The group attracted attention by filming its attacks on LGBT people and distributing the videos on the internet. Victims were lured to private apartments by members of the group posing as LGBT people interested in romantic relationships. Some of the victims had their heads shaved and were forced to simulate oral sex. Although the victims were claimed to be "pedophiles", in reality they were homosexual men. According to Buzzfeed News, the group has inspired other vigilantes to emulate its tactics. According to an editorial in the academic journalEthnoscripts, "Occupy Pedophilia" attacks began in Moscow and spread to Novosibirsk. Their activities reached a crescendo in 2013, at the time that the Russian gay propaganda law was passed. In 2014, Human Rights Watch reported that Occupy Pedophilia is the most prominent of a variety of Russian vigilante groups which commit violent attacks against LGBT people and post videos online, a phenomenon which began in late 2012. In 3 out of 114 videos analyzed, heterosexual men seeking sex with underage girls were also targeted. According to the group's website, it has chapters in 22 cities in Russia and Ukraine, including St. Petersburg, Krasnodar, Kaliningrad, Ufa, Ryazan, Rostov, Tula, Cheboksary, Perm, Orenburg, Omsk, Yoshkor-Ola, Velikii-Novgorod, Pskov, Kazan, Samara, Magnitogorsk, Belgorod, and Kamensk-Uralsky. Other branches of the organization are listed on VKontakte but not on the organization's website. The most active chapters according to HRW include Krasnodar and St. Petersburg. By 3 December 2014, the group's main VKontakte page had more than 90,000 subscribers. Occupy Pedophilia is profiled in Ben Steele's 2014 documentary , along with the similar group Parents of Russia. Steele filmed the group's planning sessions and physical attacks. Maxim Martsinkevich, the group's leader, was sentenced to more than five years in prison for incitement to ethnic or racial hatred unrelated to the anti-gay attacks, but his sentence was cut to three years on appeal in 2014. Human Rights Watch reports that "The impact on victims of Occupy Pedophilia-style attacks can be severe." Some victims suffered broken bones and other serious injuries. Others developed depression or anxiety as a result of the attacks or stayed at home due to fear of attacks.
Proyecto pilla-pilla
The Russian group inspired a similar group in Spain, called "Proyecto pilla-pilla" and started by a Ukrainian man named Mykola in November 2013. In groups of 10–20 people, the group accosted at least three homosexuals in Granollers and Les Franqueses del Vallès, humiliating the victims and posting videos of the attacks on social media. The attacks caused alarm in the localLGBT community as people feared for their safety. Four members of the group were arrested by the Spanish police and convicted for invasion of privacy and offenses against the human dignity of the victims. In 2018, the prosecutor recommended a 21-year sentence for Mykola, the maximum allowed under the law, and recommended that the offenders be required to pay 31,000 euros in compensation to each of the victims.