Steve thought he was meeting a teenager in a coffee shop in Surrey, B.C. to talk about his art. Then the cameras came out.
A stranger accused the 33-year-old of breaking the law. Soon, video of the confrontation was posted online by a group that claims it goes after âgoofsâ â prison slang for pedophiles. His face and name was clearly visible.
âWeâre going to put you on Facebook, weâre going to put you on YouTube, youâre going to be all over the place,â the man told him.
âIn my mind I knew I didnât do anything wrong,â Steve said later, pointing to the record of the conversation that remained on his phone. âI told him, âYou didnât catch me doing anything.ââ
W5 is not using Steveâs surname to avoid further harm to his reputation. But Steve is among the few people who have decided to take on the Creep Catchers and try to win their reputations back.
The Creep Catchers are a nationwide network of self-appointed pedophile hunters. At one point, the group had more than a dozen chapters across Canada.
The catchers chat with suspected child predators online, and lure them for a confrontation in real life which they post on social media and encourage their supporters to share.
But a W5 documentary called âCreep Outâ has found cases where confrontations of people who authored disturbing chats are posted alongside confrontations of people whose chats donât have any sexual content.
Some targets have told W5 they feared for their jobs if employers found out about the allegations. Some threatening online posts were the reason one target told W5 he feared for his safety. The documentary also explores what happened when one woman committed suicide after being shamed online.
The Surrey Creep Catcher president Ryan Laforge told Âéśš´ŤĂ˝ heâs confident heâs only getting the guilty.
âNinety per cent of our videos, they admit that they screwed up, and that theyâre sorry, or whatever. The other ten per cent run away,â he said.
In Steveâs case, the conversation began when he answered a Craigslist ad in the âstrictly platonicâ section of Craigslist, called âGood vibes only :) â w4m.â
âIâm really into art if you want to do that,â Steve writes. âBicycle adventures are fun too.â
âIâm 15. If your ok with that then letâs chill,â Bekky says.
âHey Iâm 33,â Steve responds. âIf your into doing art and going on bike rides then yeah, Iâm ok with your age.â He sends her a link to his Instagram page that shows off some of the art.
When he arrives, heâs greeted by Laforge, who asks him if he knows the age of consent. âItâs 16,â Steve says. âYou basically broke the law,â Laforge says.
The age of consent in Canada refers to sexual acts. Itâs not illegal to communicate online with a young person unless there is sexual intent.
Steve first tried to reason with Laforge, over e-mail and Facebook messenger. âI wasnât going to lure anyone underage,â Steve wrote him in October.
âBuddy ur a goof go away,â Laforge responds.
âNo, Iâm not,â Steve replies.
âYa u r goooooooooof,â Laforge responds.
This continues back and forth until Laforge stops responding. A month later, Steve writes that he will get a lawyer.
âGo f*** yourself goof,â Laforge responds.
Some targets have explored lawsuits against the Creep Catchers, but that can be expensive, because some in the group claim to have few assets.
The groupâs founder, Dawson Raymond, taunted some targets in a Facebook video, saying: âIâve been hearing rumours that some of these pedos are going to try to sue me. And I donât have any money. So pay your lawyers to sue me for money I donât have. Spend all that money to lawyer up.â
Laforge himself declared bankruptcy in 2007 and his bankruptcy trustee told W5 in February that he still has not paid off the debt that he owes.
But itâs not Laforgeâs money that Steve is after. So, through his lawyer, Steve is trying a different legal tactic to take the video of him down: filing a privacy complaint.
In a filing with B.C.âs privacy commissioner Steveâs lawyer, Craig E. Jones claimed that the Creep Catchers are being deceptive in how they advertise online, and theyâre not following B.C. rules in how they share personal information.
Heâs asked the privacy commissioner to put a stop to the Creep Catchersâ ads.
âThey canât function without placing deceptive ads. Thatâs their entire operation,â he said. âThis doesnât just attack a situation where they get it wrong, it attacks their entire organization. The whole legal landscape has shifted under their feet.â
Jones says the privacy commissioner can levy fines of up to $100,000 per privacy breach by an organization, and make orders that can be enforced by a court.
It could make a difference for Steveâs case in the long run. But right now, the Surrey Creep Catchers are pushing back against Steve.
They responded to his privacy complaint by posting it along with his video, and asking their followers to share it once again.
Supporting document: Read the complaint to the B.C. Privacy Commissioner