What follows is Mouna's account, supported by extensive evidence including court transcripts, depositions, text messages, audio recordings, and public records. Every major claim is cited. We encourage you to review the evidence yourself.

I Was Stalked by Tasha Kaminsky

Tasha Kaminsky's own testimony establishes a pattern of monitoring Mouna's life: knowing their address, tracking their Facebook page, researching events Mouna hosted, and showing up at locations where Mouna was likely to be. Tasha attended the very next FoodSpark event after one hosted at Mouna's home — an event she found by monitoring Mouna's home's Facebook page. She appeared at Mokabe's (the coffee shop Mouna frequented daily) and at Gelateria (where she found Mouna's housemate worked, again via Facebook research). In every instance, Tasha accused Mouna of stalking her — a textbook example of victim-reversal (DARVO).

Death Threats Were Made Against Me — Then Attributed to Me

Adriane Norman discussed shooting Mouna with a gun and cutting off their head (documented in text messages). She kept a key to Mouna's house after being asked to return it, entered without consent, and admitted she had no need for the key. Tasha Kaminsky also discussed killing Mouna with others, sent armed people to Mouna's home, and incited attacks at Mouna's workplace. Yet Tasha claimed Mouna had threatened to kill her — a claim contradicted by the text messages and emails from that period, which are affectionate in tone. Adriane herself testified twice that Mouna never threatened to kill her. Tasha's order of protection petition didn't even mention death threats and was denied. Her later testimony fabricated a bizarre, vague claim that bore no resemblance to a direct death threat.

My Home Was Stolen at Gunpoint

Tasha Kaminsky encouraged eight named individuals to confront Mouna at their home. During the confrontation — which Mouna audio recorded — Mouna was threatened with firearms, told to kill themselves, ordered to leave their own home or be removed by force, told they must break up with their partner, and gaslit with lies. The aggressors celebrated afterward, saying things like "We just took a fucking house from someone" and threatening to shoot police who might come. Tasha publicly claimed she didn't know the encounter was recorded, but her own deposition reveals she learned about the recording within hours and even told her attorney about it. She premeditated a lie to cover up her knowledge of the recording. She then reframed this violent, 8-against-1, armed encounter as a "candid confession" by Mouna.

Tasha Kaminsky Used Lies to Hurt Me and Others

Tasha falsely claimed she had been granted an order of protection against Mouna (it was denied — Mouna was the one granted a protective order). She lied about Mouna being charged with tax evasion. She made unsubstantiated bribery accusations against FoodSpark, Sex+STL, Hands Up United, Lindy Hop St. Louis, the social justice movement, and Congresswoman Cori Bush. She accused Cori Bush — a descendant of enslaved people — of "selling women" based on Mouna's lawful campaign donation, language the site characterizes as racist. She spread these lies to elected officials including Tishaura Jones.

I Was Targeted with Anti-Trans Violence

Tasha selectively performed respect for Mouna's gender identity in formal settings (court, correspondence with other nonbinary people) while publicly attacking their identity. She questioned the authenticity of Mouna's nonbinary identity, policed their appearance (facial hair, clothing), used anti-trans tropes about "dressing feminine as it suits them," and eventually dropped the pretense entirely, misgendering Mouna with "he/him" pronouns and saying "says he is non binary" — implying Mouna was faking. This is identity abuse: it endangers not just Mouna but all nonbinary and trans people by reinforcing the narrative that trans identities are performances or manipulations.

Adriane's Response to Rejection Was Violence

After Mouna ended their relationship with Adriane Norman, she escalated from anger to stalking to death threats. She dumped Mouna's belongings, tried to match with them on dating apps, attempted to get them to come over for sex, and trespassed in their home using a key she refused to return. When Mouna continued to decline reconciliation, she threatened to shoot them and cut off their head, and declared her intention to destroy Mouna's life. She acknowledged a pattern: when rejected, she "realizes" the person who rejected her was abusing her. Mouna sought an order of protection but was pressured to drop it before the hearing.

Adriane Repeatedly Crossed My Boundaries

Adriane violated Mouna's boundaries in multiple ways. She recorded a nude video of Mouna and sent it to others without consent — initially lying under oath that she had consent, only admitting the truth when confronted with proof. She engaged in sexual acts without asking permission. She used double-bind techniques: setting a boundary and then becoming angry when Mouna respected it. When Mouna tried to discuss this pattern, she accused them of attacking her character. Mouna fell into a pattern of constant apologizing — over 100 apologies documented in text messages alone — to manage her reactions. Adriane accused Mouna of pressuring her for sex, but the text record shows it was Adriane who repeatedly initiated and became upset when Mouna was unavailable. Her accusation of rape described her own behavior projected onto Mouna.

Adriane Was Intensely Jealous and Controlling

Adriane accused three of Mouna's housemates of trying to have sex with Mouna (including two who were in other relationships) and restricted Mouna's social contact. When Mouna pushed back, she started fights. She demanded Mouna make a video list of everyone they spent time with and then declared all 30 people off-limits. She accused Mouna of cheating without evidence. She invited an ex over who she said had assaulted her, potentially exposing Mouna to STI risk, but when Mouna asked about getting tested, she accused Mouna of cheating. There was a clear double standard: Adriane could see anyone she wanted; Mouna could not.

The Rape Accusation

Tasha Kaminsky initially described Mouna as "kind, patient, understanding" regarding sex. She claimed sexual coercion — that Mouna told her she was asexual and the relationship would have to end without sex — but the text message record contains no sexual content. According to Tasha's own testimony, they first had sex after 8 months of dating, at her initiation, in a hotel she booked. It was not until after her order of protection was denied and at least 5 years had passed that she claimed Mouna raped her. She then spread this accusation widely.

Review the Evidence Yourself

Every claim on this page is backed by documentary evidence. We invite you to examine it firsthand.