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Nebraska Resident Was Fighting a CSA Court Case When a Girl Tried to Intervene. Then They Made One Instagram Highlight: ‘You Did This to Yourself’

The internet always has the receipts.

A Nebraska resident fighting a CSA case just went viral after calling out a girl who tried to intervene by posting an Instagram highlight reel of the screenshots that proved the girl contacted their abuser. The TikTok video, posted by Ollie (@indigipunk) around May 17, 2026, has already racked up over 1.4 million views. 

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In it, Ollie smiles at the camera while on-screen text reads, “when a girl tries to disprove my csa court case so i make an instagram highlight reel with the screenshots of her saying she contacted an abuser to disprove a victim. It’s staying up forever lol.” The caption tags two accounts, @psychwardnotebook and @faygoismyfav, with a pointed question: “who said that.”

Within hours, one of the accounts was deleted, and the other switched to private. Early commenters were quick to piece together what happened, flooding the replies with support for Ollie and outrage at the accounts’ actions. Many even left comments on the enablers’ profiles, which likely pushed them to scrub their accounts. The reaction speaks for itself. 

Ollie has been vocal about this situation for a while

In previous videos, they’ve accused the users, particularly someone named Tristian, of refusing to take accountability. In one clip, Ollie states: “yall all want to be ‘anti-abuse’ but you literally contact the family of my abuser to try and disprove it? And then proceed to spread the statement i made to the police at 14 about the first time of many i was SAed.” 

Ollie added, “Because it was funny to you, you thought the SA of a 14 year old was a joke, and i hope you suffer the rest of your life with that guilt! Cause u should!”

@indigipunk

@psychwardnotebook@faygoismyfav sighhhh who said dat

♬ Sweet Carolina – ??

The hypocrisy doesn’t stop there. In another video, Ollie shared screenshots of Tristian’s Instagram and TikTok activity, lip-syncing to a sound clip that says, “And it made me remember what it was like in college when you’d say, oh, meet me at the Free Palestine Party. Then I find out you’re over at the Israel House. And so I just wish you would get it that this is not okay behavior.” 

The caption reads, “Like bae YOU ARE THE PROBLEM YOU ARE POSTING ABT,” while the on-screen text drives the point home: “when a performative leftist post MMIW stats while literally trying to contact my childhood sexual abusers family to try and disprove my sexual assault.”

This isn’t just about one person’s court case

It’s about a pattern of performative activism, selective outrage, and the secondary victimization of survivors. Ollie’s videos highlight how easily so-called allies can become enablers when they prioritize clout over accountability. The timing of this call-out is especially poignant, coming just days after the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women on May 5. 

According to KSWO, Oklahoma ranks second in the nation for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People cases, with Native women facing murder rates more than ten times the national average on some reservations. Homicide is the third leading cause of death for Indigenous women ages 10 to 24. 

Over half of Native women have experienced sexual violence, and nearly half have been stalked. This is an epidemic, and it’s one that often goes unnoticed by mainstream media. The Urban Indian Health Institute found that 95% of identified MMIW cases received no national coverage, leaving families to fight for justice on their own.

The National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women was established in 2017 after the murder of Hanna Harris on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation. Harris’ family had to conduct their own search after law enforcement failed to act, sparking community-led marches and advocacy efforts. The day isn’t just about remembrance. It’s a call to action, demanding accountability from tribal, federal, and state governments. 

Advocates like Kayla Woody, a domestic violence prevention specialist with the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, are pushing for legislative change. “Get out there in the community. Do some research. Speak to families who have lost loved ones. See their side of that story,” Woody says.

Ollie’s story intersects with these larger issues in a way that’s impossible to ignore

As an Indigenous survivor of child sexual abuse, they’ve been vocal about the ways systemic failures and performative activism can retraumatize victims. The girl who tried to intervene in Ollie’s court case didn’t just cross a line; she weaponized her access to Ollie’s abuser’s family, turning a legal battle into another form of abuse. And when called out, she and her friend tried to disappear, scrubbing their accounts clean like it never happened.

But Ollie isn’t letting them off the hook. The Instagram highlight reel is staying up forever, a digital monument to the hypocrisy of people who claim to care about survivors but only when it’s convenient. It’s a reminder that activism isn’t just about posting statistics or sharing hashtags but about showing up, especially when it’s uncomfortable.

@indigipunk

like bae YOU ARE THE PROBLEM YOURE POSTING ABT !!! #mmiw #leftisttiktok #fyp

♬ original sound – girlsrewatchpodcast

The Citizen Potawatomi Nation’s House of Hope, which offers free assistance to survivors of intimate partner violence, sexual assault, and stalking, is hosting a remembrance walk on May 14 in Shawnee. It has urged participants to wear red.

If there’s one takeaway from this situation, it’s that survivors don’t owe anyone their silence. Ollie’s decision to call out their abusers, and the people who enabled them, isn’t just brave. It’s necessary. In a world where Indigenous women are disappearing at alarming rates and survivors are often retraumatized by people who claim to support them, speaking up isn’t just an option. It’s a lifeline. 

(Featured image: rubberduck1951 on Pixabay.)

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A newsroom lifer who has wrestled countless stories into submission, Terrina is drawn to politics, culture, animals, music and offbeat tales. Fueled by unending curiosity and masterful exasperation, her power tools of choice are wit, warmth and precision.