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argosciv ago

(6/20)

Shillfarms (and/or worse)

Continued:

So far, it is fair to say that there is plenty of connection between Tony Podesta, John Podesta, David Brock, George Soros & sources for shills attacking research(ers) here on voat, particularly in the pizzagate subverses. I've also demonstrated numerous likely connections between the aforementioned shillfarms and now NXIVM/Scientology(et al) including the presence of shilling(or worse) in online gaming...

[14. Root of Corruption - Annex: Addendum RE: #WHQOPSI: Jim Carrey]

[14: comment 5/9]:

28. http://www.imdb.com - The Online Gamer | https://archive.is/6Mjhl

The Online Gamer

Comedy | TV Series (2009– )

A series of skits based around a 20-something man who loves online gaming.

29. http://www.imdb.com - The Online Gamer - Full cast & crew | https://archive.is/XkPeU

  • Cathriona White worked predominately in the makeup department(7 episodes, 2011-2012) for The Online Gamer, though, did appear as an extra in one episode, "Black Ops Part 1", which aired on October 18, 2010 - she left the production in 2012, the same year she met Jim Carrey - production continued least as late as 2013[28][29].

Scientology | Mark Burton | "The Online Gamer" | Cathriona White | Scientology Ireland | Abusive/Threatening correspondance to Sweetman and Carrey | Public slandering, fraud and blackmail | Online trolls and shills; people tasked with demoralizing others and spreading hate/disinfo

Avenatti

Something stinks...

Who wants to play a game?


[15. v/pizzagate - @gamepwn: Human Trafficking through online gaming? Brock Pierce, founder of Bitcoin, along with Marc Collins-Rector (An Open Secret DEN) created an MMORPG company called IGE in 2001.]


Get a fucking load of this: (long read, well worth it)

30. https://www.villagevoice.com - Agent Schmuck | https://archive.is/MHDBH

~~NXIVM and Raniere have denied the allegations and are suing Ross as well, charging him with copyright infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets, and product disparagement. But the Voice has learned that Aviv has done other work for Raniere, an odd figure who requires his followers to refer to him as “Vanguard.” The Voice has obtained evidence that Aviv agreed to investigate Raniere’s ex-girlfriend, a woman who says she has been systematically harassed, intimidated, and terrorized by members of NXIVM.

[15]:

IGE was an MMORPG company started in 2001 by Brock Pierce and Marc Collins-Rector. This was all after the Child Abuse scandal of them holding A-List Hollywood elite pedophile parties where they would drug little boys and also rape them by gunpoint.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Collins-Rector

~~

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brock_Pierce

[16. wiki: Marc Collins-Rector]:

Marc John Collins-Rector (born October 16, 1959) is an American businessman and a convicted sex offender, known for founding Digital Entertainment Network, an online streaming video broadcaster and notable dot-com failure, as well as his associations with Hollywood and media figures. His child sexual abuse conviction is highlighted in the 2014 documentary An Open Secret.


DEN founding

Main article: Digital Entertainment Network

Rector and Shackley sold Concentric in 1995 and, using money raised from the sale, as well as close to $100m of investor and venture capital, formed an early Internet video media content delivery company, Digital Entertainment Network. Collins-Rector was the co-founder and chairman of DEN, which exhausted its funding following a failed IPO bid and collapsed amidst allegations of Collins-Rector having sexually abused children, coercing them with drugs and guns.[5]

Child enticement conviction

Running DEN out of a Los Angeles mansion, Collins-Rector and his business partners - Chad Shackley (who was also Rector's romantic partner) and Brock Pierce - hosted lavish parties, attended by Hollywood’s gay A-list.[6] It was at those parties where Collins-Rector, and others allegedly sexually assaulted teenage boys.[7]

In August 2000 a New Jersey federal grand jury indicted Collins-Rector on criminal charges that he had transported minors across state lines for the purpose of having sex with them.[8] After his indictment Collins-Rector fled to Spain together with Shackley and Pierce. Interpol arrested them in May 2002 in a villa in the south Spanish beach city of Marbella. Guns, machetes and child pornography were found in the house.[7]

Collins-Rector fought extradition proceedings for two years before returning to the United States, where he pleaded guilty to eight charges of child enticement and registered as a sex offender.[9] He admitted luring five minors across state lines for sexual purposes.[10] He received credit for time that he had served in a Spanish jail and was registered as a sex offender under a weekly supervision.[10]

