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Posts tonen met het label torture. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label torture. Alle posts tonen

zondag 4 januari 2026

Free Mini: Rescued baby monkey escapes exploitation and returns to the wild: What is the truth behind baby monkey torture online? How to report it


How to report animal cruelty | SMACC  Please report if you see any online monkey torture

Mini, a long-tailed macaque, was rescued after the BBC Eye investigation, The Monkey Haters, that exposed a global online monkey-torture ring. Now Free Mini, a new short documentary from the BBC World Service, traces her release into the wild.


As a baby, Mini was taken from the forest, her mother killed. Mini was sold to a YouTuber. Her owner tortured her and filmed it for sadistic customers mainly in the US and the UK. In private Telegram groups they were brainstorming and crowdfunding the torture videos. According to the man who ran one of the groups and called himself the Torture King, Mini was a “sadistic trophy”: “Mini was so popular in this hatred world… [when] you think old movie stars, female Marilyn Monroes, in this little demented circle of ours, that was Mini.”

Rebecca Henschke – who had spent over a year tracking down Mini and her torturers uncovered in the BBC Eye investigation, The Monkey Haters – went along for Mini’s release back to the wild. “When I first saw tiny vulnerable baby Mini being abused in videos online, I became obsessed with finding her and seeing her go free. It was amazing and emotional to see her go boldly and curiously into the wild with an adopted family that will look after her in the wild.”

Femke De Haas, the founder of the Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN), who has successfully released hundreds of ex-captive and abused long-tail macaques, says: “If we would have any doubts about her being ready to be released – Mini or any of her family members – we would not bring them to the forest. They underwent… a very long process of rehabilitation, different stages. We observe every detail of this process, and they are ready to be an independent long-tailed macaque back in the forest where they belong.”

In the US, nine of the key players of the online torture ring have pleaded guilty or been sentenced. Two women, who were key players in the UK, have pleaded guilty and are due to be sentenced in the UK.

The BBC Eye investigation also lead to legal changes in the UK, obliging social-media firms to remove online animal cruelty content from their platforms.

The short documentary, Free Mini, is available for viewing on BBC iPlayer in the UK and internationally via the BBC World Service YouTube channel. The content is available on the BBC News website – via bbc.co.uk in the UK, and internationally – on BBC.com, BBC Studios global digital news platform; and in Indonesian via BBC News Indonesia.

To watch the BBC Eye investigation, The Monkey Haters, follow this link - https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct5j1p.

A year-long BBC investigation has uncovered a sadistic global monkey torture ring stretching from Indonesia to the United States.

The World Service found hundreds of customers in the US, UK and elsewhere paying Indonesians to torture and kill baby long-tailed macaques on film.

The torture ring began life on YouTube, before moving to private groups on the encrypted messaging app Telegram.

Police are now pursuing the buyers and several arrests have already been made.

BBC journalists went undercover in one of the main Telegram torture groups, where hundreds of people gathered to come up with extreme torture ideas and commission people in Indonesia and other Asian countries to carry them out.

The sadists’ goal was to create bespoke films in which baby long-tailed macaque monkeys were abused, tortured and sometimes then killed on film.

The BBC tracked down both the torturers in Indonesia, and distributors and buyers in the US, and gained access to an international law enforcement effort to bring them to justice.

At least 20 people are now under investigation globally, including three women living in the UK who were arrested by police last year and released under investigation, and one man in the US state of Oregon who was indicted last week.

Mike McCartney, a key video distributor in the US known by his screen name, “The Torture King”, agreed to speak to the BBC – and described the moment he joined his first Telegram monkey torture group.

“They had a poll set up,” McCartney said. “Do you want a hammer involved? Do you want pliers involved? Do you want a screwdriver?” The resulting video was “the most grotesque thing I have ever seen,” he said.

The Torture King at home in Virginia. "It went from baby bottle teasing to fingers being snipped off," he said.

IMAGE SOURCE,JOEL GUNTER/BBC

Image caption,

"The Torture King" at home in Virginia. "It went from baby bottle teasing to fingers being snipped off," he said

McCartney, a former motorcycle gang member who spent time in prison before entering the monkey torture world, ended up running several Telegram groups in which hardcore torture enthusiasts distributed videos.

