Last summer, voice actor Vic Mignogna went into a booth with a few others to record audio for a video game. At one point, Mignogna asked the client, who was overseeing the session, if she was ok with his performance. When she didn’t answer right away, he followed up with: “You know the old Latin—or is it Greek? There’s an axiom that says: Silence gives consent.”
Stories about Mignogna have been circulating online for over a decade, including through the Tumblr blog Dear Vic Meggnogna, but the latest round of accusations started surfacing around mid-January of this year. Our sister site io9 spoke with more than 25 voice actors, cosplayers, industry professionals, convention employees, and former fans about their experiences with Mignogna. Many of them asked not to be named in fear of retaliation from Mignogna or his fanbase.
These, along with the testimonials circulating online, paint a picture of a 56-year-old man who aggressively hugs, grabs, touches, kisses, and propositions women — often without asking for their consent. It happens at panels, in autograph lines, at private events, and behind closed doors. His behaviour has become so known in the anime and comic convention communities that it’s more than an open secret.
“Have you heard of the missing stair analogy?” voice actor Jamie McGonnigal said. “It’s basically what happens when many folks in an industry know about a certain person, and warn everyone about that person, kind of quietly… It’s related to a missing stair in that, yeah, the stair is missing, but you tell the people that you know to skip that stair because it’s broken. The problem is, people who don’t know about that stair are bound to trip [on it]. That’s what it’s been like for upwards of 15 years. People just know about Vic.”
Vic Mignogna’s name might not ring a bell for most, but within the anime community, he’s a household name. He’s appeared in hundreds of anime shows, films, and video games since 1999, including playing the lead in 2004’s Fullmetal Alchemist.
Recently, he was heard as Broly in Funimation’s Dragon Ball Super: Broly, which made more than $42 million at the U.S. box office, an impressive feat for an anime film. It’s the latest movie in the Dragon Ball series, one of the biggest anime franchises in the world. The series even had a balloon at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade last year.
Over the course of his career, Mignogna has amassed a strong, largely youthful fanbase—including within his official fan club, the Risembool Rangers. He’s also a regular on the anime and comic convention circuit, attending on average about 30 cons per year—though that doesn’t look to be happening this year.
Accusations of improper conduct with his fans, first reported by Anime News Network, led many comic and anime conventions to rescind their invitations to Mignogna.
Entertainment group Rooster Teeth shared that Mignogna will no longer voice a character on its American anime, RWBY. Funimation, a top media company for importing and dubbing Japanese anime, announced it’s “no longer engaging” with the voice actor, following an internal investigation. io9 has viewed three of the reports that were submitted to the company.
Voice actor Charlotte (not her real name) confirmed to io9 that she shared her story with Funimation for its investigation. She relayed to io9 her experience, one which Mignogna denied in emailed responses to io9’s questions. Charlotte said that at a con in the late 2000s, she was getting ready to go to dinner with Mignogna and some other con guests and employees.
Mignogna asked if they could stop by his room first, because he wanted to show her a video, and she agreed. Because both were in relationships — Mignogna with his now ex-fiancée Michele Specht and Charlotte with her then-boyfriend — she believed the invitation was platonic.
As they watched the video, she says, Mignogna grabbed her by the arms and kissed her aggressively, including putting his tongue inside her mouth. She tried to pull away, only to have him pull her back in. She told io9 she felt scared and frozen, “like a board.” Then, things escalated. Charlotte said Mignogna backed her up to the bed and she fell down, then he got on top of her. Soon after, a friend came to check on them, and she immediately got off of the bed.
“I was saved by a door knock. I can’t say what would’ve happened [otherwise]. I don’t know if I would’ve kicked his arse, or he would’ve kept [going] and I stayed frozen,” she said. “I keep waking up in the middle of the night with that panic feeling. It’s that panic, it’s that feeling I have to do something to get him away from me.”
Since the recent allegations have surfaced, Mignogna has released two statements on Twitter. First on January 21, saying he regrets if he made his colleagues or fans feel uncomfortable.
The second statement, released on February 13, added that he’s taking time to “recommit to God and [seek] the help of a counselor.” When reached by io9 for comment Mignogna said that he has never forced himself on anyone, claiming that “any and all encounters I’ve ever had have been 100-per cent consensual.” He gave specific responses to the accusations present in this article — denying some and providing his own version of events on others.