In 2006, a U.S. District Court granted Collins-Rector special permission to go to the United Kingdom to receive treatment for a brain tumor.[11] He subsequently renounced his US citizenship and has never returned to the United States.[12] In 2007, he was photographed in London, and in 2008 was living in the Dominican Republic.[13] As of 2014, he lives in a "European port city" and uses the names "Mark Collins" and "Morgan Von Phoenix".[6]

Later career

News reports have stated that Collins-Rector was a silent partner in the MMORPG service company IGE, which was founded by ex-DEN VP Brock Pierce - who is now chairman of the Bitcoin Foundation.[5][14] IGE initially used an address in the city of Marbella, Spain, where Collins-Rector, Shackley and Pierce shared a villa until it was raided by Interpol in 2002.[15][16]

[17. wiki: Brock Pierce]:

Brock Pierce (born November 14, 1980) is an American entrepreneur known for his work in the cryptocurrency industry and former child actor. As a child actor, he was in Disney films The Mighty Ducks (1992), D2: The Mighty Ducks (1994) and First Kid (1996).

Acting career

Pierce was born in Minnesota, and appeared in commercials as a toddler.[1] His first major role was playing a young Gordon Bombay in The Mighty Ducks (1992). Pierce reprised the role in D2: The Mighty Ducks. He starred as Luke Davenport in First Kid (1996). Pierce had small roles in Little Big League (1994), Ripper Man (1995), Problem Child 3 (1995), Three Wishes (1995), and Earth Minus Zero (1996).

Digital Entertainment Network

Pierce retired from acting at 17 and joined as a minor partner with Marc Collins-Rector and Chad Schackley in establishing Digital Entertainment Network (DEN), which succeeded in raising $88 million in venture capital.[2] He produced its first show, a pilot for gay teenagers called Chad's World.[3] Pierce began enjoying a lavish lifestyle in Los Angeles riding the Dot-com bubble. As an 18 year old, Pierce was making $250,000 a year and held 1% of the company's shares.[4] Within three years, DEN, never having made a profit and having exhausted its venture capital, collapsed and Pierce fled the U.S. with his two co-founders when a number of former underage DEN employees made sexual misconduct allegations against them.[5][6] The three were arrested by Spanish police before being returned to the US. Though Pierce was not ultimately charged, his partner Collins-Rector was convicted on multiple counts of child enticement involving boys.[6][7]

[18. wiki: Digital Entertainment Network]:

Digital Entertainment Network (often stylized as DEN or >EN) was a multimedia dot-com company[1] founded in the late-1990s by Marc Collins-Rector and his partner, Chad Shackley. Rector and Shackley had sold their ISP, Concentric Network, and used the proceeds of that sale, along with additional investor funding, to launch DEN.[2] In February 1999, Jim Ritts resigned as commissioner of the LPGA to become chairman of DEN.[3]

DEN's goal was to deliver original episodic video content over the Internet aimed at niche audiences.[4] DEN was one of a crop of dot-com startups that focused on the creation and delivery of original video content online in the late 1990s[5] prior to wide adoption of broadband internet access.

In May 1999, DEN announced that their business model had earned them $26 million USD in investments from Microsoft, Dell, Chase Capital Partners, and others.[6] In September 1999, Microsoft announced that DEN was one of their partners in the Windows Media Broadband Jumpstart initiative, focusing on the creation of video and audio entertainment for the Windows Media format for high-speed connections[7]. By 1999, the company was reportedly valued at $58,500,000 USD and included former Walt Disney Television President David Neuman, Garth Ancier, David Geffen, Gary Goddard, and Bryan Singer as investors.[8][9][10]

DEN was slated for a $75 million USD IPO in October 1999 but the IPO was withdrawn[11] in the wake of allegations of sexual assault against Collins-Rector, Shackley, and fellow executive Brock Pierce. All three executives subsequently resigned.[2] Layoffs followed in February 2000[12]. While a new executive team led by former Capitol Records President Gary Gersh[11] and former Microsoft executive Greg Carpenter[13] tried to salvage the company and relaunch in May 2000[14], DEN filed for bankruptcy and shut down in June 2000.[15][16]

Continued ahead in comment 7...