
Greebo
Our founder started the project in 2023. After they visited Sussex Police to report historical sexual assaults and felt put off by the DC taking the statement, they set up a site under the name Eastbourne Sexual Assault to appeal for witnesses to their assaults. However, very quickly, survivors began to contact Greebo asking for help or to put up details of sex offenders for public awareness. Hence, the site grew exponentially from a platform for a single person’s quest for justice into a public forum.
The alleged suspects of our founders’ historic sexual assaults – Ed Giddins from Magham Down, Jake Nash from Eastbourne, Jack Giddins from Eastbourne, Matt Isepp from Eastbourne, and Nancy Jones from Eastbourne, – had not been idle and, in July 2024, enlisted the help of DC Jonathan Cooley from Eastbourne CID to trump up charges against Greebo and get the Eastbourne Sexual Assault site taken offline. Our founder was arrested in November 2024 and charged with stalking and four other charges against the same number of people. Our founders’ devices were seized, including their Disabled University Laptop, a PS5, and more. They were put on conditional bail, and the Sussex Police attempted to shut down our site by sending threatening letters to our hosting company at the time.
During the incessant attack by DC Jonathan Cooley (CC232), we had to change our hosting provider and domain name multiple times. The site changed names from Eastbourne Sexual Assault to Sex Offenders Online, Sexual Assault Online, and then finally to Offender.uk.
Our founder was on conditional bail for nine months until August 2025, when all charges were dropped and the CPS decided that there was no evidence to support DC Jonathan Cooley’s trumped-up claims. His clients (the two alleged sex offenders and their three friends) were told that our founder was in the clear.
We have been operating without any action from Sussex Police for almost three months now. We reached the 7,000 mark for the number of sex offenders listed on our website in September 2025 and gained 27,000 followers on our Facebook page in October 2025, so it isn’t all bad news.

Simon
Simon has transformed a personal hell into a powerful life mission. The reality of being a male survivor of sexual assault is often shrouded in silence and stigma, but Simon chose to shatter that silence. His journey through trauma and recovery, though marked by immense struggle and the battle against ingrained societal stereotypes, became the crucible for his dedication to helping others navigate their own paths to healing.
For Simon, his role is not just a job or a volunteer post—it’s his life’s work, a continuous process of healing through giving. He is a testament to the fact that while trauma may change a life’s trajectory, it does not have to define its end, and that the most significant strength is often found in the courage to be vulnerable and the choice to dedicate oneself to lifting others.

Kalle
Kalle is not just a survivor of rape; she is a relentless advocate determined to overhaul the way police respond to and investigate sexual violence. Her mission is intensely personal, forged in the frustrating and often damaging experience she endured when first reporting her own assault years ago. Kalle remembers the scepticism, the insensitive questioning, and the sheer administrative apathy that made her feel more like a suspect than a victim. That negative encounter, she realised, was a secondary trauma—and one she is determined no one else should face.
Kalle’s commitment stems from a deep, painful understanding of the systemic failures within the justice system. She recognises that for many survivors, the process of reporting can be so dehumanising and discouraging that they either drop their cases or choose not to report at all, allowing perpetrators to walk free. She has dedicated herself to closing the gap between procedure and humanity.
She is now a respected survivor-activist who works tirelessly on multiple fronts. Locally, Kalle volunteers as a liaison, accompanying survivors to police stations to offer immediate support and ensure their rights are respected. Crucially, she documents best and worst practices, using this data to push for tangible change.

Mark
Let’s be real, when Mark graduated at 22 with a First from a top UK university in Philosophy, no one expected him to jump into a dreary corporate job immediately. Instead, the guy who spent years dissecting Nietzsche and contemplating the meaning of life decided the best classroom wasn’t an auditorium—it was the world. Now 25, Mark’s been everywhere, proving that his academic brain is just as helpful in navigating hectic bus stations as it was for writing his thesis.
Mark is back on UK soil for now, but his brain is still whirring. He’s taking all that excellent knowledge—the academic grit and the global street smarts—and figuring out how to mash them together into something valuable and exciting. Basically, he’s trying to prove that philosophy isn’t just an abstract subject; it’s a killer toolkit for life. Keep an eye on this guy; his next adventure is just around the corner!
If you or anyone you know has been affected by the individuals highlighted on this website, please report them to the Police on 101 (999 in an emergency) or visit their online resources for further details on reporting a crime. You can also report to Crimestoppers if you wish to remain completely anonymous. There is help available on our support links page.
