She Tried To Catch — A Pervert... And Ended Up As O...

Below is a full article based on that theme—exploring the fine line between vigilante justice and unhealthy fixation. The fine line between public protector and personal unraveling It starts with a noble impulse. A woman notices something disturbing—a man taking photos up skirts on the subway, a flasher in the park, a voyeur lurking near public restrooms. Instead of looking away, she decides to act. She will document, confront, or trap the offender. She will be the one who finally brings him to justice.

That’s when something shifted inside her. The system, she decided, had failed. And she would not. Rachel joined online groups dedicated to catching “creepers.” She downloaded apps to map local complaints. She began riding the same train line at the same time, not to commute, but to hunt. She bought a hidden camera keychain and a voice recorder pen. She started a blog: Catch & Release? No. Catch & Expose. She tried to catch a pervert... and ended up as o...

“I froze for a second,” she recalls. “Then I got furious.” Below is a full article based on that

This is the story of how one woman’s crusade became a cautionary tale. For Rachel Moreno (name changed for privacy), a 32-year-old graphic designer in Chicago, the turning point came on a crowded evening train. A man in a gray hoodie sat across from her, phone angled suspiciously toward her legs. She shifted. He shifted. When she finally peered over her magazine, she saw the telltale red recording light. Instead of looking away, she decides to act

She tried to catch a pervert... and ended up as o...