
Redstone and Moonves: Twin Legacies of Scandal
Both Shari Redstone and Les Moonves have been named in court filings and public investigations tied to Paramount/CBS. Moonves, once hailed as the king of network television, was forced out in disgrace under a barrage of sexual misconduct allegations that rocked CBS to its core.
Redstone, meanwhile, has repeatedly played her favorite card — calling “ME TOO SCANDALS” whenever confronted with allegations that cut too close to the truth. But unlike Moonves, who was publicly ousted, Redstone has maneuvered to shield herself behind corporate spin, mergers, and Wall Street narratives.
Together, they represent a dynasty where power was protected, abuse was silenced, and accountability was always delayed.
Fifteen years ago, Judge Kimba Wood ordered that LimeWire — the notorious file-sharing service rife with Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) — be disabled and removed from distribution platforms like Download.com.
Shari Redstone’s empire ignored the order.
She Knew, and She Ignored Judge Kimba Wood’s Order And Then Ignored The Supreme Court of the Eastern Caribbean
And today, as our September 11, 2025 screenshot from Download.com proves, LimeWire is still there, rebranded, revived, and marketed under Paramount-connected channels.
The page boasts about “AI-driven features,” “end-to-end encryption,” and “blockchain decentralized storage.” What it doesn’t mention: LimeWire was, and remains, a known vector for trafficking networks and CSAM exchange.
Meanwhile, Shari Redstone exited Paramount with an $8.4 billion Skydance merger, hailed on Wall Street as a masterstroke. She cashed out, leaving the new owners to polish a tarnished brand — while the old crimes were never reckoned with.
But in Antigua, in case ANUHCV2025/0149, she is in default. Personally served in both London and New YorkShari Redstone-1redstone.NY-1, Redstone never filed a defence. Antigua now frames her silence as admission.
Even more shocking: LimeWire 2.0 has been repackaged as an NFT marketplace. The same brand, the same networks, now dressed up as a digital collectibles platform.
History will not remember Shari Redstone as the woman who saved Paramount. It will remember her as the executive who:

