Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - Ep 1194 | Parents of Teens: Beware of AI-Generated Blackmail | Guest: Elliston Berry
Episode Date: May 22, 2025In today's episode, we sit down with Elliston Berry, a teen whose classmate shared AI-generated nude deepfakes of her and seven other girls, and her mother, Anna, to discuss the events leading up to t...he now-signed Take It Down Act. Elliston shares her story with us and tells us how she learned of the images and how the student sharing them was eventually caught. She and her mom also tell us about how Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) wrote the Take It Down Act, which passed both the House and the Senate with near-unanimous support. And Anna shares valuable wisdom for parents when facing challenging situations like this one. This episode is brought to you by Olive, the app built for the MAHA movement. Download the Olive app now to see what toxins are hiding in your groceries. Share the Arrows 2025 is on October 11 in Dallas, Texas! Go to sharethearrows.com for tickets now! Buy Allie's new book, "Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion": https://a.co/d/4COtBxy --- Timecodes: (05:28) Pornhub hosting child porn (12:02) Take it Down Act update (14:15) Elliston’s story (18:22) Anna’s response (22:37) What happened next (27:50) How the student was caught (35:33) Take it Down Act inception (39:55) The aftermath (46:14) Advice to parents --- Today's Sponsors: Seven Weeks — Experience the best coffee while supporting the pro-life movement with Seven Weeks Coffee; use code ALLIE at https://www.sevenweekscoffee.com to save up to 25% off your first order, plus your free gift! Good Ranchers — Go to https://GoodRanchers.com and subscribe to any of their boxes (but preferably the Allie Beth Stuckey Box) to get free Waygu burgers, hot dogs, bacon, or chicken wings in every box for life. Plus, you’ll get $40 off when you use code ALLIE at checkout. A’del — Try A'del's hand-crafted, artisan, small-batch cosmetics and use promo code ALLIE 25% off your first time purchase at AdelNaturalCosmetics.com --- Related Episodes: Ep 1151 | What REALLY Went Down Between Zelenskyy v. Trump & Democrats’ Embarrassing Show | Guest: Josh Hammer https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-1151-what-really-went-down-between-zelenskyy-v-trump/id1359249098?i=1000697963021 Ep 314 | The Monumental Importance of the Supreme Court | Guest: Sen. Ted Cruz https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-314-the-monumental-importance-of-the-supreme/id1359249098?i=1000494960221 --- Buy Allie's book, You're Not Enough (& That's Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love: https://alliebethstuckey.com/book Relatable merchandise – use promo code 'ALLIE10' for a discount: https://shop.blazemedia.com/collections/allie-stuckey
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Alison Barry was a 14-year-old who was the victim of an AI deep fake pornographic image of her being
circulated around her high school.
Her story is tragic and compelling, but God has used it as a launch pad for really important
legislation that has passed Congress called the Take It Down Act.
Today, we're not only hearing from her and her mom why this legislation is necessary,
but also we're going to set it up with some really important context about what is happening
in the pornography industry right now and how Christians should view all of this.
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Hey guys, welcome to Relatable.
Happy Thursday.
Hope everyone is having a wonderful week so far.
Okay, we've got to talk about some serious stuff today, some dark stuff today, but it's really important, especially as parents that we really understand what's going on.
And like we talked about with Andrew Claven earlier this week, looking at objective evil straight in the eyes is, can be really important in drawing us towards what is good and right and true.
And when we confront the reality of evil, we can either become paranoid or we can become anxious,
we can become fearful ourselves, or we can be strengthened.
We can realize that part of the reason that God has placed us on this earth is to make the world
around us better for his glory and the good of those he has placed in our lives.
And one of the things that the church has done best for thousands of years that we have to take the mantle
up on is the defense of children. Is the defense of those who do not have a voice that includes
embryos in a lab, that includes babies inside the womb, that includes children outside of the womb.
And unfortunately, a tale as almost old as time, certainly when we look back thousands of years,
we see this in the pagan world, the trend of using children for sexual gratification and objectification.
I've talked a lot about this book by historian Owen Bakke, when children became people.
And he details just the horrible mistreatment of children in ancient pagan Greece and Rome, sold into slavery.
They were sent to exposure hills when they were unwanted newborn children.
They were literally placed on these hills to die from things like hypothermia or being eaten by wild animals.
or they were sold into slavery or into sex slavery.
They were used by the powerful, by the rich as prostitutes.
Awful, awful treatment of children.
And it was the introduction of Christians 2,000 years ago, their gospel, their, what was at
the time, the upside down worldview that changed everything, not only for children,
but for women, for the poor, for those truly on the margins of society.
