7 comments

  • arcfour 3 hours ago
    The presentation here was really interesting. It felt like reading a magazine story on something back in the day. Wasn't a huge fan of just how much I had to scroll sometimes, but still cool overall.

    It's really dishearting to imagine how the victims feel after this. Being so vulnerable to someone you trust only to learn it was a ruse all along to scam you is probably one of the most awful feelings I can imagine, on top of the missing money.

  • jread 45 minutes ago
    My mother-in-law fell for a love scam last year. Luckily we caught it early and no money was lost, but I was surprised how difficult it was to convince her it was a scam despite the obvious signs and family and friends all telling her it was. The scammer claimed to be the actor Jack Wagner (popular on Hallmark channel and soap operas). Out of desperation we looked him up on cameo and paid him for a video message telling her it wasn't him texting her, and that finally snapped her out of it.
  • JackFr 1 hour ago
    I read these and it's beyond my comprehension how people can get sucked in and fall for it. And yet I know I'm not special and I think back on periods in my life where I was depressed, under a great deal of stress very apprehensive, and I wonder "Could they have gotten me then?"

    (My mother who is 88 years old has been so indoctrinated in scam avoidance that she refuses to set up an online password for her bank, and totters to the branch every two weeks to do her banking, where they plead with her to do it online. But she's not gonna get scammed. Also she finds the idea of a new romance at 88 "repulsive".)

    • pavel_lishin 51 minutes ago
      Similar situation here, with slightly different ages. My mom's friends have chatted about relationships before, and they all come to the same conclusion: none of them want to bury another husband.
  • accrual 1 hour ago
    Intense. It's unfortunate so many are affected. Imagine "a senior uniformed figure like a general" messaging you and within a few days, asking for a $20k deposit. It feels like we've failed people as a whole to not light this kind of deception up like a torch. Perhaps it points to a deeper lack of connection within humanity as a whole.

    What is enabling so many people to be like "oh, I got a random text from an unknown number, I guess I'll trust it and potentially marry this person and send my life savings to them"? That is a catastrophic failure and it must be commonplace enough to enable an entire industry to pursue it.

    • navigate8310 1 hour ago
      I think this is partly because past generations have too much of a baggage of high trust societies. We live in a new era where everything and anything is being wagered. Essentially, sharks have found a way to unlock the value.
      • phainopepla2 1 hour ago
        I don't think you're entirely wrong, but the idea of trusting strangers being "baggage" is sad
  • BeetleB 2 hours ago
    These cases can get quite interesting. They interviewed an investigator on a local show, and he said they often intercept money going to a scammer, and contact the person to inform them they were being scammed. Up to that point, the sender has no idea.

    It can take quite a bit of effort to convince them they've been scammed. The usual reaction is "You did what?! I was sending money to a loved one. How dare you!" They then have to give the sender a sense of the evidence they have, etc.

    And some percentage never believe it and remain upset. And will then resend the money through other channels.

    • alecco 2 hours ago
      The problem is banks and financial institutions have been blocking legitimate transfers for ages for anything above $10k. I lost count how many times it happened to me. One time a large sum of money was in limbo for almost 5 days and I needed it for an urgent government deposit in another country, ironically.

      I wish Crypto or something like that takes off and wipes them all out one day.

      • BeetleB 1 hour ago
        Yes, but in this case it's not a standard message from the bank, but an actual human contacting the victim trying to explain the problem to them.
      • pavel_lishin 50 minutes ago
        Sorry, but how is that "the problem" when it comes to this?
        • alecco 34 minutes ago
          The public lost trust in financial institutions. So when they say they are blocking something for our own good we will take it the wrong way by default.
    • giancarlostoro 2 hours ago
      > And some percentage never believe it and remain upset. And will then resend the money through other channels.

      Elderly people I assume?

      • BeetleB 1 hour ago
        The common denominator is "having money", which elderly are more likely to have.
  • muppetman 39 minutes ago
    I wish websites like this had a "cut the bullshit" option so I could just read. I mean yes, it's pretty and lovely but I don't always want to feel like I'm on a "choose your own adventure" when reading something.

    I mean it's beautifully presented, but why does it need to be so graphical?

    (Thankfully in Firefox I can click the Reader view and it provides that)

  • throwaway888666 1 hour ago
    Nice. I love if a scammer contacts me. I always send a goatse picture, this does the job