On October 14, 2025, anti-Scientologist and professional harasser Lara Anderson took to YouTube to announce that her boss had viewed online posts of her own drug abuse and debauchery, and immediately fired her.
“Harassment itself is a criminal matter,” Barnes-Ross announces with grim clarity. “If you are a victim of a crime, it’s not you that sues the perpetrator, it’s the state.”
Within hours of an attack on hundreds of worshippers in a Michigan Latter-day Saints Church, Barnes-Ross published an inflammatory post attacking the Church and its members.
Rivas is an unemployed anti-Scientologist who spends her days alongside felons and ex-convicts stalking, harassing and hurling epithets at members of the community.
Virtually everyone in Barnes-Ross’ life besides his circle of criminal associates have distanced themselves from him as a result of his deviant conduct.
Mondros’ prized “source” brings yet more to the table: a long, well-documented history of mocking and shaming survivors of rape, sexual assault and exploitation.