Ancient pagan Greece and Rome said the logos is what determines someone's worth, your full ability to reason and to rationalize, and only the adult-free male was seen as having that capacity, whereas children were seen as not having that capacity, so they were viewed as subhuman, and they were treated as such.
But Christians coming in with this concept of the Amago Day, coming in with this radically equalizing gospel, that everyone is equally dead in their sin and can be made alive by God.
grace through faith in him. That changed everything. And as the centuries past, the treatment of
children went from subjugation to a place of special dignity because of their powerlessness.
Because Christians serve a God who came to earth as an embryo, who was welcomed by the kicks
of an unborn John the Baptist, who was welcomed into the world as a newborn who, as an adult,
said, let the little children come to me, even against the protestations of his disciples.
That is the Jesus we serve. And not only that, Jesus is described in John 1 as the capital
L. Logos, the word made flesh. So the capital L. Logos turned the pagan philosophies of
ancient Greece and Rome on its head, who said the lowercase L. Logos determines someone's
worth, but the capital L logo says, no, your worth is determined by me. And the Christians who believed
that changed everything for children. And it is still our task to do so today as we devolve into
what seems like, at least from my perspective, paganism, not even atheism, but paganism. As we allow and
celebrate child sacrifice, we also see the subjugation and objectification of children. And we see that
most prominently through places like Pornhub. Nicholas Christoph is a reporter for the New York Times,
and he has been a very brave reporter. I'm sure he is progressive in most ways, but he wrote an article,
The Children of Pornhub back in 2020, which sparked a lot of change, positive change, both legislatively
and just in the industry. And he has published a new piece in the New York Times that came out just last week
about how Pornhub's employees actually deal with child sex abuse material.
And if you don't believe in evil, you just need to read this article.
So let me tell you a little bit about it.
It's very relevant for our conversation that we're about to have with Elliston Berry.
So documents that were accidentally leaked to Nicholas Christoff, or they were leaked, and
then Nicholas Christoph got a hold of them, show that Pornhub hosted videos tagged with terms,
like this is very disturbing, like 12-year-old.
With one video of 15-year-old being, this is very dark, it's even hard for me to say,
but it's just the truth of what's going on.
And if these children are enduring it, we have to be able to talk about it.
This 15-year-old was enduring gang rape.
It was uploaded to Pornhub, and it was viewed widely, leading her to being shamed and dropping
out of school.
As you can imagine, it ruined her life.
Pornhub delayed or avoided removing flowing.
flagged child sex abuse material. So this was content that they knew was child sex abuse material
with 706,000 videos flagged for review, some requiring 16 flags before taking action and they
didn't take action on many of these. So Christoph wrote that internal memos seem to show executives
obsessed with making money by attracting the biggest audiences, including pedophiles. In one memo,
porn hub managers proposed words to be banned from video descriptions, such as infant and kitty,
while recommending that the site should still include to allow brutal childhood force unwilling minor.
One internal note says that a person who posted a sex abuse material of a child shouldn't be banned from the site because, quote, the user made money.
Made them selves money, made the company money.
Staff acknowledged in these memos at the presence of child sex abuse material with internal discussions joking about it and debating whether to allow childhood as a search term.
A class action lawsuit filed in 2023 exposed Pornhub's monetization of child sex abuse material with tags like young and teenager being highly profited and Pornhub doing absolutely nothing about it.
there are other parts of this article that shows memos of PornHub employees joking about it.
One employee saying, we shouldn't CCR manager when we are talking about child sex abuse material.
And the other employee says, we don't want our manager to know about this.
No, they didn't want people to know about this.
The employees of Pornhub know that they're children and their babies that are being sexually abused on their website.
and they won't do anything about it, at least at the executive level, because it makes them money.
And that is why they oppose every single regulation and every single form of protection that is out there
because they know that they are going to lose money on it.
And they see it as well.
If there is a demand for it, then we will just supply it.
And it is immoral.
I will wash my hands of this.
Kind of like pilot.
If the people want it, I'll do it, but I'm not responsible for it.
Pilot was wrong.
Pornhub is wrong.
Nicholas Christoph said that he has never received more death threats after an article than when he published the article in 2020 exposing how Pornhub monetizes child rape.
He said that he's reported on terrorism.
He's reported on extremists and gangsters.
And never has he received more death threats than when he threatened the porn industry.
And you think, imagine thinking that Satan isn't real.
Imagine thinking that there isn't a print of the power of the air, the spirits that are now
at work in the sons of disobedience, says Ephesians too.
