
The face isn't real, but her story is: Why W5 used AI on an interview with a rape survivor
Warning: This story contains graphic details and allegations of sexual assault
This series is part of an ongoing W5 investigation that has infiltrated a global online network of men who are secretly drugging, raping, filming and sharing the videos of their unsuspecting wives and intimate partners. Watch W5's full documentary, Sleeping with the Enemy, Saturday at 9 p.m. on CTV.
In the opening minutes of our documentary, Sleeping With the Enemy, viewers meet 'Melanie,' a Canadian woman whose life was shattered by a Facebook message on the weekend of her bridal shower.
Attached was a screengrab of her unconscious body being sexually assaulted. She would soon discover that an ex-boyfriend, someone she had dated as a teenager, had drugged, raped and recorded crimes against her for years, without her knowledge.
Those videos, some showing sexual torture, are being traded like currency within an online network of men who secretly rape their wives and girlfriends and then share, trade and sell videos of their abuse with other men.
Our investigation reveals this isn't an isolated case, but part of a sprawling, online community where rape and degradation is normalized, organized and commodified. The scale of the abuse is staggering.
But how do you tell Melanie's story and those of other survivors we interviewed, when the people most harmed fear being seen?
That question led us to the groundbreaking decision to use artificial intelligence to digitally reconstruct the faces of survivors.
Not to distort the truth, but to deliver it.
Beyond the blur
Facial expression invokes empathy and yet survivors of sexual violence are usually shown in silhouette, with their faces blurred or pixilated. Viewers are asked to feel something for people they can't fully see.
Our team didn't think that was good enough for Melanie or for the others we interviewed.
Using AI, we were able to create new, fictional faces, mapped to their real expressions. Their actual face is never shown, but their digitally altered faces move with their words.
Viewers can see emotion. Sadness. Anger. Fear. Defiance. It brings survivors out of the shadows.
This technology, often maligned in the era of deepfakes, can be used for more than deception. It can be used for truth. We are transparent with our audience: what you're seeing isn't real. But what they are saying is.
How safe is it?
The AI-generated faces are built by blending the real face of the survivor with a computer-created synthetic face. The final image does not retain the original features in a way that could be reverse-engineered. You cannot use AI to 'unmask' the survivor, because the real face simply isn't there anymore.
We have been completely transparent about our use of the technology, burning the words 'digitally altered face' onto the screen every time their faces appear. We also flagged, in voice-over, that their faces had been digitally altered.
AI altered faces of W5 interviewees for 'Sleeping with the Enemy'
Clockwise from top left: the AI-altered faces of people W5 spoke with for this investigation include 'Catherine' (stepsister of a convicted rapist from New Brunswick); 'Julie' (the ex-girlfriend of the convicted rapist from New Brunswick); 'Steve' (the husband of 'Melanie' and a medical doctor); and 'Rachel' (the ex-wife of Hamilton Ont. suspect Bryan Hayward)
Groundbreaking decision
The decision wasn't made lightly. We chose not to use the digitally altered faces in shorter news pieces that were broadcast on CTV National News over the last two weeks. But we believe it was the right technology outside of the news division.
This has rarely, if ever, been done before in Canada. There are legitimate concerns in an age where trust in the media is waning. But in the end, the survivors gave us our answer. They feel seen, but not exposed.
