One of the worst things I can imagine happening in my world is the death of a student. These are our charges, we get to know them and feel responsibility for them, and the pain of loss is deeply felt. Even worse is when students die violently. They’re young, and should have a long life ahead of them.
The second worst thing would be for a teacher to be falsely accused of killing a student, especially when there is no evidence suggesting such a thing. It’s more than a civil and criminal accusation, it’s morally villainous.
In 2022, four students at the University of Idaho were brutally murdered. This was a heinous act without excuse. The man who did it was arrested, confessed, convicted, and was sentenced to life in prison. In the wake of the murders, though, a woman named Ashley Guillard was riding high on social media, claiming to know who the killer was on the basis of her psychic powers and making TikTok video after TikTok video declaring that the tarot cards told her that a history professor at the University of Idaho, Rebecca Scofield, had been having an affair with one of the victims and had had them all killed.
Before authorities arrested Kohberger in late December 2022 in connection with the victims’ brutal stabbing deaths, Guillard published videos on the TikTok platform baselessly alleging Scofield had engaged in a romance with one of the four people slain.
Guillard – who is a resident of Houston, Texas, and described herself as a psychic crime solver on her TikTok account – accused Scofield on camera of ordering the quadruple murder to hide her relationship with one of the victims. She cited tarot card readings as evidence to support her unfounded theory.
It was a ludicrous accusation. Flipping cards in Texas will not tell you who the perpetrator of a crime in Idaho was, but apparently making inflammatory accusations without evidence was Guillard’s only claim to fame, and she profited off the attention she got for lying about people. Her slanders finally caught up with her, though: Scofield sued and won a $10 million award from her.
In a June 6, 2024, order, a federal judge sided with Scofield, ruling that the internet personality’s statements were defamatory and based “only” on her “spiritual intuition about the murders” — not “any objective basis.”
The judge also noted that Guillard’s social media posts continued even after the Moscow Police Department issued a press release in December 2022 stating that Scofield was not a suspect in the murder investigation.
Now Guillard is crying and calling the ruling Unfair!
. Too bad. Slap her down hard, teach her that you can’t profit off false accusation. If she wants to complain about anything, it’s that TikTok has incredibly lax policies about enforcing rules and rights online. If you enthusiastically charge into a wild wild West of lawlessness and you get gunned down in a shootout, you don’t get to blame someone else.
Let’s extend the verdict. Anyone making factual claims on the basis of tarot cards, psychic powers, or Bible prophecy are charlatans who ought to face the full weight of the law when their claims harm people. Stupid people babbling on social media are small potatoes — go after the people who claim that politicians have divine favor because a god whispered in their head that they must be supported in even their most damaging actions. Prosecute those who claim to wage holy war first of all.



Not much of a psychic if she didn’t see that lawsuit coming
(One of the linked articles)
Who needs legal training when you can just ask the cards for the perfect legal argument?
If she uses the cards to find $10 million (maybe a lottery ticket?) that she can use to pay off Scofield, she’ll make herself famous and relieve her debt at the same time. It’s win-win!
She also filed her own appeal — red flag for kookery right there (hmm, who else do we know who did that?). The filing (couldn’t resist looking) just claims that the case was fraudulent and the witnesses all lied. IANAL, but surely you need to say more than that to have an appeal granted? Or else the courts would be endlessly tied up with baseless appeals.
Guillard … described herself as a psychic crime solver …
Let’s not rush to judgment here. What psychic crimes has Guillard solved?
It mostly sounds like mental illness to me, rather than lying for clicks.
She must use some damn good tarot cards to get such precise information!
Mine were always a bit vague…
“Will it rain tomorrow?” Eight of Swords!
“What are this weeks lottery numbers?” The Star!
So Eric Cartman was an inspiration for this crook?
I like the X-file episode where an insane killer goes after various alleged psychics.