Imagine not believe in Ephesians 6 that there is a spiritual battle going on between good
and evil.
And imagine not having hope that we have a God who promises to come back and avenge the innocent.
We have a God who promises that he is going to redeem all of it, that he is going to do away
with evil doers and the main evil one forever and ever.
Like, imagine not having that hope.
Like, aren't we so thankful for the gospel that God is going to do something about all of this?
And in the meantime, we as Christians still have a lot of work to do.
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Now, this take it down act that we are about to talk about with Ellison Barry,
we actually recorded this interview a while ago.
So I have an update for some context before we get into that conversation.
But just to give you a little intro about who she is, she was 14 years old,
a student at Alito High School in Texas when a classmate took an image off of her social media
where she was fully clothed and used a eye to make it look like she was naked. So these deep fake
naked pictures of her. The perpetrator was a 15 year old classmate. He also created these
fake images of seven other classmates. And this was a really difficult thing, obviously,
for her and her family, but also in the hesitance of the school and authorities to really try to find a way to do anything about it.
Alistin Berry joined President Trump as a guest at his speech before Congress a few months ago as he talked about what really is a bipartisan issue,
and that is protecting people, especially minors, from the predation of pornography and these kinds of deep fake images.
So her story is really compelling.
This is an important one for parents.
you need to know what's going on.
Without further ado, here is Elliston and her mom, Anna.
Okay, before we get into the conversation with Elliston, which we recorded a few weeks ago,
I want to give you an update on this Take It Down Act.
It was just signed by President Trump into law on Monday.
Melania Trump has been a big supporter of this legislation.
As you will hear, Elliston and her mom, Anna, were a big part of the passage of this bill.
We should be very grateful to President Trump for signing it into law.
You'll hear more about it now and the dangers that led to the need for this kind of law.
So thank you, President Trump, for making this happen.
And also, you'll hear how grateful we should be to Allison and her mom for their courage as well.
So without further ado, here is Elliston Berry.
Alison and Anna, thank you so much for taking the time to join me.
first I just want to start with your story. Can you take us back to what happened?
Yeah, I was a freshman in high school, so this was the most important time. I was so excited for high school.
I had volleyball games and football games, and I woke up the weekend or the week right after homecoming.
So I woke up with messages from my friend notifying me that these images of me were going around.
So she had sent me a screenshot of a collage of photos to innocent Instagram photos, one of her and one of me,
and then two nude photos, one of her and one of me.
She made this collage just to prove that these images weren't real.
And honestly, she was scared, I was scared.
And that whole morning, it was terrifying.
We didn't know what to do.
I was embarrassed to tell my parents.
It was really, really scary, just trying to navigate.
Were you confused at the time?
Like, when you saw those pictures, you knew that they weren't your parents?
pictures that you hadn't posed nude for photos. So like what was your first thought of like how in the
heck did this happen? I was, I was shocked. I didn't believe they were, I didn't even believe this
situation was happening to me. Obviously the photos weren't real, but I was like, no one could ever do
this. Why would anyone do this to me or or to my friend? Why is this happening to me? And I didn't
know what to say. I didn't know how to respond back to her. I didn't even know how to tell my mom.
I just, I remember trying to ignore it and like forget about it, but like right after.
after stepping out of my bedroom, I just broke down.
Yeah.
I was so scared.
I was terrified.
And I didn't even know how to tell my parents because I didn't want them to think that
these photos were real.
I never wanted that pressure or that even thought about me out there.
So I was really terrified.
But thankfully, the photo was an Instagram, like Instagram photo.
So everyone that has followed my Instagram knows the original picture.
And obviously my mom keeps up with all my social media.
So she recognizes the original photo.
And she was like, I know this isn't real.
but she immediately was at my school by 10 a.m.
And she was with the administrator and with the police officer and my principal,
just trying to get my story out or write down what happened,
try to figure out what was going on.
So at that point, did you know that the photo had been shared on Snapchat and shared to other people?
Or did you just think that you and your friends, or you and your one friend,
were the only people that had really seen it,
in addition to the person who made the pictures.
Well, she sent me that and then said,
this is going around.
People are sending this to me.
But don't worry, I made this so people know it's fake.
And I was like, who had seen this?
Why is no one texted me about this?
I did get an Instagram DM from a girl that I'm not friends with.
I don't really talk to at all.
I have one class with her, but we're not close.
And she was like, hey, I have to tell you something.
And I responded, and it was the same situation telling me that these photos were going around.
And if this girl that I don't know is talking to me about this,
I was like, everyone must have seen this.
