Gaia Soraka
kiwifarms.net
I was doing some more in-depth research on criminal record disclosure laws in Quebec, so that I could be able to find any hypothetical police report filed.
Unfortunately, the law is very clear: I would not be able to obtain documents just by filling out a form or something. I need to prove that I'm the victim of the crime or that I'm involved in some other way. (Source: Act respecting Access to documents held by public bodies and the Protection of personal information, chapter 2.1, section 59) (There are also administrative fees that vary between police departments.) They can't even confirm or deny the existence of a police report (Chapter 2.1, section 28). The only time criminal information requests would be granted to someone without these conditions would be from one police department to another (Chapter 2.1, section 41.2).
TL;DR, we can't know if there was a police report filed unless Daniel comes forward with proof himself. We might never know if this truly happened.
Some people are starting to doubt Daniel's story, however.
This person started an autistic twitter awareness thread on the situation.

Tweet (a)
A few people were quick to point out how unrealistic Daniel's bloody nose looks.


I hadn't been focusing on his bloody nose before, but it does look extremely fake.

First off, his nose isn't even injured whatsoever.
The blood is also very bright. It looks like it was awkwardly smeared around his nostril rather than coming out of it naturally. Isn't the first instinct you'd have when having a bloody nose to wipe the blood? Or touch it? This drip looks a bit too perfect.
Also, this thread...

Unfortunately, the law is very clear: I would not be able to obtain documents just by filling out a form or something. I need to prove that I'm the victim of the crime or that I'm involved in some other way. (Source: Act respecting Access to documents held by public bodies and the Protection of personal information, chapter 2.1, section 59) (There are also administrative fees that vary between police departments.) They can't even confirm or deny the existence of a police report (Chapter 2.1, section 28). The only time criminal information requests would be granted to someone without these conditions would be from one police department to another (Chapter 2.1, section 41.2).
TL;DR, we can't know if there was a police report filed unless Daniel comes forward with proof himself. We might never know if this truly happened.
Some people are starting to doubt Daniel's story, however.
This person started an autistic twitter awareness thread on the situation.

Tweet (a)
A few people were quick to point out how unrealistic Daniel's bloody nose looks.


I hadn't been focusing on his bloody nose before, but it does look extremely fake.

First off, his nose isn't even injured whatsoever.
The blood is also very bright. It looks like it was awkwardly smeared around his nostril rather than coming out of it naturally. Isn't the first instinct you'd have when having a bloody nose to wipe the blood? Or touch it? This drip looks a bit too perfect.
Also, this thread...

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