Unofficial Forensic Audit: How an AI Hallucination Exposed the Creator(s) of “WSDMGC73”
*I made updates to this post on Jan. 15, 2026, because Torry/WSDMGC73 finally updated their smear blog from “thereisnohyenacripsdetriot” (incorrectly spelling DETROIT to the correct spelling)*
Over the past few days, I (Tiny Joker) conducted an unofficial online forensic audit of the self-proclaimed “WSDMGC73” or “Westside 73 Gangsters Crips,” which appears to be a fully bot-generated persona. The results are striking: persistent typos and misspelled member names point to classic AI hallucinations driven by user error.
I reviewed slang definitions across sites like UrbanDictionary.com, OnlineSlangDictionary.com, and early January 2026 Tumblr posts about the alleged group. The goal was to identify errors in gang affiliations—for example, repeated use of “Gangsters Crips” instead of the historically correct “Gangster Crips.” For time and practicality, I won’t count every typo, but the volume is overwhelming, especially for a supposed gang-affiliated youth-offshoot where identity is taken very seriously.
To make this digestible, I’ve broken the analysis into categories.
1. The “Prior Chat” Trap
Large language models mirror phrasing from the prompts they receive.
- How it happens: If the bot-runner repeatedly prompts the AI with “Gangsters Crips” (typo included), the AI adopts it as “official,” despite the correct term being “Gangster Crips.”
- Consequence: Urban Dictionary definitions and other AI-generated content for WS73GC, WSDMGC73, or W/S 73GC inherit this error. The AI also inserts irrelevant, corporate-sounding metrics like “combined views” instead of street-relevant context. For example, one definition reads:
“WSDMGC73 has released multiple singles & albums with over 400 monthly listeners on Spotify as well as 154.4K combined views on all major platforms.”
- Evidence shows: Real gang affiliates do not care about music availability or combined view counts—these metrics are a clear giveaway of AI-assisted fabrication.
2. The “tinyjoker” vs. “Tiny Joker” Slip
This is one of the clearest signs of cross-contamination and AI hallucination.
- Real identity: Tiny Joker (with a space) is a verified member of ScoreGang in Detroit. (And naw i’m not bragging😭)
- AI hallucination: The bot-runner (likely 30KTorry) repeatedly types “tinyjoker” (no space), and the AI inserts that fictionalized name into an L.A.-based “Gangsters Crips” narrative.
- Evidence shows: The AI merges reality (Detroit’s Tiny Joker) with fiction (L.A. geography like Florence & Normandie) while preserving typos, exposing sloppy digital LARPing. Repeated AI interactions using incorrect names allow the AI to “balance” the narrative, presenting an alleged gang figure as a “superfan” because that’s what the user directs it to do. AI doesn’t “think”—it performs tasks and clearly never anticipated these chats would enter public domains.
3. The “Detroit to L.A.” Disconnect
Several elements in the definitions reveal the source of obsession and a highly invested AI user:
- Mentions of a Michigan/Detroit “fan” trying to act like WSDMGC73 are a telltale sign.
- The bot-runner is likely Clarkston-based or obsessed with gang life, attempting to transplant local lore into an L.A. context.
- Typos like “tinyjoker” and “Gangsters” leave a digital trail back to the original user, showing a single person manufacturing fake gang lore online. The AI doesn’t know these narratives are being platformed—otherwise, many typos and redundancies would likely be corrected.
4. How WSDMGC73 Likely Created Their DistroKid Persona
The pattern of AI-generated content and repeated typos also explains how WSDMGC73 built their music catalog via “8429551 Records DK.” This persona is not a collective or gang-affiliated rap group — it’s a single DistroKid account running multiple fictional “members” through metadata manipulation. The user likely asked an AI how to release music, and the AI returned basic instructions, producing placeholder names and centralized uploads.