I had to go to volleyball practice that morning, and none of my classmates knew about what was going on,
but they could tell that I was extremely upset and extremely disturbed.
My performance was off.
I couldn't focus.
I wasn't my normal bubbly self.
I mean, I was so terrified.
I was anxious.
And I went to my second period because my first period was volleyball, and I couldn't even focus.
Thankfully, I was able to leave that class early because I got called down to go and tell,
what happened to the police officer, but as I was walking, another one of my good friends
stopped me and said, I'm so sorry this happened to you. And in that moment, I realized
everyone has seen these. I've gotten three people in the span of two hours talking to me about
this and I was like my entire high school had seen these. And I didn't even know what to do.
I felt like everyone was looking at me. Just the mental block and the mental aspect of this,
I was terrified.
Everyone, this was my innocence.
This was a nude photo of me.
And I was a freshman.
I was 14 years old and everyone had seen this of me.
And I was terrified.
And Anna, what was your response?
Because you said that you didn't want to tell your parents,
but then you felt very quickly that you had to.
She came to you at home.
She was trying to explain this to you.
I mean, what was your first reaction?
Disbelief, I would say.
So she walks in, bawling.
Of course.
And I'm like,
What in the world? What's wrong? It's Monday morning and we're ready to start the week.
You know, and so it was, and she showed it to me. And in that moment, again, I was like,
this can't be real. Like, what in the world? You know, what is this? You know, and I'm at that point
looking at her picture and then the nude picture. And I'm going, this is child pornography. I mean,
and what is happening here? You know, her high school's over 2400 students. So I'm like,
so this is going around? I mean, like, just the magnitude of that.
And in that moment, realizing, okay, somebody decided her fate, and I can't help her in that moment.
So my husband and I are just like, I mean, literally sitting there going, what do we do now?
We don't know who did this.
What, you know, so of course, I went into mama bear mode.
You know, and I'm like, okay, you go to volleyball.
I'm going to the office, you know.
And so met the other parents up there at the time because we're just like, we didn't know how to navigate that.
You know, that's something.
was the parent of the other girl who had sent the photo to her and y'all decided to go to school
administration right away yes yes okay the accounts that it came from had our school in it so it had a
lito in it so we assumed that it was another student okay so the account that edited the photos
yes and it was sending it out oh so y'all did know at that point the account that was sending
it out yes you just didn't know who was associated with the account right right so that's why you
went to the school right away. And how did the school handle this initially? Um, they just kind of looked at
us like we were crazy. Really? Well, what do we do? I mean, it's, it's, it's AI. You know, so is it real?
Well, if you look at it, it is real. It looks real. Yeah. Oh, completely. Yeah. I mean,
in every way possible. So the app that this kid used, he didn't just take her face and put it on some kind
of a nude person. Um, he actually stripped their clothes off.
So it's their bodies, it's their face.
And so we're sitting there trying to tell them, this is a big deal.
This is going out to everybody.
Yeah.
You know, and at the time, he had not done it on school property.
Yeah.
So they were like, well, I'm not really sure we can do anything.
We don't know what to do.
We don't know who he is.
So we're not sure what to do.
Okay.
So we called in the police at that point.
Yes.
And we're like, okay.
And they still didn't know what to do with it either because nobody knew how to find him.
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Okay, so tell me what happened next.
So this happened on a Monday, on a Monday morning, so that whole week, it was terrible.
Um, after we went and I gave my, my statement to the police, I went home, didn't even want to
be at school. I didn't know how to do work. I couldn't even focus in the one class I went to.
So I went home immediately. Um, I didn't go to school that next Tuesday either. I called my best
friend over. I was like, please just be with me. Like, I don't even know what to do. And, um,
that Tuesday morning, we woke up and more, more girls. So it was now up to eight girls. So it was now up to
eight girls, eight more nude photos from Instagram, all of my friend group. And I remember thinking,
do I have a curse? I was like, is this happening to her because she was with me? I was shocked
and she was scared. I was scared. And I didn't even know what to do. And the account that was sending
these photos was texting people from my school awful thing, saying, targeting like one of the girls
and saying, oh, she's evil or saying all these mean things about her,
and then kind of bullying us and tormenting us and just overall wanting to ruin us.
And he was sending these out to our entire school.
So he was adding everyone and how Snapchat works is you have to accept it.
So right when someone would accept this, he would just send them like spam.
And it was terrible.
No one knew what to do.
People I wasn't friends with were receiving these photos.
I didn't even know who had all seen them.
So it was really scary.
And I remember that Tuesday I had to go to school or I had to go for at least my volleyball
because I had a volleyball game.
