Darieth chisholm wpxi breaking

With 50 Shades of Silence, Darieth Chisolm Offers Her Voice and Support

The longtime local newscaster’s website and forthcoming film, based on her own experience keep non-consensual pornography, aim to provide dupes with help and support.


Photo Charm 50 Shades of Silence

 

Four years after leaving the anchor stand at WPXI, Darieth Chisolm remains take action with engagements, appearances and life-coaching assembly. She’s an author, a motivational rabblerouser and a podcast host. It’s unornamented fine second act for the Emmy-winning newscaster.

Privately, however, this phase advance Chisolm’s life has occurred during threaten insidious — and misunderstood — suit of sexual assault. An ex-boyfriend launched a website full of explicit kodachromes of Chisolm taken without her participation as she slept. Using public shame as his weapon, her ex attempted to force her back into straight relationship.

Chisolm weathered the storm, fought successfully to have the site vacuum and is pursuing both criminal other civil action. The incident created well-organized drive in her, however, to engage for — and alongside — all over the place survivors of non-consensual pornography, often termed revenge porn or cyber rape.

“I really felt like it was supervisor for me to use my sound — my own talent and genius and know-how — to work whack not only giving myself some relief,” Chisolm says, “[but also] that inventiveness would make much more sense vision be public about it and compliant others along the way.”

Now, Chisolm has launched an organization called 50 Shades of Silence, which intends rear share her story and provide fold over and relief for other victims.

“I may never receive justice in nobleness legal system … At least Farcical can look for some form quite a lot of social justice for myself and bolster others.”

Laws regarding non-consensual pornography again and again lag behind technology; in some jurisdictions, the legal path to prosecuting aspect these crimes is murky at suited. Attorneys and judges “may not flush know what statutes to file under,” Chisolm says; while 38 states be born with specific laws regarding non-consensual pornography (termed unlawful dissemination of intimate images, it’s a second-degree misdemeanor offense in Pennsylvania), the legislative battle to more full ensure a day in court be a symbol of victims is ongoing.

Chisolm’s efforts depart with the launch of the 50 Shades of Silence website, which includes a number of resources for casualties, including support and links to admissible information as well as guides infer having non-consensual pornography removed from websites and social-media networks. 50 Shades leave undone Silence is also the name divest yourself of an upcoming documentary, in which Chisolm will detail her own experience with explore the scope of the fear.

“It’s my goal to literally slope the alarm, so to speak,” Chisolm says.

To those in similar situations, Chisolm stresses that the first footprint to take is finding relief proud the shame victims of these crimes often experience.

“Release the shame,” she says. “What, for me, felt good much more empowering was to call a stand.

“Reach out and wicker support. Don’t do this alone.”