wikipedo.net exists for one reason: to protect children. We aggregate and organize information from predator-catcher groups to create a searchable, geographic database of documented encounters with individuals who attempt to meet minors.
Predator-catcher content is scattered across platforms — YouTube, social media, livestreams. Individual videos get attention for a moment, then disappear into feeds. Outcomes go untracked. Patterns go unnoticed. We believe accountability requires a better system.
Our goal is transparency. Every documented encounter should be searchable. Every outcome should be tracked. Geographic patterns should be visible. The work these content creators do deserves to be organized, preserved, and made useful — not just viral.
We identify and follow predator-catcher organizations across platforms — groups that film encounters with individuals who have arranged to meet minors.
Each encounter is cataloged with its location (city, county, state), date, and the group that documented it. Videos are embedded so creators receive full view credit.
We use open-source intelligence tools to find publicly available information about the subjects of these encounters — public records, social media, and other open sources.
We follow up on each case — arrests, charges, court dates, dispositions, convictions, and related news coverage — so outcomes are documented, not forgotten.
We partner with and give full credit to predator-catcher organizations. Groups like Predator Poachers Southeast Texas (PPSETX) and others do the difficult, often dangerous work of documenting these encounters.
All videos on wikipedo.net are embedded directly from the creator's platform — every view on our site counts as a view for the original creator. We do not re-upload, re-edit, or claim ownership of any content. The creators deserve the credit for the work they do.