Several people in the anime industry, speaking under the condition of anonymity, shared with io9 their experiences with the voice actor. Rachel (not her real name) recounted with io9 two experiences she says she had with Mignogna. She said the first one, which Mignogna has denied, happened at a convention in 2008. She said a relatively friendly weekend turned uncomfortable when, outside their adjacent hotel room doors, Mignogna grabbed her in a tight embrace and wouldn’t let go, even as she tried to pull away. Like Charlotte, she knew he was in a relationship. She then went into her room, which shared a door with his. That’s when the knocking started.
“I heard a slow knocking on the door that was between our two rooms. I knew it was him so I ignored it. And just after two minutes, the hotel room phone rings. And I answered it, and it was Vic. I remember he said, ‘Open the door, nobody has to know,’’” she said.
She said he continued to knock on the door, and the phone rang at least one more time, until she stepped into the bathroom and turned on the shower—sitting on the bathroom floor for up to an hour, shaking.
The second situation happened at a separate convention a couple of years later. Rachel said she had agreed to stop by his room briefly. She said he invited her to sit down on the couch in the front room of the suite, and after a brief conversation she claims he knelt in front of her and began rubbing the backs of her thighs, and said: “Let me be sweet to you.”
Rachel told io9 she then got up to leave — only for Mignogna to stand up, embrace her tightly, and press his face against hers. She tried to get out of his embrace but says he wouldn’t loosen his hold. She kept giving him reasons why he should stop, like reminding him he had a girlfriend, but he kept repeating the same line — “Let me be sweet to you” — over and over, at least five or six times, she said. Rachel says she eventually got out of his embrace and left the hotel room, and later told the con’s guest services manager about the incident (the manager confirmed to io9 that they had been told).
Mignogna acknowledged this event happened, including that he rubbed the backs of Rachel’s thighs, but said the encounter was consensual. He also said that, to his recollection, they had shared a bottle of wine, were “probably” in her room, and had kissed before she pulled away and asked that they stop, which he says he immediately agreed to and left her room. Rachel responded by denying they ever kissed and that she doesn’t recall drinking wine with him. Both she and the guest services manager separately stated she had been in Mignogna’s room.
Rachel says she did not report the incident to hotel management or to the police because she feared Mignogna would attempt to negatively impact her career. “He’s very well known in the industry — very, very powerful in our industry,” she said.
According to the guest services manager and Rachel, in apparent retaliation after his sexual advances were rebuffed, Mignogna requested that Rachel be moved to another room for their previously scheduled joint autograph signing session (Mignogna denied doing this). Rachel said she spent the two-hour session alone, as most fans were there to see him.
Voice actor Gretchen (not her real name) described to io9 how, before their first panel together at a con in the early 2010s, he grabbed her from behind and starting tickling her aggressively until she screamed at him to stop. Mignogna told io9 he did tickle her without her consent, calling it a “playful and friendly” attempt to lighten her mood.
There’s also a way Mignogna sometimes hugs women, as detailed by one voice actor and confirmed by several others who’ve experienced or witnessed it. According to the voice actor, who asked not to be named, when Mignogna greets women, sometimes he’ll grab a handful of hair so he can pull their heads back slightly, kissing their necks or whispering in their ears.
She said it can sometimes happen in public, including in front of fans, and there’s pressure to go along with it so they don’t seem like they’re making a scene. Mignogna has denied this, telling io9, “I don’t greet people that way.”
In 2014 professional cosplayer Diana (not her real name) attended what she believed was a post-convention group dinner for con guests; however, when she arrived she found it was a private dinner with Mignogna. After dinner, Mignogna walked with her to a parking area. She claims he proceeded to grab and kiss her aggressively — without her consent — before inviting her to his hotel room. Diana said she refused, reminding him that she had a partner and knew he was engaged (at the time). She proceeded to walk away to meet with friends at a nearby hotel, one that Mignogna was also staying at. He followed.
“He’s sticking next to me the whole way there. He’s trying to convince me to come into his room and spend the night with him, saying ‘It’s so hard to find someone who understands the industry and lifestyle,’ saying he’d rock my world,” she told io9. “We ended up outside of his door, and I was continuing to walk not realising it was his room, when he stopped and was like, ‘This is my room, let’s go.’”
She didn’t go.