Key Observations:
- One Artist ID: Every track is credited to WSDMGC73. “Members” like Lady Dlow, Lil Dlow, or Tr3yactive exist only in song titles or “feat.” fields. There are no standalone artist pages, credits, or discographies. Online promotion branding these names as “artists” within a collective is inaccurate. In the real world, artists must release music under their own accounts to qualify.
- Metadata Laundering: The account repeatedly inserts “feat.” into song titles to simulate a roster. All WSDMGC73 releases use identical ISRC formatting across 60+ uploads, indicating a single-user, centralized operation—likely Torry Jackson/30KTorry (possibly still tied to The Dlow Siblings, though the recurring typos suggest Torry is running it, with The Dlow Siblings providing the voices).
- Artificial Metrics: Spotify reports ~400 monthly listeners. “Feat.” tags do not link to any real collaborators. Combined with prior AI hallucinations, this creates the illusion of activity, forming a self-sustaining ecosystem dependent on AI task execution. Human error still leaks through, revealing the artificial setup.
- Single-User Production: Consistency across uploads, naming conventions, and cover art points to a single operator, the same Clarkston-based bot-runner identified in the AI audit.
- Online Amplification: Slang definitions, blogs, and burner accounts attempt to legitimize the persona by linking it to California sets (73 Gangster Crips, Gangster Crips), but these claims collapse under scrutiny. Real Crips gangs have documented presence; WSDMGC73 exists only digitally.
What “WSDMGC73” Actually Is
WSDMGC73 is not known for any genuine Crips-type activity, including criminal acts or territorial graffiti tagging. Based on public sources (gang documentation archives, California and Detroit reports, graffiti photo collections, and online discussions from 2025–2026), it appears to be tied to an online persona or small music collective rather than a real gang.
The output is likely controlled by a single AI user—probably 30KTorry (Torry Jackson)—who has used AI to misinform the public on sensitive topics. This highlights the need for AI oversight. Users like this treat AI as a thinking companion, but AI only performs tasks. In this case, the user vented and misdirected knowledge into AI, producing blogs like theresnohyenacripsindetroit: long, redundant, and unsupported by real-world evidence.
Key Details:
- Frequently linked in slang definitions to a supposed “Westside 73 Gangsters Crips” (or variants like WS73GC), described online as a low-activity subset of Gangster Crips from South Los Angeles. Most active gangs today do not acknowledge its existence.
- Connections are widely called out as fabricated, often tied to a single DistroKid/Apple Music account pushing AI-generated covers, fake features, and releases with no real collaborations or street proof.
- Multiple sources confirm WSDMGC73 is not connected to real LA 73 Gangster Crips (east of 110 near Fremont High, singular “Gangster”) and has no Michigan/Detroit ties.
- No visual evidence exists of WSDMGC73 or WS73GC graffiti, tags, murals, or territorial markings in California or elsewhere.
- Online chatter, including X posts, calls it “cosplay,” “Reddit Crips,” or an attempt to invent gang history without actual street presence, beefs, or sanction from established sets.
At the End of the Day
The audit shows a Clarkston-based superfan—likely 30KTorry—or someone running a bot, used AI to manufacture an L.A. gang identity from scratch. It’s a total digital LARP, with AI hallucinations exposing the creator through typos, metrics, and repeated narrative inconsistencies.
Ironically, the AI itself revealed the creator by inserting a Michigan/Detroit connection into a definition for a West Side L.A. group, while the DistroKid data confirms the entire music persona is a single-user fabrication.
DISCLAIMER: Allegations are based on public posts/clips—do your own research
Sources:
- Urban Dictionary: TherealTalkMANE – author pushing the false narrative with consistent typos.
- There No Hyena Crips in “Detriot” (Idiots not from DETROIT so he doesn’t know how to spell it, on Jan. 15, 2026, he finally changed the blog name to the correct spelling) Blog – likely authored by the same UD user, sharing identical AI-generated errors.
- Online Slang Dictionary: WSDMGC73 – contains the same typos and AI-generated phrasing.
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