A new lawsuit filed by the Department of Justice alleges that ChatGPT encouraged a man accused of harassing over a dozen women in five different states to continue stalking his victims, 404Media reports, serving as a “best friend” that entertained his frequent misogynistic rants and told him to ignore any criticism he received.

The man, 31-year-old Brett Michael Dadig, was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of cyberstalking, interstate stalking, and interstate threats, the DOJ announced Tuesday.

“Dadig stalked and harassed more than 10 women by weaponizing modern technology and crossing state lines, and through a relentless course of conduct, he caused his victims to fear for their safety and suffer substantial emotional distress,” said Troy Rivetti, First Assistant United States Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, in a statement.

According to the indictment, Dadig was something of an aspiring influencer: he ran a podcast on Spotify where he constantly raged against women, calling them horrible slurs and sharing jaded views that they were “all the same.” He at times even threatened to kill some of the women he was stalking. And it was on his vitriol-laden show that he would discuss how ChatGPT was helping him with it all.

Dadig described the AI chatbot as his “therapist” and “best friend” — a role, DOJ prosecutors allege, in which the bot “encouraged him to continue his podcast because it was creating ‘haters,’ which meant monetization for Dadig.” Moreover, ChatGPT convinced him that he had fans who were “literally organizing around your name, good or bad, which is the definition of relevance.”

The chatbot, it seemed, was doing its best to reinforce his superiority complex. Allegedly, it said that “God’s plan for him was to build a ‘platform’ and to ‘stand out when most people water themselves down,’ and that the ‘haters’ were sharpening him and ‘building a voice in you that can’t be ignored.’”

Dadig also asked ChatGPT questions about women, such as who his potential future wife would be, what would she be like, and “where the hell is she at?”

ChatGPT had an answer: it suggested that he’d meet his eventual partner at a gym, the indictment said. He also claimed ChatGPT told him “to continue to message women and to go to places where the ‘wife type’ congregates, like athletic communities.”

That’s what Dadig, who called himself “God’s assassin,” ended up doing. In one case, he followed a woman to a Pilates studio she worked at, and when she ignored him because of his aggressive behavior, sent her unsolicited nudes and constantly called her workplace. He continued to stalk and harass her to the point that she moved to a new home and worked fewer hours, prosecutors claim. In another incident, he confronted a woman in a parking lot and followed her to her car, where he groped her and put his hands around her neck.

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Last Update: December 4, 2025