Founder of No Lives Matter Arrested on Child Abuse and Terrorism Charges

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A man identified only as “Justin B.” publicly stood in a Dutch court for his first hearing on October 28, 2025, following his arrest on a series of serious charges for his role founding the violent transnational group, No Lives Matter (NLM)

NLM is part of the nihilistic and dangerous Com network, short for the “Community,” which is made up a collection of chat rooms, groups, and individuals engaged in a wide variety of crimes. While ideology is often not the primary motivation for violence within Com groups, NLM in particular has adopted the imagery and language of neo-Nazism and the occult group Order of Nine Angles in its public documents.

The accused is charged with allegedly instructing victims to commit self-harm, engaging in animal crushing, sharing extreme violent and terrorist material, and the creation of child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

Cxrpse Image

Image of Cxrpse shared to the social media platform Telegram. (Source: Telegram).

During the hearing, the 24-year-old’s attorney admitted that his client was the pseudonymous “Cxrpse,” the screen name of NLM’s founder and a member of the Com child exploitation group 764.

In court, prosecutors claimed that the accused had glorified mass murderers like white supremacist Brenton Tarrant, the perpetrator of a 2019 attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, that killed 51 people.

“We need more people like [Tarrant],” B. allegedly wrote in messages read out in court.

In another instance, B. is alleged to have sent a video of a person being shot, and writing, “I want to do that so much in someone’s head. Brain for my shoes, everything.”

B.’s defense claims that he has a history of mental health problems since a young age, and  became the de facto leader of  NLM as others built the  organization around him and his online persona.

Inside Com spaces, the Cxrpse account left NLM around 2023. His lawyer said during the hearing his client had left the Com network shortly before his arrest this year.

Several photos of victims allegedly convinced or coerced into self harm were shown with the name “Cxrpse” cut into their bodies.

B. is being held at PI Vught, a large maximum-security prison with a dedicated wing for those accused and convicted of terrorism-related offenses. The case is being classified as terrorism due to the alleged extreme violence, incitement and glorification of terrorist acts, and intent to spread fear among the public.

Edited image of Cxrpse_2

An edited image of Cxrpse. The tattoo on his hand, reading “Psalm 144,” was described by reporters covering his recent hearing in the Netherlands. (Source: Telegram)

Two other individuals from the Netherlands have been arrested in relation to Com extortion networks including a 28-year-old man from Amsterdam and a minor from Sittard. The minor was sentenced to juvenile detention in April. A third child was searched in Zaandam, but not arrested.

Digging Up Cxrpse

Justin B.’s full name has not been made public by the courts, nor does it appear to have been leaked inside the Com network, who often dox (expose the personal information) rival members.

Though the accused has admitted to being behind the Cxrpse identity, he claims to have left the network shortly before his arrest in June 2025.

Based on text-only logs from a chat server for the Com group 764, a child abuse group similar to NLM, obtained by the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism (GPAHE), Cxrpse is seen speaking about other members of the group and his screen name indicates an affinity with another abuse group, KASKAR, standing for “Kill All Sluts, Kill All Ret*rds.”

At several points in the logs, Cxrpse speaks in Dutch, though he does not discuss where he lives. Members of other large Com chat rooms discuss Cxrpse and another individual, known as Kush, starting his own group using the name “764” after the original founder was arrested. Both are credited as founding KASKAR.

The Com network is decentralized, but often has clear hierarchies. Group owners are referred to as “OS,” short for ownership. They often hold leadership status, though can pass it off to another user while holding onto ultimate ownership of the group. Sometimes groups assign administrators to run their chat servers on communication applications popular with the network like Discord and Telegram, which are followed by regular members. People granted full membership are allowed to represent their groups publicly. Some groups will release rosters identifying official members for the rest of the Com network.

Com group Terror Council

An example of a roster taken from the Com group Terror Council. (Source: Telegram).

Com groups are participatory in nature, and membership is typically only granted to individuals who are willing to not only carry out actions demanded by the group but provide evidence of them doing so. In the case of NLM, prospective members were asked to commit acts of vandalism, arson, murder, and terrorism.

