TLDR: The Disney upskirt scandal deepens as a former park employee allegedly filmed 500+ secret videos of guests, including a 14‑year‑old, sparking a lawsuit.
The Law&Crime Network’s new video, “Disney Employee Took 500+ Videos Underneath Guests’ Skirts: Cops,” reads like something out of a nightmare. Jesse Weber walks through a case so disturbing it feels surreal: Jorge Diaz Vega, a Disney World employee, allegedly spent years secretly filming under the dresses of park visitors—even a 14-year-old girl.
Echoing the same disturbing details, CBS reports: “A Michigan family has filed a lawsuit against Walt Disney Parks and Resorts U.S. Inc. of Florida and a former employee, who is accused of filming up the dress of an underage female guest and, according to investigators, had hundreds of similar photos and videos on his phone.” and “Diaz Vega ‘estimated he had over 500 videos on his phone.'”
Scandal reaches new levels when the lawsuit alleges Disney knew or should have known about Diaz Vega’s behaviour during his six years of employment yet failed to act. The Law&Crime video packs in interviews with witnesses, victims and the suspect himself, heightening the sense that a corporate kingdom built on magic may have been blind to dark truths beneath the surface.
Weber’s breakdown lingers on the emotional toll: a traumatized child hysterically crying, vomiting, and panicking after discovering she’d been filmed without consent. The lawsuit now seeks at least $50,000 in damages and raises uncomfortable questions about responsibility and institutional negligence.
Whether this is the beginning of Disney facing real scrutiny or merely another PR firestorm, one thing is clear: the Disney upskirt scandal has shattered the illusion of innocence—and put the empire under a microscope.
