“It’s no different than drug money,” he said. “Drug money comes from dirty hands, this money comes from bloody hands.”

The BBC also identified two other key suspects who are now being investigated by the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) – Stacey Storey, a grandmother in her 40s from Alabama who was known in the community as “Sadistic”, and a ringleader known as “Mr Ape” – whose real name we cannot reveal for safety reasons.

“Mr Ape” confessed in an interview with the BBC that he had been responsible for the deaths of at least four monkeys and the torture of many more. He had commissioned “extremely brutal” videos, he said.

Storey’s phone was seized by Department of Homeland Security agents, who found nearly 100 torture videos, as well as evidence that she had paid for the creation of some of the most extreme videos produced.

According to police sources, Storey was active in a torture group as recently as earlier this month. Approached by the BBC in Alabama in January, Storey claimed that she had been hacked and declined to comment on the allegations in detail.

"I remember the face of every monkey and how they died," said Mr Ape

IMAGE SOURCE,ED OU/BBC

Image caption,

"I remember the face of every monkey and how they died," said Mr Ape

“Mr Ape”, Stacey Storey and Mike McCartney are three of five key targets in the ongoing Homeland Security investigation. They have yet to be charged, but could face up to seven years in prison if prosecuted based on evidence gathered by the DHS.

Special Agent Paul Wolpert, who is leading the DHS investigation, said everyone involved from law enforcement had been deeply shocked by the nature of the alleged crimes.

“I don’t know if anybody would ever be ready for a crime like this,” he said. “The same with the attorneys and the juries, and anybody who reads that this is going on. It is going to be a shocker I think.”

Anybody involved in buying or distributing the monkey torture videos should “expect a knock on the door at some point”, Agent Wolpert said. “You are not going to get away with it.”

Police in Indonesia have arrested two torture suspects. Asep Yadi Nurul Hikmah was charged with animal torture and the sale of a protected species, and sentenced to three years in prison. M Ajis Rasjana was sentenced to eight months – the maximum sentence available for torturing an animal.

Police in Indonesia detain Asep Yadi Nurul Hikmah, who was among the most brutal torturers.
Image caption,Police in Indonesia detain Asep Yadi Nurul Hikmah, who was among the most brutal torturers.

Monkey torture videos are still easily accessible on Telegram and now Facebook, where the BBC recently found dozens of groups sharing extreme content, some with more than 1,000 members.

“We’ve seen an escalation in this extreme, graphic content, which used to be hidden but is now circulating openly on platforms like Facebook,” said Sarah Kite, co-founder of animal charity Action for Primates.

Facebook told the BBC it had removed the groups we brought to the company’s attention. “We don’t allow the promotion of animal abuse on our platforms and we remove this content when we become aware of it, like we did in this case,” a spokesperson said.

Ms Kite also called for UK laws to be updated to make it easier to prosecute individuals who pay for torture videos to be made. “If someone is proactively involved in inflicting that pain by paying for it and providing a list of things they want done to the animal, there should be stronger laws to hold them to account,” she said.

YouTube told the BBC in a statement that animal abuse had “no place” on the platform and the company was “working hard to quickly remove violative content”.

“Just this year alone, we’ve removed hundreds of thousands of videos and terminated thousands of channels for violating our violent and graphic policies,” the statement said.

Telegram said it was “committed to protecting user privacy and human rights such as freedom of speech”, adding that its moderators “cannot proactively patrol private groups”.

Need help to report? email me and I can send you information

eevanderploeg@gmail.com



woensdag 22 oktober 2025

Four years cell for selling videos, which were shared online on Telegram showed baby monkeys being crushed, burned, drowned, suffocated, impaled and mutilated.

 

A still image of a baby long-tailed macaque, which prosecutors say is from a torture video.  

Man sentenced for 'animal crush' videos of baby monkeys he bought, shared on Telegram


The videos, which were shared online, showed baby monkeys being crushed, burned, drowned, suffocated, impaled and mutilated.

A federal judge in Cincinnati on Sept. 30 said the videos were among the most horrific things she had heard about in three decades on the bench.