So a lot of the school I attended was mandatory for me to play, to get playing time,
to be like a good teammate.
I had to show up for them.
And I was so scared.
I was terrified.
I had know what to do.
And that Wednesday we had PSAT testing.
So it almost seemed perfect.
He had said he wanted to go out with a bang,
making threats to us about
This guy had said this via Snapchat
This is like the message that he was sending people
I'm gonna go out with a bang
And y'all didn't know what that meant
It's a threat
It's a threat no no
And he so people were starting to ask him
Like why are you doing this?
You need to stop you know why are you hurting the girls
In this way
And that's when he was responding to
I want to ruin the girls
I want to go out with a bang
So then you know in today's world
I'm calling the school going
This could be a threat to the entire population
Of our school
You need to do something about that
this. And did the police know about that threat too? Yes, that in. Okay. But they're still like,
we don't know what to do. They're like, it's fine. It's okay. We're going to, we'll put an extra
cop up there. I mean, they didn't, they just really didn't seem to take it serious at any level. And I'm like,
okay, we've got the situation with the girls and the nudes. And then now we've got a threat
that he wants to go out with a bang, which he could come to school. Who knows? Who knows? Who knows? Who
Who knows? Who knows what he could do? So the whole situation was so mind-numbing to me and all the parents were like,
is no one listening?
No one's paying attention here.
There's a lot of levels here.
Oh, my goodness.
Yes.
And that Tuesday morning, when we were on the way to school and when we had first heard
that he had set and made that threat, we called the school and my mom was like, I'm not
taking my kids up there.
I'm not bringing her to school.
And they were like, no, she's fine.
She can come.
It's okay.
It's okay.
And I was calling all of my friends.
I was saying, you guys, like, this is real.
Like, don't come to school.
Like, this is scary.
She was calling my friend's parents.
that weren't even involved in this because this was a serious matter and there's school shootings
and bombings and everything like that. I go to a public high school so anything could happen.
So I didn't go that Tuesday and that Wednesday was PSAT testing. So everyone's going to be in,
it's going to be guaranteed to be in the school. We're going to be without our phones because we're all
testing in the morning. The whole school is testing. So I was like, this is perfect timing. If he was
going to do something, this is when to do it. He has us all like isolated from everybody.
this is perfect so obviously us and all the girls were freaking out and the one thing that I will
give my credit I will give my school credit is they allowed us to be in a separate room so we were able
all eight of the girls we were in a separate room taking our test words just us and another teacher
we did go to school she did go to school that day I had to yeah for this testing and the school
let us all be in a room so that was I give them credit they really
they helped us on that part.
But other than that, it was...
Their mental anguish, the girls, that week was just horrible.
And so I had to go to school on Thursday because of volleyball.
I had a, I made a commitment to my team and I couldn't stop.
But that whole day I was texting my mom, is there any way you couldn't come and get me?
And she's an interior designer.
She's over at people's houses.
There's no way she could.
And I remember being terrified.
And the whole day, I was...
was down at my counselor's office. There's one good counselor at my school and she's amazing. But
other than that, my school was no help. But it wasn't until that Friday. It was again,
second period. And the school went into lockdown. So it wasn't like a drill. There was the lights
were flashing. The announcement was going off. This is not a drill. A broadcasting system went on
all over the TVs saying hide and it was a lockdown drill.
which we still to the stay don't really even know what happened.
Yeah.
It was insane though.
But it was like, okay, this week is like out of, we couldn't even figure out the week
was insane.
Yeah.
So the one good thing that happened out of it was that while they were on lockdown, this
kid decided to go online to his account and on school Wi-Fi start posting pictures more
of the girls.
So at that point, IT was able to catch him.
And why did the school go in lockdown?
We still don't know.
You still don't know.
So it wasn't connected necessarily to what he had already said.
No, we kind of look at it.
It was the divine because if he hadn't done that, I don't know that we would have ever caught him and known who it was.
Okay.
So I don't know exactly how the technology works.
I do know when you connect to Wi-Fi, you are making your identity vulnerable to everyone who, you know, especially the person who owns that Wi-Fi.
So can you explain exactly how that worked?
How did they find him?
So I guess because my school's very like they don't want you to be on any social media or anything.
So when you're on this Wi-Fi, it kind of like blocks certain things.
So when you're on it, it can sense what apps you're on.
It can sense what you're doing.
It lets them know.
Yeah, it lets them know.
So he was on Snapchat and on this account and sending images, I guess to scare us if this guy's active on a Snapchat account,
Walburn lockdown, oh, it must be him.
or he had some sort of crazy thing in mind,
but it was truly a blessing in disguise that he did that.
