Stokes Twins Explained

Alan Chen Stokes and Alex Chen Stokes
Birth Date:23 November 1996
Birth Place:Shenyang, China
Nationality:Chinese and American
Occupation:YouTubers, TikTokers
Channel Url:UCbp9MyKCTEww4CxEzc_Tp0Q
Channel Url2:UCUdKQXtKb1me2Gt1nz6tzdg
Channel Display Name:Stokes Twins
Channel Display Name2:Stokes Twins Too, Stokes Twins Top Videos
Years Active:May 21st, 2017–present
Genre:Comedy, Vlog, Shorts
Subscribers:85million
Views:10.74 billion
Silver Button:yes
Gold Button:yes
Diamond Button:yes
Ruby Button:yes
Stats Update:August 17, 2024

Alan Chen Stokes and Alex Chen Stokes, commonly known as the Stokes Twins, (born 23 November 1996 in Shenyang, China) are Chinese-American twins and Internet celebrities known for their YouTube and TikTok accounts with 84.9 million subscribers and 30.8 million followers, respectively. The Stokes Twins are the 15th largest Youtube channel as of 20 August 2024. They began making videos separately and then combined their following into a shared twins account.[1]

Legal issues

In August of 2020, the Stokes Twins were charged with false imprisonment effected by violence, menace, fraud or deceit and falsely reporting an emergency in connection, or swatting with a YouTube video that they had recorded in October 2019.[2] The video contained two separate fake bank robberies as pranks, where the brothers pretended to be robbers; dressed all in black, wearing ski masks and carrying duffle bags,[3] and are attempting to make a getaway by asking unsuspecting people for clothing items or transportation help.[4]

At one instance, they called an Uber driver, who was not aware of the prank, and after the driver refused to drive them they attempted to coerce him. Numerous bystanders called police in both prank attempts and footage of the pair being stopped by officers were added to the video.[4] The Uber driver was held at gunpoint by responding officers until it was determined the driver was not involved, and the brothers were warned but not arrested and continued to film the video with a second prank four hours later at University of California, Irvine.[3]

The twins' attorneys have raised claims that the twins are not guilty of the charges as responding officers from the first prank reportedly gave suggestions for the video being filmed, and one brother reportedly called the Irvine Police Department's non-emergency line twice to tell them about the prank prior to the video being filmed. Their attorneys also raised concerns about the length of time between the video and the charges; ten months, and that the twins were not notified about the charges until after the department issued a press release about them.[5]

On April 1, 2021, the twins pleaded guilty in a plea bargain, and were sentenced to 160 hours' community service and a year of probation.[6] [7]

References

  1. Web site: Whateley. Dan. A 'twinfluencer' with millions of followers says he's leaning into TikTok for brand sponsorships and getting 'low 5-figure deals'. 2020-12-30. Business Insider. 9 June 2019 .
  2. Web site: KABC. 2020-08-06. Orange County twin YouTube stars facing possible prison time over phony bank robbery. 2020-12-29. ABC7 Los Angeles. en.
  3. Web site: 2020-08-08. Twin YouTube stars charged after Uber driver held at gunpoint during fake bank robbery. 2020-12-29. KTAB - BigCountryHomepage.com. en-US.
  4. Web site: Parker. Ryan. September 5, 2020. YouTube Prank Stars Charged With Felony in Connection to Fake Bank Robberies Hollywood Reporter. 2020-12-29. hollywoodreporter.com.
  5. Web site: Topher. Gauk-Roger. September 11, 2020. Stokes Twins' lawyers say YouTube stars are not guilty of any crimes. 2020-12-29. CNN.
  6. News: Stokes Twins: YouTubers plead guilty over fake bank robbery . April 1, 2021 . BBC News . BBC . 1 April 2021.
  7. News: YouTube Pranksters Stokes Twins Plead Guilty to Staging Fake Bank Robberies . April 1, 2021 . NDTV Gadgets 360 . Reuters . NDTV . en.