“I'm sorry I even know what they are,” US District Judge Susan Dlott said at a sentencing for a man who paid more than $1,200 for multiple videos – and even made requests about what acts of torture he wanted to see.

The man, 39-year-old Giancarlo Morelli, a car salesman from New Jersey, was one of  multiple people charged locally  last year in connection with the videos.

Dlott sentenced Morelli, who was accused of conspiracy to distribute animal crush videos, to four years in prison and ordered him to pay a $25,000 fine.

The videos are illegal under a 2010 federal law that criminalizes so-called animal crush videos.

A second defendant, 28-year-old Nicholas Dryden of Cincinnati's English Woods neighborhood, attempted to plead guilty on Sept. 30, but Dlott rejected the plea.

Dlott didn't fully explain her decision. Dryden faced a maximum of 12 years in prison, but the plea agreement called for a seven-year sentence. Dlott indicated that she wanted to impose a sentence longer than seven years.

Prosecutors say Dryden paid a 17-year-old boy in Indonesia to create videos showing the torture. The monkeys in the videos were baby or juvenile long-tailed macaques.

Best customer of animal crush videos

Prosecutors described Morelli – who on the messaging app Telegram called himself “Lord CmdrGC” – as Dryden's best customer.

Morelli participated in numerous Telegram chats in which people shared videos and talked about acts of torture they wanted to see. One group had more than 400 members, court documents say.

Morelli's requests, according to prosecutors, led Dryden to ask the Indonesian boy to find a baby monkey and create a video that is described in court documents.

In that 30-minute video, the baby monkey is first fed pieces of a banana. The person recording the video eventually kicks the monkey, then bends and twists its arms, “appearing to break them,” the documents say. The monkey can be seen trying to crawl across the floor “in obvious pain.”

The monkey's genitals are burned with a candle, and it is placed in a cage with a mongoose, which attacks it. The videographer then breaks the monkey's legs before throwing it against a wall and the floor.

Prosecutors say Morelli paid for that video and only stopped buying videos from Dryden after Dryden was arrested.

He beats it to death

In one Telegram exchange about a video, Dryden says, “He beats it to death and cuts its (genitals) off.”

Morelli's response: “Yes finally!”

Prosecutors noted that Morelli also funneled money to others, who would then obtain videos for the Telegram group.

At the Sept. 30 sentencing, Morelli, wearing a gray suit, read a statement, apologizing for what he did. Although sober now, Morelli said a heroin addiction that he hid from his wife and child was at least partly to blame.

“All God's creatures should be respected and cared for,” he told Dlott, adding: “I am extremely sorry for my actions, and the harm brought to these animals.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for Telegram said: "Any content that encourages violence is explicitly forbidden by Telegram's terms of service and is removed whenever discovered. Moderators empowered with custom AI tools proactively monitor public parts of the platform and accept reports in order to remove millions of pieces of harmful content each day, including animal abuse content."

zondag 24 augustus 2025

Natalie Herron in Scotland sentenced for 2 years and 3 months prison for taking part in global monkey torture video's with unbelievable suffering of baby monkeys

 Woman in Scotland jailed in baby monkey torture case

https://actionforprimates.org/

Captive infant long-tailed macaque in Indonesia; Action for Primates
Captive infant long-tailed macaque in Indonesia
Action for Primates

Natalie Herron in Scotland, has been sentenced to two years and three months at Airdrie Sheriff Court today for her part in a global monkey torture ring that paid for and ordered baby monkeys to be sadistically tortured and killed in Indonesia, to create videos to be circulated online.

The sentence has been welcomed by Action for Primates and Lady Freethinker, who have spent four years investigating the sadistic world of online monkey torture groups. The conviction is part of an international crackdown by law enforcement agencies in the UK and the USA against those people who facilitate the torture of baby monkeys. Several people in the UK and USA are already serving or have served prison sentences.

