Read Time:45 Second



If you are a victim of this scheme: file a claim with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov and include the code “BT06182025” in the complaint narrative.

This is a documentary about pig butchering scams, which is a billion dollar enterprise affecting victims worldwide.

*INSTAGRAM*
https://www.instagram.com/spencercornelia1

*EMAIL FOR SPONSORS*
spencercornelia@creatorsagency.co

*EMAIL FOR PERSONAL OR TOPIC SUGGESTIONS*
spencer0cornelia@gmail.com

*TIMESTAMPS*
0:00 – Intro
0:41 – How big is this scam?
1:39 – Unexpected scam becoming more popular
4:37 – How Coinbase is helping victims
5:15 – How does the scam begin?
8:35 – Why is Coinbase safer than international exchanges?
10:07 – How the scam escalates
13:14 – Chief Security Officer of Coinbase Interview
17:32 – The scale of this global scam
20:36 – How the scammers may actually be victims
21:59 – How can you best avoid getting scammed

source

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
0%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

50 thoughts on “Inside the Romance Scam Operation Stealing Billions

  1. Honestly I respond and I play their game. It always starts with hi Sarah (whatever name they choose) are we still going out today? To which I respond this isnt Sarah but I'll be ready to go to work. They eventually say sorry I got the wrong person but would you like to be friends? I answer yes, Introduce myself with a backstory (false name, fake pic, fake location, etc). Where I know it's fake is when they want the convo to go to TELEGRAM or similar messaging apps.😂😂

    When I video call them, their too busy or they can answer right now 🤣🤣🤣

    I honestly say it's fun to run game on them

  2. I got caught in a scam like this because a FRIEND had got hooked by the scammer. And the friend brought me in, and I brought in 2 friends.

    It was heart wrenching.
    I stopped speaking to my friend
    And my 2 friends stopped speaking to me.

    😞

  3. 0:03 whaaaaaat I thought they are all real but they have 2 pictures on their account and the reverse image search shows some model or b list actor 😮😮😮 damn and I was gonna move and get married to all of them 😂😂😂

  4. I’m currently dating half of Hollywood actresses right now. I know they’re real because they sent me pics and they messaged me first. Boy these actresses sure do need a lot of money all the time. But I’ll do anything my babes.

  5. I met a few of these scammers on dating apps maybe 6 years ago, their pivot to talking about investing wasn’t subtle. They’d continue to steer the conversation towards investing unprompted. When I told them I wasn’t interested they’d stop and later bring it back up again later.

  6. Had one of these scammers attempt the crypto trading scam on me, it seemed extremely legitimate – my biggest red flag was it just seemed way too easy, so luckily I did my due diligence and found it was a scam, but it is incredibly convincing

  7. "…if a random number contacts you, it's probably best to just delete and not respond." But where's the fun in that? I've had 30-minute, even full-hour commutes made much shorter by either scam-baiting the caller or just getting them so pissed off that THEY block ME.

    (And scammers, if you see this, no real person sounds like Kevin from The Office or Hank Hill from King of the Hill. I honestly think those two voices work the best because the scammer thinks they're talking to someone stupid.)

  8. I'm skeptical at first if you reply to one of my comments Spencer. But I fully agree with getting the message out there. Lots of people don't seem to know about reverse image searching etc. Also, how did you get my number? Oh, I missed typed the number I was calling, but can we still be friends?
    I guess lonely people are the targets, it's quite sad really.

  9. Here’s how to avoid this type of scam, and this came from my director of security operations: “If she’s a L.A. 9 and you’re a Missouri 7, it’s a scam or a honeypot. You have to know your number, fellas.”

  10. Older white women are the most desperate to give away their life savings. The men they choose as their fake boyfriend always looks like a buff model driving a jet ski in some tropical paradise and the women is like a 70 year old grey haired grandmother who lives in Idaho.

  11. What chaps my crack- is we have the means to know where these fraudsters operate from, down to the very building. AND YET we continue to send them foreign aid, and accept their associates as "students" and "refugees". These associates them roam our country picking up gold bullion from our little old ladies.

  12. My mom fell for one of these. The scammer claimed to be a four star General. Looked him up and there was a whole ass thread on Facebook with hundreds of comments from women who were duped by various scammers using the same name. Hundreds if not thousands of these accounts using the same name and FB doesn’t do anything about it.

  13. My dad who is 69 yrs old was a victim of the imposters posing as an attractive woman or a well known celebrity woman, which was the case for my dad, they target elderly men and women who is not hip on scams and frauds, please educate your parents and grandparents on this shi. I was so heated when i found out and told the person to never contact my dad again or i'll get the police involved, they haven't reach out since i had to educate my dad on it, luckily they only got 2 xbox cards out of him, thank God they texted him when i was taking a picture for him, who knows how long they would've gotten away with it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

1779125826 maxresdefault.jpg Previous post Bien: Noochie’s Live From The Front Porch