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Ex-Bellingcat child porn researcher commits suicide after conviction for abusing own child

Ex-Bellingcat child porn researcher commits suicide after conviction for abusing own child

Russia Today05-05-2025
A former Bellingcat operative, known under the alias Daniel Romein, has allegedly taken his life after being sentenced to prison for sexually abusing his own daughter.
Romein has been involved in the investigation of the MH17 crash by the Western-funded 'open-source intelligence' group, as well as in the Stop Child Abuse initiative, dedicated to geolocating explicit materials involving minors.
The bombshell revelation was first made by independent Dutch journalist Eric Van De Beek last month, with the affair further explored in a piece released by the Grayzone last Friday. Van De Beek denied that Romein died from a 'cardiac arrest' in December 2022, stating a close friend confirmed the Bellingcat operative took his own life.
The child porn researcher, who worked for Bellingcat between 2014 and late 2019, was sentenced to 36 months in prison earlier that year for prolonged sexual abuse of his daughter, the journalist claimed, citing an anonymized court case on the matter. The case was released by Dutch authorities only in March this year after repeated inquiries by independent media, Van De Beek noted.
The case details the abuse the daughter of the defendant experienced roughly between October 2011 and October 2016, when she was six to 10 years old. The material offers an extremely graphic depiction of the relationship between the father and his underage daughter, which involved oral sex, genital rubbing, and other sexualized behavior.
The affair was exposed years later when the defendant's daughter disclosed it to her mother and stepfather. The court's materials quote a lackluster letter of apology sent by the defendant to his daughter when the affair became public, in which he appeared to blame her.
The case also reveals the defendant was convicted of possession of child pornography 'over 15 years' prior.
Inquired by the Grayzone, Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins denied that Romein's firing in December 2019 was related to his pedophilic endeavors. However, the group's founder 'tacitly acknowledged' the researcher was the target of the sexual abuse allegations. 'It is not clear whether the [court] judgment is about Mr. Romein, as it is anonymized,' he told the outlet in a mailed statement.
In August 2021, Romein was stripped of his European Press Prize, awarded for his work on the Stop Child Abuse project. At the time, the Netherlands-based non-profit cited 'unidentified substantiated complaints' from different individuals as the reason for its decision. When asked by Grayzone if the complaints were related to sexual abuse, Higgins stated they were due to the researcher's 'unacceptable online behavior.'
Despite advertising itself as an investigative group specializing in fact-checking and open-source intelligence, Bellingcat has been receiving state funding from multiple Western states. This has raised questions about its credibility, with Moscow, for instance, having squarely accused it of working closely with Western intelligence services to 'put pressure on either [Russia] or individuals and entities.'
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