See verified streamer incidents, platform bans, and real-world consequences
Streamers command massive audiences and influence millions of followers daily. When they behave badly—especially toward vulnerable people like elderly passengers on public transit—the consequences matter. This tracker documents verified incidents of streamer misconduct with evidence: police reports, platform enforcement actions, news coverage, and legal outcomes.
Unlike social media rumors, every incident here includes source documentation and status updates. See which platforms took action, which streamers faced legal charges, and what actually changed as a result.
Search by streamer name, platform, incident type, or date to find accountability records and understand the real consequences of toxic behavior.
Streaming platforms host billions of hours of content daily, and while most creators are responsible, misconduct happens. Unfortunately, platform enforcement is inconsistent, rumors spread faster than facts, and consequences aren't always visible or enforced fairly. This tracker exists to create public accountability by collecting verified incidents with documented sources.
Every incident here includes citations: news articles, police records, platform enforcement announcements, or legal filings. We distinguish between verified incidents and unconfirmed claims. When sources are updated (appeals filed, charges dropped, bans lifted), we update the record.
Search by Streamer Name: Type a username or real name to see if they have documented incidents.
Filter by Incident Type: Find incidents matching specific behaviors (harassment, assault, fraud, etc.).
Check Consequences: See what actually happened—was there a ban, legal charge, sponsor loss, or other outcome?
Review Sources: Every incident links to news coverage, police reports, or platform statements. Verify the details yourself.
Track Status: Incidents show current status: Active Investigation, Resolved, Pending Legal action, or Appeals filed.
We only include incidents with at least one of these sources:
• Police reports or court filings (public record)
• News coverage from established outlets
• Official platform enforcement announcements (Twitch, YouTube, etc.)
• Video evidence with verified metadata and independent corroboration
• Legal documents or civil suits with case numbers
We do NOT include:
• Unverified TikTok allegations or Twitter rumors
• Screenshots without context or date verification
• Anonymous allegations without documentation
• Disputed claims from either party without third-party verification
This tracker is crowdsourced and community-verified. When incidents are updated (charges dropped, bans lifted, new evidence emerges), we update the record with dates and new sources. All updates are timestamped.
Found an error? All incidents include a 'Report Issue' link where you can submit corrections with documentation. We review submissions and update within 48 hours if verified.
The goal isn't punishment—it's transparency. These records exist so audiences know their creators' histories, platforms enforce policies consistently, and accountability actually means something.
Quick answers to common questions