Introduction: The Era of Unfiltered Villainy
The internet doesn’t just shine a light on darkness — it often amplifies it, distorts it, and then feeds it back to the public like a grotesque form of entertainment. In an age when anyone with a webcam can immortalize their worst confessions, two figures emerge as case studies in the collision of crime, rumor, and digital spectacle:
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Rick Berry, known online as Rick Productions, whose husband Martin Berry was convicted in Bristol, England of serious child sexual abuse offenses. Rick himself now sits on YouTube, confessing to watching child pornography and engaging in sexual acts with his husband while it played.
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Chance James Finley Wilkins, better known to internet subcultures as Cyraxx, a chaotic online personality from Akron, Ohio, infamous for harassment, plagiarism, and disturbing behavior — yet oddly untouched by confirmed courtroom convictions.
Together, their stories show the disturbing truth: in the digital age, you don’t need a trial to be infamous. All it takes is a camera, a platform, and the willingness to broadcast your own demons.
Part One: The Bristol Conviction — Cold, Hard Fact
In April 2020, Martin Berry of Bristol was convicted at Bristol Crown Court of multiple counts of sexual abuse against boys, alongside possession of indecent images. He was sentenced to 12 years in prison, with an extended 4-year licence period of monitoring upon release.
The Bristol Post reported that his crimes amounted to a “catalogue of abuse,” with detailed accounts of how he manipulated and harmed minors. The conviction was widely covered in local press, leaving no room for doubt: Martin Berry was a predator, and the justice system caught him.
This sets the anchor of truth: an officially documented, legally validated conviction.
Part Two: Rick Berry — From Whisper to Confession
The Social Media Whispers
Before 2021, online speculation linked Rick Berry (Rick Productions) to Martin as his partner. Posts accused him of destroying evidence of child pornography, but lacked any verifiable documentation. It was the kind of murky internet chatter you can’t print without burning your credibility.
The Shift — YouTube Confessions
That changed when Rick himself began appearing in YouTube videos — not denying, not deflecting, but admitting. In multiple clips now archived publicly, Rick Berry can be heard making disturbing statements:
In these recordings, he admits to watching child pornography and further claims he performed sexual acts on Martin Berry while child porn was playing.
These aren’t allegations. They are his own words, captured on video, on a public platform.
Why the Law Hasn’t Moved
Despite these statements, there are no public records of charges, arrests, or prosecutions against Rick Berry in connection to these admissions. That leaves him in a chilling position: a man who has openly confessed to acts that should trigger criminal investigations, yet remains uncharged.
This gap between confession and conviction exposes a systemic flaw — when criminals self-incriminate online, but authorities either don’t act or can’t act without additional corroborating evidence.
Part Three: Chance Wilkins — The Infamy of Cyraxx
The Persona
Across the Atlantic, in Akron, Ohio, lives Chance James Finley Wilkins, known by his many online aliases: Cyraxx, DJ ShadowBlayde, Psyraxx. He promotes himself as a musician, gamer, and vlogger. To the internet, he’s something else entirely: an endlessly mocked “lolcow,” a living spectacle of dysfunction.
Entire wikis and YouTube “documentaries” exist to catalog his meltdowns, plagiarism scandals, and harassment campaigns. Clips show him fighting with trolls, screaming into livestreams, or being confronted by police at his home.
The Allegations
He’s accused of:
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Harassing vulnerable people online.
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Sending explicit messages to alleged minors.
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Copying other artists’ work and presenting it as his own.
A petition brands him as an “Internet predator.” YouTube videos claim he’s been arrested. Reddit boards label him a “horrorcow.”
The Legal Reality
But here’s the missing piece: there are no court documents in Akron Municipal Court or Summit County tying him to these criminal allegations. No case number, no conviction, nothing on official record.
Cyraxx exists in the uncanny valley of infamy: hated, documented, and ridiculed — but not legally proven guilty.
Part Four: Patterns in the Digital Circus
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Martin Berry: Convicted predator, imprisoned. Clear legal outcome.
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Rick Berry (Rick Productions): Openly confessed to child porn and sexual acts involving his husband on YouTube, yet still untouched by legal consequence.
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Chance Wilkins (Cyraxx): A pariah and internet punchline, smeared with allegations, but with no legal convictions to date.
The difference? The system caught Martin. The system hasn’t caught Rick. And Cyraxx isn’t even on the radar of real-world law enforcement, despite being infamous online.
Conclusion: Confessions in the Void
We’re left with a disturbing hierarchy:
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A predator (Martin Berry) rightly behind bars.
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A man (Rick Berry) who confessed on camera to participating in child exploitation, but remains free.
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An internet clown (Cyraxx) who may be guilty of little more than spectacle, yet carries the label of predator in the court of public opinion.
The exposé is this: the internet has become its own courtroom, one where confessions can exist without convictions, and infamy can eclipse justice.
For victims, that’s devastating. For predators, it’s a loophole. And for the rest of us? It’s a grim reminder that evil doesn’t just hide in shadows anymore — sometimes, it streams live on YouTube.
Resources
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Bristol Post – “Bristol man jailed for 12 years for sexually abusing boys”
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LawPages – UK offender registry entry linking to Bristol Post coverage
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YouTube: Rick Productions – The Victim Blamer and The Confession
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Change.org petition: Bring Awareness to Internet Predator Chance Wilkins
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Akron Municipal Court – case lookup portal
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Summit County Clerk of Courts – case search
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