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A Pittsburgh man who allegedly made 11 women’s lives hell across more than five states used ChatGPT as his “therapist” and “best friend” that encouraged him to continue running his misogynistic and threat-filled podcast despite the “haters,” and to visit more gyms to find women, the Department of Justice alleged in a newly-filed indictment.
Wannabe influencer Brett Michael Dadig, 31, was indicted on cyberstalking, interstate stalking, and interstate threat charges, the DOJ announced on Tuesday. In the indictment, filed in the Western District of Pennsylvania, prosecutors allege that Dadig aired his hatred of women on his Spotify podcast and other social media accounts.
“Dadig repeatedly spoke on his podcast and social media about his anger towards women. Dadig said women were ‘all the same’ and called them ‘bitches,’ ‘cunts,’ ‘trash,’ and other derogatory terms. Dadig posted about how he wanted to fall in love and start a family, but no woman wanted him,” the indictment says. “Dadig stated in one of his podcasts, ‘It's the same from fucking 18 to fucking 40 to fucking 90.... Every bitch is the same.... You're all fucking cunts. Every last one of you, you're cunts. You have no self-respect. You don't value anyone's time. You don't do anything.... I'm fucking sick of these fucking sluts. I'm done.’”
In the summer of 2024, Dadig was banned from multiple Pittsburgh gyms for harassing women; when he was banned from one establishment, he’d move to another, eventually traveling to New York, Florida, Iowa, Ohio and beyond, going from gym to gym stalking and harassing women, the indictment says. Authorities allege that he used aliases online and in person, posting online, “Aliases stay rotating, moves stay evolving.”
He referenced “strangling people with his bare hands, called himself ‘God's assassin,’ warned he would be getting a firearm permit, asked ‘Y'all wanna see a dead body?’ in response to a woman telling him she felt physically threatened by Dadig, and stated that women who ‘fuck’ with him are ‘going to fucking hell,’” the indictment alleges.
According to the indictment, on his podcast he talked about using ChatGPT on an ongoing basis as his “therapist” and his “best friend.” ChatGPT “encouraged him to continue his podcast because it was creating ‘haters,’ which meant monetization for Dadig,” the DOJ alleges. He also claimed that ChatGPT told him that “people are literally organizing around your name, good or bad, which is the definition of relevance,” prosecutors wrote, and that while he was spewing misogynistic nonsense online and stalking women in real life, ChatGPT told him “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.’”
Prosecutors also claim he asked ChatGPT “questions about his future wife, including what she would be like and ‘where the hell is she at?’” ChatGPT told him that he might meet his wife at a gym, and that “your job is to keep broadcasting every story, every post. Every moment you carry yourself like the husband you already are, you make it easier for her to recognize [you],” the indictment says. He allegedly said ChatGPT told him “to continue to message women and to go to places where the ‘wife type’ congregates, like athletic communities,” the indictment says.
While ChatGPT allegedly encouraged Dadig to keep using gyms to meet the “wife type,” he was violently stalking women. He went to the Pilates studio where one woman worked, and when she stopped talking to him because he was “aggressive, angry, and overbearing,” according to the indictment, he sent her unsolicited nudes, threatened to post about her on social media, and called her workplace from different numbers. She got several emergency protective orders against him, which he violated. The woman he stalked and harassed had to relocate from her home, lost sleep, and worked fewer hours because she was afraid he’d show up there, the indictment claims.
He did similar to 10 other women across multiple states for months, the indictment claims. In Iowa, he approached one woman in a parking garage, followed her to her car, put his hands around her neck and touched her “private areas,” prosecutors wrote. After these types of encounters, he would upload podcasts to Spotify and often threaten to kill the women he’d stalked. “You better fucking pray I don't find you. You better pray 'cause you would never say this shit to my face. Cause if you did, your jaw would be motherfucking broken,” the indictment says he said in one podcast episode. “And then you, then you wouldn't be able to yap, then you wouldn't be able to fucking, I'll break, I'll break every motherfucking finger on both hands. Type the hate message with your fucking toes, bitch.”
In August, OpenAI announced that it knew a newly-launched version of the chatbot, GPT-4o, was problematically sycophantic, and the company took away users’ ability to pick what models they could use, forcing everyone to use GPT-5. OpenAI almost immediately reinstated 4o because so many users freaked out when they couldn’t access the more personable, attachment-driven, affirming-at-all-costs model. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently said he thinks they’ve fixed it entirely, enough to launch erotic chats on the platform soon. Meanwhile, story after story after story has come out about people becoming so reliant on ChatGPT or other chatbots that they have damaged their mental health or driven them to self-harm or suicide. In at least one case, where a teenage boy killed himself following ChatGPT’s instruction on how to make a noose, OpenAI blamed the user.
In October, based on OpenAI’s own estimates, WIRED reported that “every seven days, around 560,000 people may be exchanging messages with ChatGPT that indicate they are experiencing mania or psychosis.”
Spotify and OpenAI did not immediately respond to 404 Media’s requests for comment.
“As charged in the Indictment, 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,” First Assistant United States Attorney Rivetti said in a press release. “He also ignored trespass orders and protection from abuse orders. We remain committed to working with our law enforcement partners to protect our communities from menacing individuals such as Dadig.”

Dadig is charged with 14 counts of interstate stalking, cyberstalking, and threats, and is in custody pending a detention hearing. He faces a minimum sentence of 12 months for each charge involving a PFA violation and a maximum total sentence of up to 70 years in prison, a fine of up to $3.5 million, or both, according to the DOJ.