Mignogna acknowledged this event happened but said he remembered it “very differently.” He said the two of them went out to a private dinner, after which they “mutually and consensually” kissed, and he invited her to his room. According to Mignogna, Diana responded that she wanted to, but “shouldn’t since we were both involved with someone else at the time,” after which they parted ways. Diana denied Mignogna’s version of events, saying “it wasn’t nearly as simple as he makes it seem—telling him we were both taken was not the end of it.”
Most of Mignogna’s responses to these women’s stories included some mention of how, from his viewpoint, the women seemed fine with their interactions—and even acted friendly toward him later. He mentioned that he and Diana “flirted quite a bit both times” they saw each other and noted how both Gretchen and Rachel were cordial or friendly with him during their interactions after the events took place. All three of them rejected this notion as being proof that they weren’t upset with Mignogna for his behaviour.
“I have seen him a handful of times since, always in public or work settings. He is mistaking my ‘friendliness’ for professionalism,” Gretchen said. “Vic can try to justify his actions any way he likes, but it still doesn’t make them any less inappropriate or invasive. The man has no boundaries.”
It’s easy to find proof of Mignogna’s physical closeness with fans, especially female fans. There are countless photos available online — including through the hashtags #KickVic, which has shared accusations against the voice actor, and #IStandWithVic, which later emerged as a show of support.
The photos show him hugging people, holding them in his arms, pressing his face against theirs, kissing them on the cheek. Some fans remark on their experiences with Mignogna positively and have been sharing their photos and stories in support of him. Others call their encounters with him uncomfortable and nonconsensual.
Former fan Viola Hewak told io9 that at a con in 2011, when she was 16 years old, she went to get an autograph from Mignogna — a common convention activity that fans sometimes pay for—when he unexpectedly got up and said, “I’m going to hug you!” Hewak told io9 he pulled her into an embrace, his hands sliding up and down her back and sides, and wouldn’t let go when she tried to pull away. At a 2013 con autograph signing, another former fan named Michelle Light said he kissed her intensely on the cheek right as their photo was being taken, without asking for permission first, and added that if she hadn’t moved her head she thinks he would’ve reached her mouth.
Con-goer Kelly, who asked her last name be withheld, described to io9 what happened at an anime con in 2014 when she went to get Mignogna’s autograph for a friend of hers. She wasn’t a fan, though she was familiar with his work.
“I regrettably asked for a pic with him as a way to show my friend, ‘Hey, guess who I’m with.’ After the pic, I joked, ‘Well my friend’s gonna be angry’ and then he said, ‘Oh, let’s make her really angry,’” Kelly said.
“He grabbed me into a tight embrace against his body, both arms. And it wasn’t just a light peck on cheek, it was a big kiss. I remember when he did it, I felt frozen for a second, and then felt my face turning really red in embarrassment.”
Convention staffers also discussed their own Mignogna interactions with io9. Two people who’ve worked at Phoenix Comicon (now Phoenix FanFusion) shared how staffers would sometimes alert coworkers over the radio when a certain person was entering an area. One of them described it being used for Mignogna, to make sure a particular 19-year-old female staffer wasn’t in the area. She called it “Code Vic.”
Mignogna’s contact with fans isn’t limited to autograph lines and panels. Over the past several years, especially following the success of Fullmetal Alchemist in 2004, Mignogna has cultivated a devoted fanbase online. Most notably, it’s been through the Risembool Rangers, an official Vic Mignogna fan group that was started in 2005 and is currently managed by Mignogna’s mother, Barb Myers, who goes by the name “Matriarch” when she addresses the group.
Most of the group’s activity is on a Discord chat, which is a private text and voice chat primarily for gamers, so io9 can’t independently confirm the current membership numbers. But there is an official Facebook page with about 5,500 subscribers, as well as a closed Facebook group for the Risembool Rangers with nearly 1,600 members.
One former Risembool Rangers member, Dave (not his real name), joined the group back in 2009 when he was around 11 years old. Dave described the group as “absolutely rabid,” ready to defend the voice actor against any criticism. Still, he stayed because he was a big fan of Mignogna and an aspiring voice actor. He left the group shortly after meeting Mignogna, saying he no longer considered himself a fan after their encounter. While taking a photo together at a convention in 2012, Dave said Mignogna unexpectedly grabbed him around the waist, pulled him close, and asked if he had a boyfriend. At the time, Dave was 14 years old and presented as a young woman.