Herron was a member of the same monkey torture group as two women from England—Adriane Orme and Holly LeGresley—who were both sent to prison in November 2024 (https://www.westmercia.police.uk/news/west-mercia/news/2024/november/women-jailed-for-monkey-torture-offences/). The group was run by Michael Macartney, who called himself the "Torture King". Macartney is currently serving three years and four months in prison in the USA for conspiring to make and distribute "animal crush" videos. He ran several online Telegram groups that facilitated the torture, murder and sexually sadistic mutilation of baby long-tailed macaques as 'entertainment'. Several other members of the group are also serving time in US jails.

In the group on Telegram, Herron shared videos depicting the torture and abuse of baby monkeys, and enthusiastically discussed her enjoyment at watching horrific and disturbing videos in which monkeys suffered unimaginable agony and distress. These videos included placing an infant into a food blender; sealing an infant inside a jar with red ants; gouging out the eyes of an infant; and wrapping an infant tightly in sticky plaster in the shape of a ball, who was then kicked around. Examples of comments posted by Herron include:

  • Or watch them be blitzed in blenders and scalped, dicks cut off, set alight. If only my family and friends knew they'd never look at me the same again lol.
  • Torch its whole face off until it's just skull and melting skin haha.
  • We finally got our ants in a jar. Phenomenal!
  • Haven't you seen the video where they cellotape it into a ball? It's awesome.

Along with LeGresley, Herron was also involved in organising a poll amongst group members to suggest and then vote on which method of torture they wanted to see inflicted upon a monkey in the next video they were funding. The choices included sealing a monkey inside a jar with red ants, applying a painful substance to the wounds created by a cheese grater or gluing together various parts of a monkey's body.

Sarah Kite, co-founder and spokesperson for Action for Primates, stated: We welcome the sentence given to Herron and are extremely grateful to UK law enforcement for continuing to track down and bring to justice these sadistic and depraved people involved in online monkey torture groups. The perverted 'enjoyment' Herron and others obtained from facilitating and watching baby monkeys being abused and brutalised in the most sickening and horrifying ways shows a level of depravity that must never be tolerated.

Nina Jackel, Founder, Lady Freethinker, stated: The suffering endured by helpless, infant monkeys for online videos is heartbreaking, and the brutal nature of these acts is sickening. The perpetrators involved in the creation, funding, or sharing of animal torture content for human 'amusement' must be held accountable.

Members of these online torture groups are primarily active on platforms such as Telegram and get 'pleasure' from watching helpless and vulnerable infant monkeys in terror and pain, fighting for their lives. The extreme cruelty inflicted upon the baby monkeys included being set alight; having parts of their body cut off, including limbs, genitals, fingers and toes; their bones broken with a hammer; their heads squeezed in a clamp; beaten viciously; and having their eyes drilled out with a power tool.

The evidence obtained during the investigations by Action for Primates and Lady Freethinker has been given to various law enforcement agencies and spurred the BBC investigation and documentary about online monkey torture gangs—The Monkey Haters—which helped lead to the inclusion of animal cruelty in the UK Online Safety Act (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-65951188 and https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-65951188).

Disturbingly, many graphic and violent videos paid for by members in Telegram groups—depicting extreme violence and sexual abuse inflicted upon baby monkeys, including genital mutilation—have appeared on mainstream social media platforms such as Facebook.

https://actionforprimates.org/

zondag 6 juli 2025

A CNN investigation has uncovered rise in cat torture videos made in China where a global demand for this horrific cruelty is growing daily

 


A CNN investigation has uncovered a disturbing rise in cat torture videos made in China and shared online. These violent videos are part of a dark global market aimed at people who enjoy watching animals suffer.

The investigation reveals how weak animal protection laws, poor online moderation, and global demand have created a dangerous and growing problem.

Over several months, CNN infiltrated secret online communities that share these videos. The reporters discovered that many of the videos are created in countries with little to no protection for animals. These videos are then sold or traded through international networks.

CNN’s Ivan Watson spoke with animal rights activists and online investigators who are working to expose and shut down these torture networks.

Feline Guardians

Animal rights group Feline Guardians reported a shocking 500% increase in cat torture videos produced in China in less than a year.

In June 2024, a new video was uploaded every 14 hours. By February 2025, the number had increased to one every 2 hours and 38 minutes.

In just the first two months of 2025, over 500 new videos were uploaded. These videos showed more than 300 cats being tortured and killed.

