Lacari was put on blast for recently showing a Microsoft Notepad file that had links to alleged CSAM and beastiality porn. After getting repeatedly called out in his chat by his viewers, he absolutely crashed out during a live StarCraft II broadcast.
One visible tab was labeled “JBT,” which viewers identified as shorthand for “jailbait teens.” A URL inside the document appeared highlighted as if selected for copying. The window remained on screen long enough for multiple viewers to capture evidence before Lacari switched back to gameplay.
Lacari did not end his stream. Instead, he addressed the situation while continuing to play, telling viewers he “didn’t do anything” and claiming the files came from a virus or unwanted download that placed content on his PC without his knowledge.
His explanation shifted throughout the broadcast. At times he suggested nothing was downloaded, then later described downloads in ways viewers found contradictory. He also mentioned owning a large archive of adult material, which he used to argue that “stuff just gets downloaded” occasionally.
Viewers noted technical inconsistencies in his virus claim. The Notepad tabs showed saved filenames rather than unsaved document behavior, and the presence of multiple tabs suggested intentional file creation rather than a single accidental download. When users mentioned that deleting a file while it’s open in Notepad produces a specific error message, commenters said no such error appeared on Lacari’s screen.
Comment
byu/National_Ad_8331 from discussion
inLivestreamFail
Lacari accused critics of virtue signaling and claimed people didn’t understand the full context, but what context would make having that kind of stuff on your computer okay? He took a brief break during the stream, appeared to check his file system off-camera, then returned claiming there was nothing to find.
He downloaded and ran Malwarebytes live on stream as proof of the virus explanation. According to viewers, the scan returned clean results, which appeared to undercut his claim that malware was responsible for the files.

