Alex Barnes-Ross’ Latest “Marketing” Scheme Backfires and Educates the World That He’s a Stalker 

Alex Barnes-Ross

On January 15, 2025, STAND published a shocking exposé covering Alex Barnes-Ross’ serial stalking of a female Church of Scientology staff member, after which he was dismissed from Church staff, then, ultimately, the religion.

The story went viral, as did Barnes-Ross’ response: instantly stalking another female Church staff member—this time publishing all the evidence to YouTube in a video the platform immediately took down.

Things didn’t quite go as planned.

Barnes-Ross’ own mother, in a mad scramble, then stripped any and all mentions of her toxic son from her official website.

What’s a stalker to do?

Well, we know what Barnes-Ross did: whinged to The Guardian’s Shanti Das.

But things didn’t quite go as planned.

Instead, on March 23, one of the largest newspapers in the United Kingdom amplified the following from its virtual pages for all the world to see: Alex Barnes-Ross is a “disturbed” and “unhinged” “rabid anti-religious bigot,” who was “kicked out” of the Church of Scientology and now wages an “anti-Scientology hate and harassment campaign,” as part of which he violates YouTube’s terms of service—repeatedly—while operating as a notorious “harasser,” “pervert” and “serial stalker with a history of severe mental instability.”

Barnes-Ross bemoaned in the article that, as a result of the above, he has to “fight ‘really hard’ to be taken seriously.”

We can’t imagine why.

Barnes-Ross made the young woman he serially stalked “extremely uncomfortable,” The Guardian also noted.

We can’t imagine why.

Das’ article broadcast the truth about Alex Barnes-Ross far and wide—into thousands of homes the stalker had never tainted before.

And we know exactly why: Alex Barnes-Ross is so stupid he made sure of it. 

AUTHOR
STAND Staff