Johnny Somali, the American internet troll whose provocative livestreams across Asia made him one of the most controversial figures online, has been sentenced to six months in prison with hard labor by a South Korean court. He was taken into custody immediately after the verdict was delivered Wednesday at the Seoul Western District Court.
The streamer, whose real name is Ramsey Khalid Ismael, was found guilty on all charges against him, according to NBC News. The conviction marks the end of a legal saga that began in late 2024 after a string of incidents that outraged the public and triggered national backlash.
The incident that started it all
The case that drew the most attention involved the Statue of Peace, a monument commemorating the tens of thousands of Korean women who were forced into sexual slavery by Japanese forces during World War II. In October 2024, Somali posted a clip of himself kissing the statue and performing sexually suggestive gestures on it during a live broadcast. The video spread rapidly and drew immediate condemnation across South Korea.
Somali later apologized, claiming he had not known what the statue represented. Many Koreans rejected the apology, particularly after he followed it up by challenging locals to fight him. The issue carries deep emotional weight in South Korea, a country that still actively demands an official apology from Japan over the wartime atrocities. A small number of the women who survived are still alive today.
A trial full of drama
The legal proceedings were anything but quiet. At his first court appearance, Somali showed up an hour late, hungover, and attempted to enter the courtroom wearing a red MAGA hat before being stopped. He later made remarks during a court session calling South Korea a “vassal state of the United States,” which drew further backlash.
His charges covered a wide range of offenses. The Korea Herald reported that Somali was prosecuted for causing disturbances in a Seoul convenience store by blasting music and spilling cup noodle broth, disrupting passengers on a bus and subway, blocking rides at Lotte World amusement park while live-streaming, and playing North Korean propaganda audio in public spaces. He also faced two counts under South Korea’s Special Act on Sexual Violence Crimes for distributing sexually explicit deepfake videos featuring two South Korean female streamers without their consent.
Somali pleaded not guilty to the deepfake charges, arguing that a Korean streamer had shared the same content without facing consequences. The court rejected that argument and found him guilty on all eight counts.
What the sentence means
The six-month prison term with hard labor was significantly less than the three years prosecutors had requested. The reduced sentence reflected the court’s assessment that the harm to victims was not considered severe enough to warrant the maximum. The judge cited the fact that Somali had committed his offenses specifically to generate YouTube revenue and had shown disregard for Korean law throughout.
In addition to prison time, Somali received 20 days of additional detention and is barred from working at any institution serving children or people with disabilities for five years after his release.
Before entering court on Wednesday, Somali told reporters he was remorseful and wanted to apologize to the South Korean public. His mother had also filed a petition asking for a lighter sentence, but the court moved forward with the ruling. His phone will be confiscated during his incarceration, cutting off his ability to stream.
A pattern of provocation
South Korea was far from the only country where Somali courted trouble. His history of disruptive behavior stretches back to 2023, when he first gained notoriety in Japan for taunting subway passengers with references to the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was also detained at a protest in Tel Aviv after making inappropriate remarks toward a female police officer.
Back in South Korea, the backlash against him at times turned physical. A former Korean Navy SEAL knocked him unconscious in a confrontation that was widely shared online, and he was reportedly assaulted multiple times by members of the public.
A flight attendant threatening a passenger for switching seats caused a stir online this week, but Somali’s case represents a very different kind of public conduct story. Meanwhile, online behavior generating real-world consequences has been a recurring theme lately, as seen when fans slammed Justin Bieber’s Coachella appearance as lazy after a YouTube stunt.
Legal experts have noted that Somali’s conviction could set a precedent for how South Korea handles foreign influencers who travel to the country looking to generate provocative content for online audiences.





