DELRAY BEACH, Fla. – Dustin Lampros walks into a grocery store with purpose, his eyes moving across the aisles as he looks for the person he came to confront. He isn’t searching for something to buy — he is trying to track down a man he believes may be a child predator.
Lampros, a mixed martial arts fighter, has spent the past several years working to identify and expose adults accused of targeting children online. Since 2022, he has documented that effort on social media under the name 561 Predator Catcher, a reference to the area code of his hometown.
Among friends and inside the MMA cage, Lampros is better known as “Scrappy.” The nickname dates back to fourth grade, when he stood up to two larger boys on a football field after they had bullied him.
His campaign against adults who allegedly prey on minors began after a friend who works in cybersecurity warned him about the threats children can face online.
Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros stands outside his MMA training gym in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026, wearing the Meta Glasses he uses to record encounters with people he suspects of being child predators. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
Lampros told News Agency that, around that time, he had recently renewed his commitment to his faith and had been praying for guidance about God’s purpose for his life.
What his friend showed him, he said, left him shocked.
Within minutes, the friend created a fake profile for a 13-year-old girl named “Amy” on a platform commonly used to make connections.
It took seconds for men to make contact. “We had multiple grown adults reaching out trying to talk to who they thought was a 13-year-old,” Lampros said, fuming at the memory.
That sparked painful memories.
“Two people close to me in my life were victims,” he said, including a close childhood friend. “He was raped by our principal from sixth to eighth grade.”
Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros spars with a teammate during training at MMA Science Academy in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
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Lampros felt a calling on his life.
“Instantly, I knew that I was meant to do something.
“I could help.”
Bait and switch
Now, the 32-year-old professional fighter coordinates with people across the country who work as decoys posing as children. They converse online. They exchange photos.
Once an in-person meeting is arranged, and plans for sexual activity are discussed, Lampros prepares to pounce.
At the agreed-upon time, he waits outside the meet-up location. And when he spots the person who’s been communicating with the child, he places a 911 call to police.
Then, he strolls inside. Coolly and confidently, he walks up and addresses his “target” by name.
Immediately, Lampros pummels them with questions about why they’re there, who they’d planned to meet, and what they’d planned to do. He films the interactions on Meta glasses.
Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros spars with a teammate during training at MMA Science Academy in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
“I’ve gotten really good at getting these guys to just kind of … admit everything to me,” he said. Twice, his targets were women. One was a law enforcement officer. Several have been teachers.
When their answers to his questions don’t match the conversations decoys shared with him in screenshots, he brandishes his phone.
“I have all the messages right here,” Lampros reveals.
When police arrive, he turns over the messages and his video of the “catch,” as he calls it, as evidence.
He credits his MMA training and his faith for his ability to stay calm.
“Inside I’m fuming, I’m boiling,” he said.
“The goal is to get these guys arrested, charged, and convicted, and I know that if I put my hands on them, or if I act out, I know that that can affect the case. So, therefore, I keep myself calm, and keep myself composed.”
Fighting to protect children
Lampros trains at the MMA Science Academy in Sunrise, Florida. The other fighters and coaches celebrate his successes, said the gym owner, Roger Krahl.
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By sparring with him and helping him hone his skills, they feel they play a role in his mission, he said.
But they’re mystified by how Lampros refrains from flexing his fighting skills when interacting with alleged child predators.
“We tell him all the time,” Krahl said. “But he’s got the perfect personality for it. He stays very calm and keeps his cool, which is obviously a big thing in the cage.
“When you get in there and fight, you’ve got to be calm under pressure. You’ve got to be able to think.”
MMA Science Academy owner Roger Krahl (L), stands with Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros (C) and MMA coach Troy Worthen (R) in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
Lampros has completed about 100 catches since 2022. About 10 have resulted in convictions, he said. Others still simmer in the legal pipeline.
“The cases take years,” he said.
Meanwhile, his technique has evolved, even softened, he admitted.
He used to order catches to do pushups while waiting for police. Now, he coaxes alleged predators to discuss details on video that can be turned over to police.
“He’s very comfortable,” Krahl said, adding that he doesn’t worry about the 5-foot-7 fighter’s safety.
“Obviously, he can protect himself. He’s a high-level professional athlete.
“Even though he’s a smaller guy—a bantamweight, 135 pounds—I wouldn’t worry about him versus anybody. Just a trained professional athlete versus an untrained person is not even fair.”
MMA Science Academy owner Roger Krahl (L), stands with Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros (C) and MMA coach Troy Worthen (R) in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
Lampros and his decoy helpers don’t coordinate with law enforcement. He reveals the details when he calls police.
“I tell them exactly what’s going on, that there’s a grown adult coming there to meet what they believe is a 13- or 14-year-old to engage in sexual activity.”
When officers don’t arrive quickly, Lampros stalls.
Twice the situation spiraled dangerously, he said. Once, a man he was questioning pulled a gun from his car. Lampros and his helper fled. Another man wielded a boxcutter during their interaction.
‘God’s will’
Lampros isn’t deterred. If he’s ever badly injured or killed during a “catch,” he’ll know he was doing God’s will, he said.
“It took years for police departments and state attorneys to actually look at us as legit and to make these cases stick,” Lampros said.
Now, about every month, a years-old case yields a conviction, he said.
Some lawyers in Florida advertise that they can help defend accused child predators who interacted with Lampros. They accuse him of being a vigilante. They subpoena him for depositions. Some insist he’s “just in it for the clicks,” he said.
But no matter the cost, Lampros said he’s in this fight for the long term.
He won’t stop working to expose child predators, he said. And when his MMA fighting career is over, he hopes to travel the country, educating parents about how to protect children from online dangers.
Before starting 561 Predator Catcher, Lampros said he was where any young, professional fighter would want to be.
He’d moved from Illinois to South Florida, a hub for the sport. He had a 7-0 record in cage fights, with five knockouts.
Dustin “Scrappy” Lampros spars with a teammate during training at MMA Science Academy in Sunrise, Fla., on June 29, 2026. (Natasha Holt for News Agency)
His sole focus: becoming a fighter for the UFC. The Ultimate Fighting Championship is the world’s largest professional MMA organization.
But, “I felt very empty,” he said. “My whole identity had been behind being an MMA fighter, being ‘Scrappy’ the fighter. I knew that having UFC as my idol wasn’t gonna fulfill me. That’s when I realized there’s got to be something more for me.”
He started praying, he said, “asking for His will to be done in my life.”
It was then that he was introduced to the idea of catching child predators. “When you start focusing on God’s plan, the doors kind of open up.”
“Once I figured that out, and I started living for Him instead of living for Scrappy the Fighter, my life has evolved so much more into such a blessing.”
He still hopes to be selected as a fighter in the UFC. But, he said, a fight against evil is far more important. “Knowing that God’s on my side, whatever happens, I believe it’s God’s will.”






