“I felt violated and invalidated by my idol,” he said. “I wish that I could take it away from my memory because I can’t hear that guy’s voice without thinking about how I was a grossed-out 14-year-old kid…I love anime, and I legitimately cannot watch dubs with his voice in them.”
According to former members io9 talked to, the Risembool Rangers lean toward the younger side and are sometimes underage. Mignogna communicates with his fans through email and has given out his phone number for fans to get in touch with him. He’s held Q&A sessions with members through the private Discord chat, and attends con parties hosted by the fan club — which have included events like a 2007 Twister competition, judged by Mignogna himself, where he (dressed in a Star Wars uniform) can be seen “signing” his name on a few young women’s lower backs as they’re playing.
A January 2019 chat, shared on the group’s Facebook page, showed Mignogna denying the allegations against him, suggesting it could be connected to the recent Dragon Ball Super: Broly release, and requesting members share positive stories about him online. Since then, at least eight people io9 talked to said they’ve faced online harassment for either sharing their stories or for stating online that they support the victims.
The harassment has included pizzas being sent to a former workplace, the receiving of death threats, and a fake Twitter account being created in the name of one individual. Mignogna initially spoke out on Twitter on February 8 to condemn harassment of people criticising him. But an email shared with io9 also showed Mignogna, three days later, privately telling a fan how a certain voice actor had “turned to [be] hateful toward me.” Mignogna mentioned that person by name.
In summer 2018, as preparations were being made to record the dubbed vocals for Dragon Ball Super: Broly, two people connected to the project met with Funimation executives to suggest Mignogna be recast due to some improper conduct allegations making the rounds in the voice acting community, according to someone present at the meeting.
This person, who asked not to be named, said that Funimation later told them the company was conducting an investigation into Mignogna’s conduct — but it was inconclusive, so Mignogna was kept on the project. io9 reached out to Funimation for comment on this report, and the company referred us back to its original statement:
Following an investigation, Funimation recast Vic Mignogna in Morose Mononokean Season 2. Funimation will not be engaging Mignogna in future productions.
Mignogna told io9 that, until recently, he’s “hugged everyone who comes to my autograph sessions,” saying it’s a common activity for voice actors. But he said that he’s learned he has to change this. And over the past few weeks, Mignogna has seemingly adjusted his public behaviour — at least at conventions. He appeared at Bak-Anime 2019 in early February, one of the only conventions he’s scheduled to attend this year after a majority rescinded their invitations.
Voice actor Neil Kaplan, who was also a guest at the show, said he didn’t see Mignogna touching any guests during his autograph signing. He mostly stayed behind his table. There are also videos of Mignogna from his panels at that con, showing him tearfully apologizing for recent events, saying he got “lazy” about interpreting whether fans wanted him to hug them. But several of the people io9 talked to said it’s time for him to be out of the voice acting industry.
Voice actors and other professionals have been speaking up online, including McGonnigal, Dragon Ball co-star Monica Rial, and The Dragon Prince actor Neil Kaplan — all of whom confirmed to io9 that Mignogna’s behaviour is a problem. Specht, Mignogna’s ex-fiancée, also released a statement to io9. In her statement, she said she was not aware that he was pursuing other women during their relationship, and that she supports the people coming forward with their stories about Mignogna’s behaviour:
My 12-year relationship [and] engagement to Vic Mignogna ended in May 2018. Very soon after, information about Vic’s previously unknown behaviour began to surface, and has continued to do so over the last several months — each revelation more shocking and painful than the previous, spanning the entirety of our time together. I have had to face the reality that the loving, monogamous relationship I believed in and was devoted to never existed.
This pattern of egregious behaviour is so linked to his position of power that the voices of those stepping forward with allegations need to be heard clearly, and their claims taken with the utmost seriousness. And I extend whatever remains of my broken heart to every one of them.
Last summer, Mignogna went into a studio and told a small group of people that silence gives consent. It may have been in response to a query about his performance, but voice director Donald Shults told io9 that it eventually became something else. When others in the room tried to push back, including Shults saying that the phrase doesn’t reflect today’s values, Mignogna didn’t drop the subject. He clarified.
“If I’m a jerk and you don’t tell me so, then you’re consenting to me being a jerk. See how that works?” he said. “If somebody is doing something you don’t approve of and you don’t say anything…the implication is that you must be OK with it.”
They’re not silent anymore.
