Austin Wilde Calls Out JustForFans Owner Dominic Ford For Continuing To Label His Alleged Rape Victims “Online Haters”
Dominic Ford, the owner of amateur porn video site JustForFans, continues to lash out against the two young men who accused him of rape and sexual assault earlier this year, and he’s once again taken to Twitter to publicly accuse his alleged victims of “being a cancer” and “having no lives.” While Ford’s tweets don’t specify whom he considers to be his “aggressive haters,” it’s possible he could be referring to both of his alleged victims (as you’ll recall, Tannor Reed and Justin Stone—two young performers who were independent contractors of Ford’s JustForFans, and who each had personal, off-camera relationships with Ford—each accused Ford of rape earlier this year).
In the below tweets, Ford wrote, “If you’re in the industry and have aggressive haters, as I do, here’s a tip. Go offline for a weekend. Be around real, and non-industry people. See how kind and genuine they are and how well they treat you. Then remember how pitiful your online haters are. They have no lives, no one actually likes them, and their power comes only from your reaction to their venom…”
Someone facing multiple rape accusations by the young men who worked for him taking to social media to complain about having “haters” is so delusional, it’s almost Trumpian. Thankfully, there were many who replied to Ford’s tweets with a reality check, most notably performer/producer Austin Wilde.
Wilde correctly pointed out the accusations against Ford (and also mentioned other possible victims who are afraid to speak out due to Ford’s lawsuit threats), and told him that he was “part of the problem in this industry”:
Others who replied to Ford’s tweets suggested that maybe he has “haters” because he’s been accused of rape. Twitter user Conner Bradley wrote, “Maybe if you didn’t do that, people wouldn’t hate you.”
Twitter user WiglessGay put it succinctly, “Ain’t you got rape allegations”?
And finally, while not a reply to Ford’s tweets, alleged victim Justin Stone posted last night that he was being “sued for mental anguish against my abuser. My rapist. Let that sink in.” (Stone is referring to Ford’s pending defamation suit against him.)
Dominic Ford has faced increased scrutiny in the months following the rape accusations, first when he claimed he’d be “exploring a legal response” to Tannor Reed’s “defamatory allegations” (after six months, Ford has not filed any defamation lawsuit against Reed that Str8Up can find), and then when Ford hired Marc Randazza—a defender of neo-Nazis who’s known as an “attorney-to-the-trolls”—to sue Stone for defamation. Then, just last week, Ford was seen with another one of his company’s young independent contractors, performer Brent Everett, in multiple sex videos that Ford posted online.
In Str8Up’s report on Ford’s disturbing public relationship with Everett (yet another one of Ford’s young independent contractors), I wrote that Ford repeatedly having sex with young men who are financially dependent upon his company is ethically abhorrent, predatory, and pathetic. I also shared my belief that if Ford is unable to operate his business without becoming emotionally and sexually involved with the young men he pays, there will only continue to be more allegations against him. After the article was published, Ford took to Twitter to falsely accuse me of “creating a narrative in which [Ford] took advantage of someone”:
The Dominic Ford narrative that exists—facing at least two rape allegations from young men who worked for his company, hiring a neo-Nazi defending lawyer to represent him, having for-profit sex on video with multiple young and emotionally vulnerable men who work for his company—is a narrative that’s been created solely by the behavior (and alleged behavior) of Dominic Ford himself. Has he looked at his own tweets? His own sex videos? His own lawsuits? (You know, the ones filed by the neo-Nazi lawyer that he pays.) The “trash” that Dominic Ford is so sickened by is just his own day-to-day life.