He went on, he was on the school Wi-Fi
and sending these photos to people, posting them, things like that.
And because he was on that school Wi-Fi
and he was on school property, he was on the school grounds,
one of my school's police officers was able to track his IP address
and take it back to the student that did it.
and catch them.
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Okay, so what do you know about this?
He's a 15-year-old boy who was doing this.
Do you know anything about who he was?
Was he some troubled person?
Had he done this before?
Do you know the motivations behind it?
Well, I had a class with him.
Our last names are sort of similar.
So when we were sitting in class and like our seating arrangements were alphabetical, I was seated by him.
And he was, he was a quiet kid.
And when this first happened and people started suspecting him, I immediately was like, no, he would not do that.
There's no way he'd do that.
He was just a nice kid.
He was quiet.
He wouldn't go out of his way to talk to you.
But I'm very bubbly and I love to talk.
So especially when I was sitting in class, my math class.
with him and this other kid.
I'm always talking and I'm always engaging.
And he's very techy.
He likes taking photos.
He's very like techy, technology, everything like that.
And my brother sort of the same way.
So I kind of saw my brother and him
because they both had that fascination for technology.
And I'd always had a kind of a soft spot for him.
My brother, he didn't really do well in myelito school either.
So I very much wanted this kid
to feel seen. And I didn't want anyone to experience what my brother experienced. So someone that I saw
my brother in, I wanted to make sure that he would never go through something, anything like that.
We had a friendship. We definitely wouldn't hang out out of school or anything, but you were kind to
him. You wanted him to feel included and seen because you felt like your brother had kind of been
excluded and pushed out. So you had a lot of compassion for him. And he had given me a Bible.
we've talked about stuff like that.
Really?
Yeah, like a gift.
I mean, it was so strange.
And a lot of the other girls, they'd also talk to him.
There was no bad blood or anything that have gone between him and any of the other girls.
Like he'd bring them donuts.
It was so bizarre why he did what he did.
But still, we haven't really heard anything.
We'd never got an apology.
He was suspended, but his parents took him out of school, so we still haven't really heard much about the whole situation.
So that's it. There's nothing that law enforcement can do here.
Well, they did charge him with a class A misdemeanor for harmful distribution of underage material.
Yeah.
But, I mean, he got probation, and then it'll fall off his record when he's 18.
Gosh, it just feels like the punishment should be a lot.
heftier than not. And in the sheriff's department that actually pressed the charges, they were like,
we just don't have any laws. We don't know how to, we don't know what to do with them. So they kind of did
the only thing they thought they could do. And so, because there's no laws and he's a minor,
that was the issue. Him being a minor kind of protects him. And it was the same way with the
school. When they knew on that Friday who he was, they're like, we caught him. Oh, okay. Well,
who is he? Oh, well, we can't tell you. Because he's a minor. Yeah, because he's a minor. So we've, we've got it.
we've got it wow so did you talk to his parents no no i never they kind of lawyered up once that
happened and so there was no communication between us i mean she did some social media posts
about i'm worried he's going to be bullied now and i'm worried for my other kids so it was never uh
oh you know what my son did a bad thing we need to apologize to the girls um i'm gonna hide him
and you know we're just going to pretend like my goodness it was
would take every bit of self-control in me, every bit of the Holy Spirit, not to be banging down
their door. Oh, my goodness. Oh, yes. We've had so many conversations about what we would like to do
in this situation. I mean, I'm sure. My goodness. Okay, so you said that there's no real laws on the
books. And I'm guessing that's why you were a part of this take it down act that is going through
Congress or that went through Congress, correct? So this is, it was introduced by Ted Cruz on June 18th,
2020, 24, passed the Senate unanimously, 2024. And then you guys were a part of a roundtable on this,
on March 3rd with Melania Trump, right? So can you tell us how that all happened?
Well, when this first happened, we didn't know what to do. No one would listen. So my mom,
she's a squeaky whale so she was texting and she was emailing everybody anyone that had an inbox
she was emailing and telling her story and she did all of her state representatives and she did an
inbox to our senator ted cruz and his team got back to my mom and they emailed back and was like
this is a serious matter like let's get together let's talk about this and in the beginning of june he
flew my mom and my brother up to Washington dc and they were able to write up the
take it down act. He realized that my photos were up on social media for nine months.