Comments
19 responses to “One Of Anime’s Biggest Voices Accused Of Sexual Harassment”
What an absolute trashfire person. Great, if somewhat confronting, article.
Agreed, came across him at conventions down here a few times and always felt a bit off about him.
Guess I’m watching FMA subbed from now on…
Fair warning: The majority of communities pertaining to anime and video games are chock full of males aggressively pro-Vic. I’ve been smashed over it in another community with the arguments being lumped as A) It’s all ‘proven’ lies part of a conspiracy to get Monica Bial his roles, B) The girls in the photos are smiling, and C) There is no ‘evidence’ and accusations like this hurt “real victims”.
Apparently a “real victim” is a woman who retained the ripped clothes, semen sample, and then bottled he tears before directly going to the authorities in a manner that doesn’t evoke a traumatised reaction. Everyone else is okay to be called a liar.
Also, that “Silence implies consent” line was possibly taken out of context. It’s more akin to “ask for forgiveness, not permission” line of thinking and not relative to sexual dynamics.
Put it to you this way. if it was an open secret then he’s really not the only problem here. if he was really that terrible then why did none of his Co-workers(even the men who are apparently aware) report to HR to get him fired? why are their no police reports of illegal actions taken?
I’ve seen evidence of false reporting and things that do look too touchy feely. Honestly I don’t really know if he is guilty of anything more than being too friendly for his own good but, given the fact it’s been going for 15 years or so…
Basically the fact it’s only a major problem worthy of news attention *now* says a lot about everyone involved. if it’s actually true that he is a creep it should have been resolved a long time ago. Heck the fact that so many people continued to happily work with him says apparently no one ever called him into question with anyone important in the companies. if someone was protecting him that’s something that needs to be looked into.
Bascally I’m saying this is incredibly complicated and gives me a lot of questions. I’m not looking for an argument about whether he is or is not guilty, just wondering why it’s taking until now for this all to come out. after all the #metoo era started a while back so it obviously isn’t about only just feeling brave enough in the last 2 months to bring it up.
A lot of it has to do with timing and the #MeToo movement. Vic has an extremely popular movie out there where he is in the lead role, so while the spotlight is on him, why not take him down with these accusations? We now live in a world of “guilty till proven innocent, and even then you’re guilty”. So a bunch of people from years ago come forward with stories that can’t be fact checked, so we’re meant to “listen and believe” since there is no other way to take things.
Anything popular at the moment, especially in movies and TV, are instantly under attack for some reason, and if it’s not the content, then focus changes to the people involved. That’s life on the Internet in 2019.
You know why “listen and believe” is a thing? Because for decades it’s been “he said she said so let’s not do anything about it”. It’s not literally about believing any claim it’s about not dismissing claims out of hand just because nobody thought to rig up a sting operation before a random creep harassed them.
Do you really think convention organisers are out to get someone who consistently sells a large volume of tickets just because it’s the hip new thing to do? That Hotel staff are like ‘oh, that mega star from the Broly movie needs to be taken down a peg’? If it was a few people he’d clashed with before about other stuff then sure that’s pretty grey, but you have to admit there seems to be no shortage of people with nothing to gain who agree that he’s not cool about this stuff.
Comments like this are why it doesn’t come out. You have someone who is powerful and influential in his field and he faces. It would be a mistake to cross him on anything without a guaranteed level of support and everyone who has to deal with this crap, not just victims, knows that the majority of people want to see this stuff buried. I doubt you intended to mean it this way but your comment is the corporate response people fear. Dismantle strong allegations until they don’t add up to more than a warning everyone can move on from while saying they did their best if it ever turns bad.
People have careers built on professional relationships that are destroyed by rocking this sort of boat. Even on the floor sweeping level it can hurt you’re ability to get another job. That’s enough to make anyone question whether it’s worth coming forward. Sadly they’d be better off lying and accusing him of kicking a dog or regular bullying. The internet will destroy a man over that stuff without a shred of evidence.
As for no police reports of illegal activity that’s pretty easy to answer, nobody is saying he broke any laws. This sort of sex pest behaviour is really tricky to navigate for everyone near a person like this. The ‘code Vic’ stuff is pretty standard when you’re stuck dealing with a problem person who doesn’t work for you and is only going to be around for a few weeks.