Criminologist Jenny Edwards explained that some people make or watch these videos due to “sexual sadism,” a mental disorder where people enjoy the pain of others.

CNN also interviewed a man who admitted to buying these videos. He called it “a fetish I can’t quit.” He explained that he often searched for more extreme scenes and even asked the video creators to perform specific acts of abuse.

These requests show how dangerous and organized this market is. People are not just watching; they are ordering cruelty like a product.

Activists threatened by abusers

The people trying to stop this network face serious risks. Activists working with Feline Guardians often choose to remain anonymous to protect themselves.


Photo of Laura

One volunteer, known only as Laura, told CNN that she hides her identity for safety reasons. She said many of the people making or buying these videos are part of hidden communities, and exposing them can lead to threats or worse.

These activists often track the creators, collect evidence, and report them to authorities or social media platforms.

The videos are usually shared on encrypted apps like Telegram, where it is hard for outsiders or police to find them.

However, they also appear on public platforms like Facebook, YouTube, and X (formerly Twitter), where children and other users can easily come across them. This raises serious concerns about online safety and the failure of big tech companies to remove harmful content.

Weak animal welfare laws in China

Chen, a Chinese volunteer for Feline Guardians, said the Chinese government is quick to censor political speech and pornography but rarely acts against animal cruelty. This lack of action has made China a hub for these violent videos.

While China fails to respond, other countries are starting to act. Police in the United States and Turkey have arrested people involved in creating or distributing similar content.

In these countries, animal cruelty is treated as a serious crime, especially when it involves online videos. But in China, where there are no strong laws protecting pets and companion animals, most offenders are not punished.

One Chinese university student was caught torturing over 80 stray cats. In another shocking case, a man poured boiling water over a pregnant cat.

In Hangzhou, a kitten was killed with steel blow darts. After that attack, a popular Chinese influencer asked a chilling question: “What if he shoots humans one day?”

The legal situation in China remains a big part of the problem. China only has one national law protecting wildlife, not pets or companion animals like cats and dogs.

A draft law to punish animal cruelty with jail time has been discussed, but it has not been passed. Cultural views and lack of political interest have blocked its progress. This gap in the law allows abusers to act without fear of arrest or punishment.

Animal abusers often also torture humans

The issue also goes beyond animal cruelty. Studies have shown a strong link between abuse of animals and violence against people.

The FBI in the United States has long said that many serial killers and violent criminals started their crimes by hurting animals. One famous case is Jeffrey Dahmer, who tortured animals as a child before going on to kill people.

20-year study showed that people who abuse animals are five times more likely to commit violent crimes against humans.

Another study found that 70% of animal abusers had committed other crimes, and nearly 40% had committed violent crimes. In the most extreme cases, like sexual homicide, 100% of the offenders had a history of abusing animals.

Psychologists say that these offenders often show signs of low empathy, bullying behavior, and a need for power or control. These feelings can easily shift from animals to humans.

Convicted animal abuser kills three people

In September 2023, a 32-year-old university student in Rotterdam opened fire at a hospital and a nearby house, killing three people. He had been known to police and had a 2021 conviction for animal abuse.

Another global case that highlights this risk is Luka Rocco Magnotta, a Canadian who murdered and dismembered Chinese student Jun Lin in 2012.

Before the murder, Magnotta had become known online for torturing and killing cats. He posted videos showing him suffocating and drowning kittens. Activists had warned authorities that he was a threat to humans, but no action was taken until it was too late.

Social media accountability

Social media companies are also failing. Platforms owned by Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, host the majority of online animal cruelty content. Yet only about 36% of reported content is actually removed, according to data from Feline Guardians.

This poor enforcement allows the videos to keep spreading and puts children at risk.

In response, countries like the UK and the EU are taking stronger steps. The UK’s Online Safety Act and the EU’s Digital Services Act both classify animal cruelty as illegal online content.

These laws demand better action from social media companies and allow large fines if they fail to act.

The rise in online animal torture is a serious and growing problem. Activists, lawmakers, and tech companies must work together to stop this cruelty and prevent it from spreading further.

https://www.theanimalreader.com/