So this happened in October. So my photos were up from October until June when he was able to
get in touch with Snapchat and took the account that linked all of the photos of me and all of my
friends. He were able to get them all down, which was, it was so refreshing. I mean, anyone could
have seen these and it was creating a weight on my shoulders. But he was able to take those down,
but it was with the help of, it was with the help with a political member. But,
we were trying to get in touch with Snapchat for a month trying to get these images down, but
nothing happened. But he has kids, he has two daughters right in between, right under me and
right above me, like age-wise. So he couldn't even, he has a heart for this subject. So we were
able to get in contact with him and then write up the Take It Down Act. And then later in June,
we were able to go back up there and get to talk with him. And we were able to promote this
bill as much as possible in order for it to be passed.
Yeah, so it was really important for him to bring on democratic support as well so that it was a bipartisan bill.
So it was super, super important that it be bipartisan.
Yeah.
So, and it's about the kids.
It's not political.
No, it's not political at all.
It's really about protecting our children.
And that, for me, I felt like I didn't have a voice and no one was listening.
So, and, you know, local police were like, if we had a law, we could do something.
about that. We just don't have anything. AI is progressing so quickly that we can't,
you know, we're just reactive to it. We can't be proactive because it's increasing so much. So
we were very thankful that, that Cruz. And then Amy Klobuchar, who is a Democrat, she came on board
as well so that it really started just becoming this real bipartisan bill that we could try to pass.
So that would provide, you know, it would make it a felon. So this kid, even being a minor, would have
jail time attached to that and then hold big tech accountable as well. So 48 hours, it has to be
taken down. Yeah. My goodness. So this makes it a federal crime. It comes with prison time.
And that's good. I still think that like the legislature, the state legislatures also, I know that this
is a federal law and that's good, but I would like to see even stricter regulations on the state
level. They're just, I mean, law is always behind the big.
pace of technology and we really need legislatures to recognize that and to do what they can
to be ahead of it because this is serious. This is not just reputational damage. I mean,
this could risk your ability to earn a livelihood in the future, not yours, hopefully,
but just in general for victims of this. And I thank God that you had your parents, the squeaky
wheel of your mom. But think about all of the young people that have no communities or who aren't
believed and don't have people that will go to bat for them. That's where we have to have the law
step in and say, okay, even if you don't have other grownups protecting you, the law is going to
protect you. Yeah, absolutely. It's just scary. And that was kind of like my motivation behind all this.
I'm really big in my small group in my church. And when this first happened, I immediately went to
my small group leaders. One of the girls that was involved, her mom is another small group leader.
So she was really good about all this. And none of the girls wanted to say anything.
And I didn't even want to say anything. We were told that we shouldn't tell people. We should just put it under the rug.
Alito, my school, they just want to put it under the rug. They didn't want to ruin my school's reputation.
but it got to a point where it felt like this whole situation was gone and that we were just victims of this,
that we had to deal with the fate that he decided for us.
And something about that just did not sit right with me.
So when my mom started getting in contact with all these people, it made me realize that God has given me an opportunity to talk about what happened and to use my voice.
and I've always been taught to be firm in my opinions and to use my voice.
And thankfully, I grew up in a household that really taught me that what I feel and how I feel matters
and that to fight for what's right.
So when all these opportunities started appearing, I just knew that it was the Lord putting this in front of me.
And growing up, I always knew that I wanted to help people, like, be a therapist.
But ever since this, it's really shown me that my future could be as an advocate for the people that don't get the ability to use their voice and to be someone that people can look up to for hope and for justice.
And that's really what's been helping me and motivating me.
Yeah.
Well, you must be so proud.
I'm proud because that takes a lot of courage.
I think most people understandably.
I don't think anyone would blame you if your choice was.
I don't want to ever talk about this again.
I'm just going to move on.
I don't want to generate interest in this.
But you decided that, okay, what Satan meant for evil, God is going to use for good.
And I just have to follow in obedience.
And, you know, God says vengeance is mine, I will repay.
And one day, like, he is going to take care of all injustice.
But until then, he uses situations like this, like yours, to, as you said,
advocate for justice for the people who come after you.
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the arrows.com. Get your tickets today. Gosh, I just think about so many of our cultural problems
that led to a moment like this, the pervasiveness of pornography. When you think about the so-called
in-cell movement that really is built on just hatred and resentment toward women, all of that
comes into play here. And I'm thankful that you've had the platform that you have. You got to go to
the state of the union. You got to talk to the First Lady, talk to Congress people. And I just really
hope and pray that God uses this to change things for the better. Yes, that's what we're hoping for
for sure. Yes, absolutely. And I can't change his, I can't change what happened to him. I mean,
although it would be amazing that he got a little bit more punishment, I've accepted what
happened. And if I can't change what happened to him and I can't change my situation,
and then I can change others.
