a big sharing person unless it’s not even.”
Duncan says he did not meet Alexander in person.
The charge to expose Alexander has largely been led by Yiannopoulos, a right-wing provocateur sometimes described as a troll. Yiannopoulos and Alexander have been at odds for years, but the conflict was mostly background noise in the far-right cacophony. The fallout over Kanye West’s defunct presidential campaign put them at war with one another.
Yiannopoulos’ attacks on his nemesis have included giving him pithy nicknames like “Scammy Davis Jr.” and making serious allegations that he has a history of preying on teens.
Yiannopoulos first published screenshots of Alexander’s purported communications with Duncan and others. Those screenshots show Alexander asking for dick pics and nudes.
One of those men, who was reportedly 17 when they corresponded, told the Daily Beast that he refused to send Alexander explicit images. Lance Johnston said he kept quiet for the last four years because he was afraid that Alexander would use his political connections in the right-wing world against him.
In fact, both of the alleged victims said they were concerned that Alexander would use his political connections to socially attack and harass them. (Based on our experiences with Alexander, those concerns were reasonable.) So far, Alexander has admitted that some of the allegations against him are true, and he has apologized. Writes Goforth:
“I thought in my mind that he would try his best to try to discredit me and ruin me politically and influentially with my time in politics,” Johnston told the outlet.
Duncan echoed the same in a tweet last week, writing, “When I was 15, I was naïve and desperate. I thought I had no choice but to cooperate with inappropriate and humiliating requests if I wanted to make it in politics. I figured that was just the nature of the game.”
The allegations have caused chaos on the far-right, with people picking sides and some blaming Fuentes for working with Alexander until recently. Duncan says that Fuentes has done nothing wrong and had nothing to do with Alexander’s behavior.
Last week, Alexander apologized for “any inappropriate messages sent over the years” and acknowledged that he struggles with SSA or same-sex attraction.
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