

BBC Panorama
The meeting between the speaker of Planner Berton and Sam Wall lasted less than a minute. After attending one of his workshops and then shining in a video, he left a brilliant witness, making a picture of himself for a picture.
Brad says it wasn’t interesting. “Only one of the thousands of people I should have seen in these years.
Two years later, he began to attack online.
In hundreds of posts, Wall described it as a modester, psychotherapy and a social painkiller. Day by day, he accused him of threatening to kill, break his windows and kill his cat – all false accusations.
“He put him on social media in all the platforms. He painted a picture of somewhere on the way. I had done all these things and tried to cover it,” Brad told the BBC.
“How do you prove a negative? That I didn’t poison my cat? Social media and its working methods are guilty until acquitted.

Wal, 55, a social media adviser, has confessed to the crime of prostitution and sending false messages to the Manchester court in November last year.
He was sentenced to a second sentence last week, but the judge told him to wait for a prison sentence.
A psychological report shows that he has a chronic mental illness.
His punishment was in connection with two victims – Brad and the merchant woman Namiparli – who were targeted with painful messages over the past four years.
“It’s just hidden, it’s really hidden, and I don’t know why it happened,” Naomi told us. “I’m still really anxious, sometimes I’m really sad.
The BBC has spoken to other victims who have been prostituted on the wall for more than 10 years.
Some of them never went back to the wall, while others knew him only as a passing acquaintance.

At that time, the wall targeted Brady, he was running a network that supported hundreds of small businesses across Britain.
Many of his violent positions were discussed in detail – one of them was 20,000 words. Some were shared in Linkedin, which had the 30,000 followers – the platform that Brad relied on to improve his work.
While the epidemic hits it hard, he says he helped to sink his work.
Wall also falsely claimed that Brad was actually harassed for 10 years – and was arrested and imprisoned.
Brad posted a picture of himself online to prove that he was not in prison. Wal replied and claimed that Brad’s mental twins took the pictures and appeared on occasions to cover the fact that he was locked.
His friend Alan Price knew that Wall had lied about the 10-year request because he introduced him in the workshop two years earlier.
“He tells everyone that Brad Berton is in prison, but I was actually outside in Bernahm-On-Ci in Somerset where he had worked,” he said.
In an attempt to stop him, Brad went to a lawyer who advised him to send a standing letter. Wal then replied by publishing the letter online, saying he could file a complaint – but he had no money.

Technology consultant Naomi Timparley had only seen the wall on a passing on the wall – he followed him on Twitter and contacted him at Linkedin. Hundreds of messages were also targeted – accused of harming crime, destroying wallions and attaching others to the so-called gang-stal.
Wal also has also falsely claimed that Naomi was arrested for harassment.
“I have been attacked on Instagram, Twitter, Linkedin and Facebook, and I have been accused of really wicking something,” Naomi told us.
Wall continued on online attacks even after being accused of prostitution.
Justin Wright, the employer based in Manchester, has been targeted in ten years. He had built a wall for a couple of months and when the wol left, Stalking online began.
Justin is a shopping consultant and the Wal has repeatedly targeted his own clinics – big companies – with false claims. Justin had never seen Brady, but Wall accused him of conspiring with him to poison his cat.
Rory Ins, the executive director of the cyber aid line, a charity that helps the victims of online crime, says people may be surprised by the number of victims and the wall has not worn their identity.
But he says this is common and normal.
“This is a terrible case and he harms many people and change their lives. But this happens to hundreds of thousands every year.
Panorama has spoken to other victims who do not want to be given identity cards. One says he has been prostituted for more than a decade, during which the Wall has sent thousands of texts, with 10,000-word emails for his friends and business relationships.
Wal also appears to be portrayed as his wife, and accused him of family rape.
All the victims have complained to social media companies about the posts, but have not been dropped.
Social Media Lawyer Paul Tuide told Panorama that the companies had not been able to help them.
“They decide what to take down, they decide when to be down and how to be down. They say, when you ask them, when you abide by the law,” he said.
Linkdein says he cannot comment on individual users, but does not allow harassment and harassment and has taken action against anything that has violated his policies. Instagram, Facebook and X did not respond to Panorama’s request to comment.
None of the companies had dropped the bad messages of the Wall, although Panorama told them two months ago.
Last week, he published another message of evil about Brad.

The charity cyber aid line estimates that 600,000 people talk about prostitution online for police annually. Another charity, Suzi Lamplug Trust, says less than 2 percent of the suspension complaints and harassment of punishment ends.
A major review by police last year showed that the lack of understanding of online prostitution and evidence that the police did not take seriously.
Advice for the victims of Stalking online – Don’t participate, store the records and report to the police. But the people who spoke to Panorama did that, and that insult continued.
Brad and Naomi were unhappy with the response he received from the Great Manchester City (GMP).
Roy Ines says the results are really bad for the victims.
“They actually end up with investigations,” he said. “And when a study occurs, the technological element can mean that it takes years to reach the point where the evidence is viewed.
A spokesman for GMP says the delay in the judicial system has affected the Walk case and the force received positive results last year for more than 3,000 victims.
We contacted the Wall for a statement, but he didn’t answer.
In the meantime, Brad says he will forgive him. “I hope he will get the help he needs and will find peace in his life,” he said.