Alan and Alex Stokes, popular YouTube pranksters, have been charged with false imprisonment and swatting after police responded to what they thought was a bank robbery. In October 2019, the ...
In exchange for their guilty plea, their charges were reduced to misdemeanor counts of false imprisonment and reporting false emergencies Digital News Writer, PEOPLE Twin YouTube stars have each ...
Twin brothers who have a wildly popular series of prank videos on TikTok and YouTube have been charged with false imprisonment and “swatting,” the Orange County District Attorney’s Office announced ...
Update: In a statement provided to Insider, the defense team of twin YouTube and TikTok stars Alan and Alex Stokes said that the Stokes brothers were not guilty of any crimes. An August 5 press ...
SANTA ANA (CBSLA) — Twin brothers Alan and Alex Stokes have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor false imprisonment and reporting false emergencies in connection with a pair of fake bank robberies in Irvine, ...
IRVINE, Calif. (KABC) -- Twin brothers from Irvine who have gained millions of followers on YouTube by making prank videos could end up in prison. Alan and Alex Stokes, 23, were charged with false ...
The prank is documented in a YouTube video titled "BANK ROBBER PRANK! (gone wrong)" Twin YouTubers have been charged with felony counts after they pretended to be bank robbers for prank videos filmed ...
Twin YouTubers Alan and Alex Stokes have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor false imprisonment and reporting false emergencies in connection to a series of fake bank robbery pranks orchestrated back in ...
Twin Youtube stars Alan and Alex Stokes may be facing time behind bars thanks to a bank robbery prank the pair apparently pulled last year. The Orange County District Attorney's Office announced ...
Twin YouTube stars Alan and Alex Stokes face criminal charges in connection with staging two fake bank robberies in Irvine, one of which involved an Uber driver who was not in on the prank. Orange ...
SANTA ANA — Twin brothers who have won millions of followers by posting prank videos on social media have been charged for faking bank robberies in Southern California and could go to prison if ...
Twin brothers who have a wildly popular series of prank videos on TikTok and YouTube have been charged with false imprisonment and “swatting,” the Orange County District Attorney’s Office announced ...