And the Bible verse that I've been going off of is Romans 828,
which is God works for the good of those who love them,
and I've been called according to his purpose.
And that's really stuck out to me between this whole thing.
And it's really taught me that this bad situation that I've been in
has completely changed.
And he's really shown me that he works in crazy ways,
being able to go to the state of the union
and being able to talk to senators.
and representatives is really, it's just such an amazing opportunity.
And I've never would have thought that this situation could turn into something so big.
And it's really, it's really just been amazing.
And the moment that I, that I have been recognizing all of this is when we were able to go up in June.
And I remember being so nervous to go.
And we were on, I think, Good Morning America.
And that was what really hit me.
I was like, oh, I'm going to be sharing my story in front of the whole country.
This is a national news, and I have to do this, and I didn't want to.
I mean, right before I went on, I was like, I'm going to be admitting to this, I'm going to be a victim, I'm going to be weak and vulnerable.
But then I realized God doesn't call the equipped, he equips the called.
And that's just really what pushed me because I'm just, at the time I was 14, or no, I was 15, I was 15 years old when I started talking about this.
14 when it happened.
14 when it happened.
But 15 when I started talking.
and I realized that there are people out there that don't have anything.
I mean, there was a representative in South Carolina, Brandon Guffie.
His son went through something similar, and he lost his son to suicide.
I talked to him actually on the show.
Yes, it was terrible.
Terrible.
Horrible story.
Although I'm fortunate to have such a great community and such a great family
and such a great friends, people out there have nothing.
They have no one, and they are just forced to live with this.
I mean, this is happening to people who don't have the ability to speak up.
And it's really been put on my heart that I am going to do this in order to not only help others, but to show others that this is only possible through God.
Yes.
If there was one message that you, Anna, would want to send to parents watching this, what would it be?
It would be to have open dialogue.
So I feel like we're blessed in that we've always been able to kind of talk to each other.
but this subject needs to be broached with kids.
So a lot of times we get contacted now probably weekly
when this is happening to somebody else,
somebody else and parents not knowing what to do
and going, this is really a thing?
You know, like people don't even understand
what is happening in regards to AI
and bullying and the whole fake, deep fakes.
So it's like, let's have this talk.
Let's go ahead and have it
so that kids don't feel like they're isolated,
when it happens. What happened to Gavin? You know, he didn't, he didn't know what to do. He didn't
know where to go. He felt threatened and he was afraid for his family. And so it's kind of like,
you've got to start having these conversations previous to anything happened, being proactive
instead of reactive. And so it's just like have these conversations. And then we've got to,
we've got to, our next part of this is getting it out there to our schools. So we've got to be
able to have training for teachers, for administration, for school boards who don't know what to do
it you know and then and then for our you know our local police and sheriffs I mean they if they don't
know what's going on either or don't know about hopefully to take it down bill when it passes into law
they're not going to know to prosecute so it's like we we have to get the word out there that
there is something and you know and and have that open open dialogue with people put the protocols in
place and let everyone know there's a zero tolerance policy we will turn you over to law enforcement
and you will be in trouble and take it seriously from the get-go, even preemptively, as you said.
And parents having these proactive conversations, because as you mentioned, it's not just like guys being the perpetrators and girls being the victims.
Yes, that very often happens.
But as you just mentioned, that one situation, it was actually a guy, a teenage guy.
And I've heard multiple of these stories who was the victim of someone sending an AI or Photoshop's
picture of them. Looks like they're doing something sexual. They don't know what to do. They commit
suicide. And so for parents, like the open dialogue, both if you think your child could be
susceptible to doing that and if you think your child could be susceptible to being a victim,
like also I just want to remind parents that, and I'm, you know, I'm not a parent of teens.
My kids are small. So you can back me up. I'm sure you agree. But like parents, you are still
the parent and you are allowed to take your child's phone. Like if you think it's a possibility
that your child is looking at porn or doing something like this, it doesn't matter if your child is
17. You can take your child's phone as long as they are in your home. And I don't think it's
too late to put parameters and rules around social media use because it is a tool that even,
you know, even we adults don't always handle correctly. Right. Exactly. Yeah. Well, I just appreciate
you all so much. I appreciate y'all so much in your willingness to share your story and to come on
today. And I know that everyone watching will be praying for y'all and just praying for y'all's
protection and for God to continue to use your story. So thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you.
Yeah. We're hoping that in the next two weeks it'll be presented on the house floor and go through.
Okay. Well, prayers for that would be huge. Absolutely. Yeah. Thank you so much. Thank you.
