Bombshell Lawsuit Against Pornhub Details Accusations Of Rape, Sexual Exploitation Of Children

A bombshell lawsuit filed Thursday against Pornhub and its parent company MindGeek accuses the adult website of hosting — and profiting off of — videos depicting rape and the sexual exploitation of children.

Thirty-four women have joined the civil suit, accusing MindGeekn of running a “criminal enterprise.”

“MindGeek is the most dominant online pornography company in the world. It is also one of the largest human trafficking ventures in the world. And it is likely the largest non-regulatory repository of child pornography in North America and well beyond,” the lawsuit asserts.

The lawsuit emphasizes that the case against MindGeek is not about porn, but child exploitation, rape, and coercion.

“This is a case about rape, not pornography,” it reads. “It is a case about the rape and sexual exploitation of children. It is a case about the rape and sexual exploitation of men and women. And it is a case about each of these defendants knowingly and intentionally electing to capitalize and profit from the horrendous exploitation and abuse of tens of thousands of other human beings so they could make more than the enormous sums of money they would have otherwise made anyway.”

As noted by CBS News, MindGeek owns and operates more than 100 pornographic websites, including highly-trafficked sites like Pornhub, RedTube, YouPorn, and Xtube. “MindGeek also owns porn production companies that create content, but for years, a majority of the content on Pornhub was uploaded by unverified users. MindGeek operates some paid-subscription sites, but Pornhub is free for anyone to access and earns money through advertising revenue and optional, premium subscriptions.”

“The online porn industry has essentially been the Red Light District of commerce,” said Michael Bowe, who’s representing the dozens of women fighting back against MindGeek. “This new industry of online porn, for the last 10 years, has been allowed by law enforcement, government entities, to operate by a different set of rules. Basically, no rules or oversight.”

The civil case constructed by Bowe is based on racketeering laws, which CBS notes are typically used to go after mobsters and drug gangs.

Some of the victims — a group that includes women who were as young as 15 years old in videos posted to and hosted on Pornhub without their consent — joined the suit after reaching out to activist Laila Mickelwait.

Unrelenting in her pursuit against the exploitation and sex trafficking of young men and women, including minors, Mickelwait founded the Traffickinghub movement and started a petition to shut down Pornhub, which has been signed by more than 2.2 million people.

One of the underage victims, known as “Michelle,” detailed to CBS “that she was targeted at age 15 by an abuser who has since been convicted of blackmailing children to sexually abuse themselves on camera”:

She said that the videos’ uploads on Pornhub had “way, way worse” of an impact on her than even her blackmailer’s initial abuse. “It was only when my videos went on sites like Pornhub that my life started to become something that I couldn’t live out properly,” she said, adding that she stopped eating, leaving the house and once attempted suicide.

Michelle reported the videos to Pornhub during the fall of 2018 and continued flagging content for the site to take down throughout 2019. And although Pornhub took down all unverified content last year, Michele said she continues to find images of her abuse re-uploaded on other websites. She said, “Any other place I find my videos there’s some type of mention of Pornhub or where they originated from, and my name was always with them.”

Strangers continue to contact her about her videos, she said, and one man even showed up at her house, telling her that he’d found her through Pornhub.

“The spread of illegal content is an existential threat to the internet, and every platform has the moral obligation to join the fight against it,” MindGeek said in a statement concerning the suit. “Illegal material on the internet harms its victims, internet users, and all platforms that operate online. Any suggestion that the company tolerates or celebrates this material is patently false.”

It’s no secret that the porn industry is rife with abuse. Earlier this week, a San Diego schemer for porn website GirlsDoPorn was sentenced to 20 years behind bars for human trafficking.

Thirty-one-year-old Ruben Garcia, who pleaded guilty in December, forced young women to film pornographic videos and lied to them about their distribution.

“Garcia and the company’s co-owners, Michael Pratt and Matthew Wolfe, tricked young women into filming the videos by posting modeling ads and then coercing their victims into filming porn, the Justice Department said in a press release,” the New York Daily News reported. “Wolfe is still awaiting trial, Pratt fled and is on the FBI’s Most Wanted list.”

Related: GirlsDoPorn Recruiter Sentenced To 20 Years For Sex Trafficking

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