Vancouver Sun

Creep Catchers vow to defy order to destroy videos of their targets

- HARRISON MOONEY hmooney@postmedia.com

The Surrey Creep Catchers, a controvers­ial group of vigilante pedophile hunters, have been ordered to destroy all videos and “stop collecting, using and disclosing ” the personal informatio­n of two individual­s caught up in their sting operations.

In a ruling, B.C.’s acting privacy commission­er Drew MacArthur found that the Surrey Creep Catchers had violated the Personal Informatio­n Privacy Act in regards to two complainan­ts, and that they weren’t carrying out an investigat­ion of any sort, but rather a campaign to publicly shame both individual­s. The complainan­ts are not named in the ruling.

“Despite its suggestion­s to the contrary,” said MacArthur in his ruling, “the organizati­on was not actually collecting, using or disclosing the complainan­ts’ personal informatio­n for any investigat­ive purpose. I agree with the complainan­ts that the organizati­on’s true purpose was eventually to publicly name and shame them, as its disseminat­ion of the videos and its request that others share them indicates.

“This belies any argument that, when it posted or responded to the Craigslist advertisem­ents, or when it confronted and video-recorded the complainan­ts, the organizati­on was trying to investigat­e individual­s who had lured or may lure a child.”

MacArthur also dismissed the Surrey Creep Catchers’ argument that the act did not apply to them because they were acting as journalist­s.

“There is no fair attempt to describe or analyze the facts, or to provide opinion or debate. The purpose of the exercise is to entrap individual­s,” he said.

The Surrey Creep Catchers must now take down and destroy all videos related to the two complainan­ts by Sept. 6 or potentiall­y face hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines.

However, Ryan LaForge, the organizati­on’s president, has indicated that he doesn’t intend to comply. In a Facebook Live video posted Monday, LaForge spoke about the ruling.

“For you all to know and for our biggest haters listening, the decision from the privacy commission­er did find in the favour of (the complainan­ts),” he said. “We have 30 days — I have 30 days — to destroy all informatio­n on these predators that lured children out that wanted to do sexual things.”

“I told them to go f*** themselves.”

LaForge continued, “I said it from the beginning and I’ll say it again: I will never destroy, I will never take down videos voluntaril­y. I will fight to the very, very end to keep all these videos up. I’ll never destroy chat logs. These guys are predators.

“The privacy commission­er is saying that we didn’t have permission to do it, we obtained it wrongfully, et cetera, et cetera. Every single goof we’ve caught can go and cry to the commission­er and say this and you know what I’m gonna say? I’m gonna tell them the same thing.”

In April, LaForge was charged with assault after confrontin­g one of the group’s targets.

 ??  ?? Ryan LaForge
Ryan LaForge

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