A notorious YouTuber linked to the alt-right shared sexualised images of underage girls during a shocking livestream watched by thousands of people.

Last week Andy Warski, an internet personality regularly accused of sexism and racism, hosted an online event on YouTube designed to expose a ‘paedophile ring’, during which he published photographs of children aged under-16 in provocative poses.

The video has now been deleted after viewers began to claim it suggested Warski had gathered and distributed child pornography – an accusation which he emphatically denied.

He insisted the images he shared were ‘creepy’ rather than illegal – and said he has never looked at or downloaded ‘nudes’ featuring children.




The stream provoked a storm this week in the nether regions of the internet among communities populated by trolls, Nazis, gamers and the alt-right.

In the video, Warksi spent three hours presenting and discussing his own research which found that girls who described themselves as being under 16 were selling naked pictures of themselves on Instagram.

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This ‘investigation’ saw him collect images showing children in provocative poses and expose the identities of men in a ‘child porn ring’ who collected and discussed these vile photos on private chat rooms.

The pictures he shared on YouTube were posted publicly on Instagram by underage girls with usernames too sexually extreme to print and were been edited in some way to make sure they don’t trigger the photo site’s nudity filters.

They are designed to entice paedophiles into contacting the girls via DM and paying for illegal nudes.

In his deleted stream, Warksi shared an image of a seemingly underage girl’s cleavage take from one of these public Instagram profiles with the see-no-evil and speak-no-evil monkey emojis placed in front of them.

The Youtuber also uploaded a picture of a girl who posed topless but had edited the images with images of cherubs to mask her breasts.

He reported all the public Instagram accounts that appeared to be offering illegal nudes.

An image of Warski as he appeared on his YouTube live stream

He is also heard passing photos over to co-host Ethan Ralph, owner of online news site The Ralph Retort, and discussing whether they were suitable to be shown on screen.

‘Ralph, I’m going to open up my screen share for you,’ Warski said.

‘I’m not going to show the audience yet so you can tell me if these are, you know.

‘Do you think this should be allowed on the show?’

Ralph replied: ‘Lemme see, lemme look.

‘I don’t know. It looks.. I don’t know.’

Andy Warski earns money from tips given to him by followers (Photo Twitter/ Andywarski)

‘Can I show this?’ Warski asked later in the video after sending another photo.

‘It’s so hard to tell. This person, she is 15.’

He then sent the picture to Ralph, who replied: ‘Let me see… ugh.’

The vagueness of this conversation led viewers to speculate that the pair had been looking at and discussing illegal images.

We wrote to Warksi and he sent us a Twitter DM which said: ‘We did not have [illegal] images of underage girls.



‘That was Instagram public accounts.

‘The things I didn’t want to show [and which were sent to Ralph] were in those Instagrams and were just creepy images.

‘I would never have any nudity of underage girls on my comp.

‘I ai t redicukous [sic].’

He said people had posted suggestively edited versions of his live stream on ‘message boards’ to falsely suggest he had a folder of illegal child pornography on his computer, which he was viewing and sharing with Ethan Ralph during the stream.

During the stream, he is shown opening a folder and then quickly closing again, suggesting there were images inside he did want to be shown on the livestream.

‘People are trying to frame us but we don’t play with illegal activities,’ he said,

The aim of his show was to expose a ‘child porn ring’ of men who pay kids under 16 years of age to send them illegal pornographic images of themselves.

These perverts use pseudonyms like Loli Lord, referring to the book Lolita, but often give away their identities by inadvertently handing over personal information to the chatroom websites in which they share the illegal images.

Warski revealed the names of several of these men during the stream, who rushed to delete the identifying data ‘in real time’ as the video unfolded.

Warski said an unnamed female researcher gathered a folder of images which proves the identity of these men but also contains some of the illegal child porn photos they shared has now been sent to the FBI.


He denied ever receiving the illegal images contained in this folder.

‘I made sure NOTHING disgusting was sent to me because I know it’s illegal and it’s disgusting in the first place,’ he insisted.

‘Two detectives are talking to some people today and I am glad that circle of people are being taken down.’

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Although he has denied being part of the alt-right, many of Warski’s fans are known to be members of his hard-right online movement and others are believed to be actual Nazis.

The YouTuber has the nickname RaceWarSki, which refers to extreme right-wingers’ belief that the US is doomed to be torn apart by a devastating ethnic conflict.

He hosted white nationalist Richard Spencer – star of the ‘Punch a Nazi’ meme – on a live stream in January 2018 and has been described as a ‘megaphone’ for the alt-right.

During Warski’s live streams, viewers pay him tips and he can earn hundreds or even thousands of dollars.