A Darwin man with a prolific collection of schoolgirl selfies has been confronted by a local resident outside his home, in a video sent to The Mango Inquirer.
Posting under the pseudonym "Ray Reynolds", the man was first exposed by on our page earlier this month, after a concerned reader sent through his Facebook profile.
The man's public gallery contained over a dozen recent images where minors, some as young as 13, were featured in his photo backgrounds.
Locations included McDonalds, public buses, Casuarina Shopping Centre, and department store fitting rooms.
When we shared his images in a post earlier this month, Mango attracted the ire of some parents for failing to blur out their children's faces. We removed the post immediately.
In one selfie, a blueberry muffin is held up beside a young minor in a creepy fashion.
A number of odd captions appeared to read like poetry, striking a rather chilling note on the man's intentions with his content:
Follow me through the dark let me take you past our satellites
In the video inboxed to The Mango Inquirer, a vigilante can be heard saying: "This is him. I opened your gate, because I want to show people who you are, and where you are.
"You want to be taking photos of young girls on the buses?
The schoolgirl selfie snapper asks: "Which one?" to which the vigilante responds: "Exactly which one! Yes, yes so much of them. I found you."
A number of commenters on the original post indicated the man was already on the police radar and was recently released from custody, although it's unclear what the matter involved.
The schoolgirl selfie snapper's mother wrote to the Mango Inquirer: "My son is not the person that we all know in our household.
"He has undergone a lot of stress if not depression, as he has episodes of being very very quiet.
"Since his matter has gone to court, he didn't want to hide stuff, that might seem as if he is hiding evidence.
"He has explained to me that he doesn't know all those people on the background."
More updates if they become available.
We are The Mango Inquirer.