I’ve taken guests to strip clubs while they’re in town purely because I know they’re too sleazy to go anywhere else. I can either take them to a strip club and hope they waste enough money to avoid getting kicked out before they get tired or I can take them to a restaurant, have them harass the restaurant staff, complain to their boss, and then best case scenario is they get formally warned and I burn a bridge with their entire company. It’s more likely that the company knows about it already, has a reason why they haven’t dealt with it and they discretely burn the bridge because they don’t want me pushing them into a corner where they have no choice but to deal with it.
I’m not saying everything is automatically true, although there are a lot of people backing things up that have nothing to gain from attacking someone who makes them money, but the article reads like a case study on exactly how this stuff plays out.
Many years ago, I was part of the organising committee for an anime convention, and we got a major voice actor to come out as a guest. The girl in charge of dealing with him told me later that he was an unrelenting sleazebag who continually tried to hit on her and other female convention staff, and wanted to know if we could arrange sex workers/strip clubs for him etc etc.
I’m not gonna name who it was, but I promise you it’s a voice actor (not Vic) who is very well known and has had some very major roles.
So I don’t know how true this is, but the accusation that I’ve heard thrown around is that Vic was best buds with Gen Fukunaga, who was the CEO of Funimation. Vic’s behavior was an ‘open secret’, but no one really spoke out about it inside the industry because for a long time Funimation was the biggest player in that industry, and it was always said that no one could make any accusation against Vic without destroying their reputation with Fukunaga. They would apparently say that the instant that he was gone from the leadership, Vic would be exposed.
Fast forward and Funimation was acquired by Sony at the end of 2017, and that coincided with increased rumblings about him. Then at the start of this month, Fukunaga stepped aside from the CEO role and barely ten days later, Funimation dumped Vic. So circumstantially it suggests there’s probably some truth to this.
As for “why did it take so long” it’s not any different to the way it’s unfolded for similar accusations from eg Hollywood. Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey were both open secrets in the same way but got away with it for decades. It’s a reflection of a cultural change that’s happened over the last few years.
for the second part about time, those did take a while and then everything came out of the woodwork at the same time. this is a signifigant time from the initial outtings.
for the first part, if that is indeed true it needs to be looked into.
The article starts by mentioning how the thing has been going for so long and is so well known that people were known to adjust their behaviour around him. #MeToo may be around for a while now, but the thing is that the movement only offers a virtual platform and a bit of voice-amplifying to victims. It doesn’t do anything for the fact that you still need one very brave person to be the first to denounce and expose themselves to the harassment, counter-accusations, and dismissal, in no small part from people like you, whose very first reaction is to go “hmmmhhm, suspicious”.
The thing is so bad that even with #MeToo and several people corroborating accusations, some people would still default to blaming the victims. When you are the first person to raise your voice, you don’t know if you’ll be the only one, in which case, you may be successfully “booed” out of the issue and then experience consequences for it.
if hes being axed from the anime community due to these accusations doesn’t that now empower these people who were initially afraid of retribution to get this prick.
he can’t attend cons anymore and he’s not in a position to influence the actresses careers anymore, i mean if this is all true and i can’t think any sensible reason for this many people to perpetrate a hoax then this fucker should be in prison learning about unwanted sexual advances from a burly man named Ivan.
It’s accusations. Untill proven guilty, you can’t judge them.
Yes you can. Opinions aren’t a court of law. If I choose to believe the countless women who have come forth to expose Vic for the utter sleaze he is that’s my prerogative.
Victoria hardly a predator he is now taken funanmiation to court he will win justice will prevail
On multiple credible accounts you absolutely can.
Does not surprise me one bit. Mignogna is a monumentally arrogant and egotistical twat. The instances where he comprehensively lost his shit at Trek fans critical of his hammy acting and Trek Continues in general, along with his unprompted attacks on the Axanar crew (and for some reason, very specifically at Alec Peters’ GF) and general shit-talking of them during their fight with CBS show what kind of a garbage person he is. And those rumblings about him being a sleaze have been around for a pretty long time now. So yeah, not surprised to hear these accusations about him at all…
accused? come back when hes charged with, any one can make up a story, and yes in great detail.
I support someone who has done wrong is brought to justice.
However, stuff like this where a prominent voice actor faked a swatting that they then blamed on Vic does not make the campaign against him look good. Samantha Inoue-Harte should not be taken seriously. Nor does it look good when the Event director at cruchy roll supports Samantha even though her claims were easily proven false.
Stick to facts.