Nicola Bulley ghoul who filmed mum’s body UNMASKED as TikTok creep barber who tricked cops into letting him past cordon | The Sun

A TIKTOK ghoul who duped police and covertly filmed as Nicola Bulley's body was retrieved from the river has been unmasked as barber Curtis Arnold.

The 34-year-old posted grim footage of officers by the water's edge on several social media channels.




Arnold's sickening eight-minute clip sparked a wave of condemnation – but its near million views have earned him almost £1,000 in royalties.

The barber also shared footage of the ashen-faced couple in shock after finding the 45-year-old mother-of-two in reeds by the River Wyre, Lancashire, on February 19.

He previously recorded a "possible burial site" in woodland near where Nicola was last seen on January 27 and headlined a string of videos with outrageous smears against her partner Paul Ansell.

On his Curtis Media channels on TikTok, YouTube and Facebook, Arnold claims to offer "media and journalism done differently".

READ MORE UK NEWS

Nicola Bulley’s heartbroken friends and former neighbours join for vigil

Nicola’s family can now plan funeral as her remains will be released

But he hides his identity, is careful not to appear on camera, and sometimes uses a picture of Paul as his profile image.

The powerlifter made five, six-hour round trips from his Worcestershire home to St Michael's on Wyre in the space of 10 days to acquire content for his channels.

Arnold's most sickening video from the village opens with his Go Pro camera, fastened to a harness around his neck, filming a male police officer blocking his path.

He is asked to turn back but dupes the cop into letting him through by claiming that he needs to return to his parked car and saying that he is from Blackpool.

Most read in The Sun

THREE IS A CROWD

Una Healy dumps David Haye & Sian Osborne after row over holiday

MASON TO BE DAD

Mason Greenwood becoming dad for first time weeks after charges dropped

THAI-ME FOR DRAMA

Worst Towie feud in the history of the show explodes in Thailand

FAKE EMPIRE

Putin’s war has left him facing coup & his dream of Soviet 2.0 in tatters

As dozens of officers gather and a police helicopter and drone hover overhead, Arnold asks a female colleague on the other side of the cordon: "What's going on down there? I've walked down and he wouldn't let me pass."

She also directs him to leave the area but the video then cuts to Arnold filming covertly as officers lift what appears to be a body bag.

Many viewers reacted with horror to his footage headlined "Nicola Bulley *breaking* police found something".

One wrote: "This is disgraceful! Imagine if that was your loved one. I hope her family do not see this."

Another said: "You need your head looking at filming this. Her children will see this one day you vile man."

Arnold's TikTok account named Nicola Bulley Case, which had more than 13,000 followers and 100,000 likes, has since been removed but the video remains elsewhere online.

He was tracked down to his barber shop from his digital footprint after re-branding his channels Curtis Media.

Asked if he was behind the notorious video, he replied "Yes. How did you find me?"

He admitted that he lied to police and crouched in a field to film covertly on his Samsung S21 smartphone.

He will do anything for more views to make money.

He recalled: "I held the phone as high above me as I could, resting it on fencing.

"I couldn't see a thing but I knew my camera would be recording whatever was happening."

Arnold, whose ambition is to "make a good living" from YouTube full-time, gleefully revealed the £716.06 in royalties that he made from the platform alone, adding: "It is probably £900 by now but it takes a while to come through."

Arnold is single and lives in a three-bedroom detached house near the barber shop, which he has been running for the past two years.

His first viral videos were of "car fishing" – vehicles coming unstuck attempting to drive through deep water – at Rufford Ford near Newark, Nottinghamshire.

The ancient river crossing that featured in the Domesday Book, had been used, in various forms, for at least 1,000 years.

But Nottinghamshire County Council had to close the ford in December at the request of police after the TikTok craze turned the small rural lane into one of the world's most notorious roads.

'DESPERATE FOR CASH'

Someone who knows Arnold well said: "He will do anything for more views to make money.

"He gives all TikTok-ers a bad reputation."

Arnold tried to justify smearing the reputation of Nicola's grief-stricken partner, insisting: "I was hoping my videos would trigger a member of the public to come forward with new information."

Another of the videos, titled "Nicola Bulley *UNSEEN* ABANDONED HOUSE SEARCH", has been viewed almost 100,000 times on YouTube.

It shows Arnold roaming around a large, supposedly vacant house on the opposite side of the river from the bench where Nicola was last seen and her phone was found.

He has also been criticised for a video he uploaded to another of his channels, Curtis Cool Stuff, on February 18 of a "possible burial site".

He filmed a man digging in a copse and it looked like the pair were working in tandem as a search team.

'DISGUSTING'

But Arnold said he had simply stumbled across another amateur sleuth, saying: "I never met him before. I just filmed him digging."

Arnold claims that his covert filming triggered death threats and apologised to Nicola's family for the potential "distress" he may have caused.

But he remains undeterred, saying he intends to follow as many breaking news stories as he can to post about online.

"It gives the public a chance to get closer to the event and in the Nicola case I wanted people to watch my footage and see if they noticed that me or the police had missed anything," he added.

Experts say that social media algorithms encourage and reward controversial content like Arnold's.

There have been 400 million views on TikTok alone of videos with the hashtag "NicolaBulley".

They include over half a million views of 26-year-old "psychic" Lucy Hesford-Buckingham, from Wales, sharing her vision on the case before Nicola's body was found.

In her video, she claimed that she sensed intuitively from an "overwhelming smell of lemon bleach" that Nicola was still alive but being held captive and in "severe danger".

Read More on The Sun

Our trip turned into living hell after catching silent killer bug from a hot tub

iPhone owners can get ‘Google upgrade’ with ingenious perk for first time ever

So many sleuths descended on St Michael's on Wyre that, at one point, police had to issue a 48-hour dispersal order to clear the village of outsiders.

TikTok insists that it removes content and accounts that engage in bullying and harassment or otherwise violates its policies.









Source: Read Full Article