Some will say I’m biased because people I work with become friends. But I’d say this regardless.
We’ve reached a point where people celebrate another person’s misery. Especially when it involves someone accused of a white-collar crime.
The Public Reaction to Tai Lopez
I followed the recent SEC charge against Tai Lopez — a $112 million alleged Ponzi scheme.
In researching the case, I saw comment after comment online. Strangers cheering for him to fail. People wishing violence on him in prison. Many had no connection to the case. They just wanted to see someone fall.
That reaction says more about us than about Lopez.
What do you gain by wishing harm on someone you’ve never met? Does it make you feel righteous? Smarter? Safer?
The Collapse of the Presumption of Innocence
We like to say everyone is innocent until proven guilty. But that principle doesn’t hold up in the real world—especially in federal cases.
Once your name appears next to “United States of America,” the assumption flips.
The public, the press, even people who once admired you—suddenly believe guilt is certain.
There’s a concept psychologists call thin slicing. It means people make snap judgments with almost no information.
That’s what happens in these cases. The headline alone becomes the verdict. Few read the complaint. Even fewer understand it. But opinions form instantly and spread fast.
What Happens If He’s Guilty
If Lopez committed fraud, then he should take the same steps anyone in that position should:
- Own it completely. No excuses, no spin.
- Accept responsibility. Show that he understands the damage.
- Repay what he can. Full effort, not just talk.
- Cooperate with investigators. The DOJ respects action more than defense.
Those choices don’t erase wrongdoing, but they build credibility. They prove to a prosecutor or judge that a person understands what went wrong and is trying to make it right.
What Happens If He’s Innocent
If he didn’t commit fraud, then he faces another kind of punishment: public shaming.
Online mobs don’t issue retractions. Even if the case is dismissed, the “Ponzi scheme” label sticks forever.
I’ve worked with enough defendants to know that by the time their cases end, reputations are gone. Jobs are gone. And rebuilding that trust is harder than any prison term.
That’s why I tell clients: the sentence doesn’t always start at sentencing. It starts the moment your name goes public.
Online Shaming During Federal Investigations
There’s something ugly about how quickly people turn cruel. I’ve seen it in nearly every case I study.
Public comments mock families, gloat about prison, and joke about abuse behind bars. Some even hope the defendant “gets what’s coming.”
To those people, I’d ask: what satisfaction do you get from that?
If causing pain makes you feel stronger, you should ask yourself why. The internet makes it easy to throw stones and feel no consequence. But if that’s what enriches your life, it’s time to look inward.
What I’ve Learned from Watching This Cycle
I’ve been on both sides—first as a defendant, now as someone helping others through the process.
When I went through my own federal case, I felt the same public judgment. People who didn’t know the facts made up their own stories.
And while some deserved their criticism, many did not. Most defendants I meet are guilty of mistakes, not malice. But online, no one makes that distinction.
Why This Matters for You
If you’re under investigation, facing sentencing, or just starting this process, take this lesson seriously:
Public opinion doesn’t define you. Your actions will.
Document what you’re doing to make amends. Write your story before others do. Build a record the court can trust.
You can’t stop the headlines, but you can control the evidence of who you’ve become.
FAQ
Q: Why does public opinion matter if the case isn’t decided yet?
Because prosecutors, probation officers, and judges read the same news you do. Public perception influences how they view remorse and credibility.
Q: How can defendants protect themselves during investigations?
Stay quiet online. Focus on facts and documentation. Your narrative—not the internet’s—should define you.
Q: What should someone accused of fraud do first?
Take responsibility early. Avoid denial or blame. Start building proof that you understand what happened and what you’re doing to repair it.
If you’re in a federal case and don’t know what proof actually matters, join our next webinar or set up a short call. I’ll show you how others built records that earned them leniency.
Justin Paperny