B. was arrested this past summer, but he relinquished ownership of NLM around 2023. This did not end the group’s activity. Several iterations of NLM have since existed, though all use the same branding and aesthetic. NLM often uses an altered sketch of Joseph James DeAngelo, the Golden State Killer, as their symbol. DeAngelo, connected to 13 murders and 50 rapes, evaded identification for decades until being caught by DNA evidence in 2018.

NLM, and other Com groups, use the language of the Order of Nine Angles (ONA), an esoteric occult order created by United Kingdom-based neo-Nazi and extremist writer David Myatt in the 1970s. In manuals released by NLM, readers are instructed on how to select victims for murder, create poisons, choose weapons, and conduct extortion. And jargon used by the ONA appears, including threats to kill “mundanes,” a term referring to people who do not follow the ONA philosophy.

NLM-764 manual

An image taken from a NLM-764 manual, detailing types of poisons that can be used against targets. (Source: NLM Terror Guide).

Understanding the Community  

The Com network is a decentralized and diffuse network of interconnected individuals and groups connected through numerous websites, chat servers, and social media applications. A collaborative collective of illegal hackers, blackmailers, swatters, child abusers, and more, people associated with the Com have been connected to a litany of criminal activity across countries and continents. This criminal activity divides Com into three distinct pillars: Cyber Com, Extortion Com, and Offline Com.

Cyber Com, sometimes called Hacker Com, is where the network initially emerged. Prominent English-speaking hackers and fraudsters came together to collaborate on a variety of acts, including cell phone fraud and large scale corporate computer intrusions. This has included large financial crimes like ransomware attacks that cost targets over $115 million.

Extortion Com, also called “Sextortion Com” and sometimes the “764 network,” might also include financial crimes, but is mostly dedicated to manipulating or coercing minors and vulnerable people into creating Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) and engage in self harm, animal abuse, and other debasing acts. Potential victims are often found on sites popular with children, including video games with chat features like Roblox or Minecraft,

Offline Com, sometimes called “IRL (In Real Life) Com,” encourages acts of violence offline including murder and terrorism. Besides No Lives Matter, these groups include Maniac Murder Cult, which gained notoriety within Com networks after its members shared videos of random assaults on people believed to be homeless on the streets of Ukraine.

In May 2025, Michail Chkhikvishvili, also known as Commander Butcher, was arrested in Moldova, in an alleged plot to poison children in a Jewish neighborhood during the 2025 winter holidays. Chkhikvishvili is accused of providing detailed instructions on the production of ricin-based poisons.

Many Com groups have overlapping membership or carry out criminal activity that may align them with other pillars. 764, for example, was started by Bradley Cadenhead as an extortion group targeting children, predominantly girls. After his conviction at age 17 and 80-year prison sentence, Prasan Nepal, also known as Trippy and King Krampus, of High Point, North Carolina, took over the group.

A publication titled Classified, released in partnership with NLM and signed with Nepal’s screen name, states that the purpose of the group is “the purification of all living things through endless attacks committed by the cult.”

This quote indicates that while 764 is best thought of as a group dedicated to extortion of minors, it also seeks to inspire random violent acts and other types of criminality.

NLM has claimed numerous acts of violence, and been connected to a series of stabbings. In September and October 2024, a 14-year-old using the alias Slain764/NLM live streamed a series of assaults and knife attacks in the neighborhood of Hässelby in Stockholm, Sweden.

Eight videos were posted to joint NLM-764 Telegram channels, including two stabbings. Police had suspected the boy in four assaults prior to his arrest, but the investigations were close. He admitted to stabbing an 80-year-old man when interviewed by police, but was below Sweden’s age of criminal responsibility at the time of the attack and cannot be charged criminally.

The perpetrators and victims of the radical exploitation networks that include groups like 764 and NLM are not limited by borders and has become a global problem. Numerous law enforcement agencies have issued warnings and guidance about the networks, including Canada, Australia, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Finland. In the United States, the FBI said it had opened investigations into more than 250 related cases impacting all of its 55 field offices around the country.

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