On October 21st, 2021, fresh off the humiliating Epik Hack, “antifa doxer” Joey Camp was still in full-blown denial. Far from accepting that his doxing days were over, Camp was busy harassing journalist Steven Monacelli and defending his shrinking digital harassment network, joeycamp2024.com and yourdaddyjoey.org.
His core claim? That he only publishes “information that’s already public.”
This defense conveniently ignores the legal test of intent. Doxing isn’t just about what you post; it’s about why you post it. Joey’s intentions are, as always, malicious.
Camp finished his rant with a display of pure bravado, claiming he would continue his “game” because he owned all his code and servers. He boasted about owning 2,000 domains across 200 registrars, that deplatforming means nothing when he can just “rinse and repeat.”
That, of course, proved to be a lie.


-
The Rise And Fall Of Joey Camp
The only thing Joey Camp, aka JoJo, learns from his mistakes is how to make them bigger. His life has been a cycle of copying the successful actions of other people so he can become famous, and then destroying himself by acting out against his critics. Most recently he ran a doxing website that posted…
-
Frank Parlato, Cult Crusader or Clown Prince of Paid Propaganda?
The “Parlato Paradigm”: if you piss him off or someone pays him money to be pissed off, prepare for a media firestorm
-
Loliland, The Toxic Domain History of Epik’s Top Admin
In our Predator Files video series, we’ve laid out the origin story for Rob Monster’s “bulletproof” infrastructure. He didn’t just find a random tech company; he deliberately acquired Sibyl, a company run by teenagers whose real, not so hidden business was producing and selling anime CSAM. Monster did this to get his hands on the…
-
Honeypot, a musical parody featuring #theomahaoracle Cortney Kodzian
Cortney was one of the plotters in a public Telegram group exposed by Bullyhunter (Bullyville).








