Fedly Jean Louis
Biography
Fedly Jean Louis, also known as Fredly Jean Louis, DJ Sniper, or Crazy Touch, is a man from Aux Cayes (Okay) in Haiti's South department. He worked as a local DJ and occasional barber. In November 2023, he gained public attention after documented evidence of his financial activities was published online.
In 2020, Fedly Jean Louis initiated contact with a 21-year-old man through Facebook. The man, who is Haitian and came to the United States when he was younger, was a singer, while Fedly was a DJ. Both individuals shared an interest in music. Fedly requested the man become his manager, which was declined, but the man helped create a Facebook page called "DJ Sniper" that grew to nearly 2,000 followers. Fedly later deleted the page, claiming he wanted to rebrand as "Crazy Touch."
The two men engaged in an online romantic relationship that lasted approximately three months before ending in January 2021, when Fedly began ignoring the other party. Throughout this period, Fedly concealed that he had children with different women, according to evidence later discovered.
After the relationship ended, Fedly maintained sporadic contact. In August 2021, he reported that his home collapsed during the South earthquake and claimed he was sleeping in the streets. Later that year, he sent photos of burned belongings, claiming his nephew started a fire with a candle. On July 4, 2022, Fedly claimed his mother had died, reporting that his cousin found her dead at home. The man sent $200 for funeral expenses and provided extensive emotional support based on this claim. Evidence later revealed this claim was false.
In early 2023, the two men reconciled. The man gifted Fedly an iPhone before they resumed dating. In February 2023, Fedly claimed his brother was mistreating him after his mother's "death," locking him out of the house. The man helped rent an apartment for Fedly, though evidence later showed Fedly submitted a fake rental contract claiming the apartment cost 80,000 gourdes when the actual contract showed 50,000 gourdes, allowing him to pocket approximately $150.
During this period, the man provided extensive financial support including weekly money transfers, monthly gym membership and protein supplements, trade school tuition (which Fedly's baby mother later confirmed he never attended), English lessons via Canvas (an online learning management system) with weekly quizzes and $20 rewards, items shipped via Shippex including iPhone, power bank, books, and ring light, and $1,000 for humanitarian parole sponsorship. The total financial assistance provided was approximately $10,000.
The man explicitly warned Fedly not to have women living in the apartment, and Fedly assured this would never happen. However, evidence later revealed Fedly was secretly living with his baby mother in the apartment. The man also discovered that Fedly's mother was alive and they communicated regularly on WhatsApp, contradicting Fedly's claim that she had died.
After Fedly refused to provide documentation for the humanitarian parole sponsorship, the man accessed Fedly's iPhone and iCloud account, discovering photos of Fedly with his one-year-old baby and baby mother, pictures with another woman at a hotel, WhatsApp messages with his mother proving she was alive, screenshots of arguments with his baby mother, and over 10 contacts for bokò (voodoo priests) and manbo (voodoo priestesses).
When confronted, Fedly claimed he was the baby's "godfather" and sent a group photo circling another man, claiming that man was the father. The man contacted Fedly's baby mother, who revealed she didn't know where Fedly got money for the apartment, that Fedly told her the man was his "manager," and that she once texted the man pretending to be Fedly's sibling to test their relationship.
In November 2023, the man published articles on Facebook, Medium, and Reddit, and created videos on the "Tribinal Bouzen LGBT" Facebook channel documenting the evidence. The first video, titled "Fedly Jean Louis, Visye Okay" (Fedly Jean Louis, Greedy from Okay), specifically targeted Aux Cayes residents. The posts received nearly 200,000 views each, while the video received almost 100,000 views.
In response, Fedly Jean Louis posted his own defense on social media. In his posts, Fedly confirmed key aspects of the situation. He stated that he had saved the man's contact as "My boss," indicating the financial power dynamic. In a text message to an ex-girlfriend that was later made public, Fedly wrote: "If I was in a relationship with him, why would I put 'MY BOSS' as his contact name? I was just using him for money... It's not like I killed anyone." This statement confirmed that Fedly acknowledged using the relationship for financial gain.
Regarding the children, Fedly publicly denied having children, despite photographic evidence showing children who bear a strong physical resemblance to him. However, he did not deny the financial aspects of the situation. Fedly's defense strategy focused primarily on denying that the relationship was romantic, repeatedly insisting they never met in person, never had sex, and that he is not gay. In Haitian culture, being labeled gay carries significant stigma, and Fedly's public statements suggested he was more concerned about being perceived as gay than addressing the financial aspects of the situation.
Fedly's mother and sister publicly supported him, with his mother liking his posts and making supportive comments. Fedly's sister made both direct and indirect attacks supporting Fedly, including posts that featured the man's photo and face. However, Fedly's baby mothers cooperated with the man, revealing that Fedly would take random women to hotels, confirmed he spent money drinking at bars with male peers, confirmed he never attended trade school, and warned he's obsessed with voodoo and money.
Evidence of voodoo practices included photos of Fedly wearing two voodoo rings representing Erzulie Freda (love/wealth) and Ogou (strength/power), a photo of a voodoo altar with colored flags, framed spirit images, bottles, and ritual objects, and a video of Fedly performing rituals. According to his baby mother, she doesn't trust Fedly with their child because of his obsession with money and voodoo, fearing he could "sacrifice anyone" for financial gain.
After the public exposure, Fedly kept his direct response posts up for 7-8 months before deleting them. After the scandal, Fedly would occasionally make subtle indirect attacks, trying to break the man and make him surrender, perhaps attempting to have him delete his posts. However, months later, when Fedly realized the man did not remove the posts, Fedly eventually deleted all his indirect posts attacking the man from the groups where he shared them and from his personal page. He attempted a "comeback" post stating "Good morning, good afternoon Facebook... I am back. Aux Cayes niggas never break," which failed to gain traction. He began posting Freemasonry symbols on his social media, appearing to seek association with the organization, possibly as another means to gain financial advantage. Fedly has largely disappeared from social media since the exposure.
The documented evidence includes fake vs. real rental contract comparisons, screenshots of bokò/manbo contacts, photos of Fedly wearing voodoo rings, voodoo altar photographs, and a gallery of 14 photos of Fedly Jean Louis. All claims made in the public exposure were supported by documented evidence including screenshots, photos, WhatsApp messages, and contracts that were made publicly available.
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