Their faces aren't real. But their stories are. The trauma is. The network is. And what was taken from these women — their control, their memory, their consent — is finally being reclaimed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
28 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Ontario court awards $1.7M in damages to group labelled ‘groomers' in smear campaign
The lawyer for members of an AIDS information group who were targets of an anti-LGBTQ+ smear campaign says a court ruling awarding them more than $1.7 million in damages sends a 'strong message' about the consequences of online hate. An Ontario Superior Court judge issued the ruling this week in the case of eight volunteer directors and staff members of the Canadian AIDS Treatment Information Exchange, who were referred to as 'creeps,' 'groomers' and 'pedophiles' online by a British Columbia man. The plaintiffs' lawyer, Douglas Judson, said he was glad the 'very long saga' for his clients has ended. 'They have been relentlessly targeted online by this individual with some of the most depraved libels imaginable,' Judson said in a phone interview. 'I think that it's important that they have received judgment in their favour and in very clear terms denouncing this type of malicious expression.' The default judgment released Monday says Peter Scott Blackwell, who did not appear in court or send a representative, started the smear campaign in May 2023 when he posted defamatory profiles of the plaintiffs on his website. The website displayed their names, pictures and the logo of the organization, labelling each person as a 'GROOMER,' according to the judgment. That term was defined as someone who manipulates children to 'participate in sexual activities.' The defendant also used interconnected social media accounts to amplify his hateful messages, the judgment said. The court ruling also issued a permanent injunction requiring the defendant to remove the defamatory content against the Canadian AIDS Treatment Information Exchange, a Toronto-based non-profit that provides sexual health information to people at risk of HIV and hepatitis C, including members of the LGBTQ+ community and other marginalized groups, and avoid posting such content targeting the organization in the future. Judson said some of the defamatory posts that had disappeared have resurfaced at various times. 'So as far as I know, the lion's share of it is still on the internet today,' he said. 'But once we have the court's issued order, I will be taking enforcement steps to ensure that it is complied with.' One of the plaintiffs, who was the target of at least 34 defamatory publications, is Andrew Brett, the director of communications at CATIE. Brett declined an interview request and instead referred to his LinkedIn post about the court's decision, in which he noted while the ruling has set a precedent, 'this legal victory underscores a critical failure in how we handle online abuse.' More needs to be done to hold internet companies that are hosting hateful content accountable, he said. Online hate wasn't the only approach the defendant used to harass the victims, according to the court ruling. Blackwell also left two voicemail messages at the organization's office threatening to post additional content about everyone, calling them 'child-grooming pedophiles.' The Canadian Press reached out to Blackwell via social media but received no response. On his website, Blackwell says the goal of his platform is 'fearlessly exposing the truth and ensuring unwavering accountability for individuals who engage in corrupt and deceitful practices.' Judson said they tracked down Blackwell after contacting the internet company hosting his website. He said the court ruling has wider implications concerning marginalized groups and hate speech. 'It sends a very strong message that hate has consequences, that expression online that baselessly attacks reputation with these insidious allegations of pedophilia or child abuse or other such slurs can attract serious civil liability,' he said. 'It is not the Wild West. There is law that governs how we express ourselves.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 21, 2025.


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
Sask. man convicted of murder found guilty again; judge finds testimony ‘frankly unbelievable'
A Saskatoon man has been convicted of second-degree murder for the second time. Brandin Brick, 33, has once again been found guilty in the 2018 killing of James Chaisson. ADVERTISEMENT Surveillance footage showed Chaisson getting into Brick's car outside the 7-Eleven at 22nd Street West and Avenue P North. A Crown witness testified that Brick shot Chaisson when he was inside the vehicle. The Crown believes Brick targeted Chaisson because he was in a rival gang. Brick was granted a new trial by Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal after claiming his lawyers didn't give him an opportunity to testify. But when he did take the stand — claiming the shooting was a drug deal gone wrong — the judge didn't buy it. Brandin Brick, 33, has once again been found guilty in the 2018 killing of James Chaisson. Brandin Brick, 33, has once again been found guilty in the 2018 killing of James Chaisson. Brick said Chaisson got into his backseat to buy drugs. As he drove away, Brick testified Chaisson suddenly pulled out a gun and shoved the barrel into his ribs, demanding drugs. Brick said he slammed on the breaks, Chaisson dropped the gun and Brick took a 'clean shot.' 'I frankly find this unbelievable,' Justice Timothy Keene wrote in his decision. Justice Keene said the mechanics of the shooting, as described by Brick, 'defy physics.' The judge ruled the Crown had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that Brick 'had the state of mind required for murder.' Brick is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 15. Second-degree murder comes with a life sentence with no chance of parole for at least 10 years.


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
Fredericton Police arrest six, block off northside neighbourhood and city park
Six people were arrested in Fredericton, N.B. following a targeted enforcement operation. The Fredericton Police Force says six individuals were taken into custody Thursday morning, following an alert for people to avoid a northside neighbourhood and nearby city park. The force issued an alert on social media just before 8 a.m. telling people to stay away from the Pine Street area, extending the alert about an hour later to include Carleton Park. Police said there was no threat to public safety. The alert was rescinded just after 10 a.m. Police confirmed three men, and three women were taken into custody for what it described as a 'targeted enforcement operation.' Police said charges were pending, but didn't provide additional details. Pine Street Fredericton Police arrest six people on Pine Street. (CTV Atlantic/Nick Moore) For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.