
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Chief Unmasker of Slaylebrities here, and let me drop some serious knowledge on you. We’re talking about SCAMMERS today, the lowlifes and parasites of society. How long can these wretches slink around in the shadows, pulling their disgusting tricks, until they finally nab the big fish they’re after? Buckle up because I’m about to hit you with some explosive truth.
You see, in the GAME OF SCAMS, it’s not about how long—they can go on indefinitely, slipping through the cracks, morphing their tactics, always one step ahead. Why is that? Let me tell you. It’s because these scammers have studied us like PREDATORS study their prey. They’ve made a science out of manipulating the weaknesses and vulnerabilities of everyday people.
Think about the ultimate SCAM: the con artist. These people infiltrate your life, gaining your trust, making you believe they’re a friend, a lover, a mentor, an influencer! This is not a short game. This is a LONG GAME hustle. They invest time, patience, charm, and resources.
The reason they get what they want is because they are ruthless, unrelenting, and BRILLIANT at reading people. They know when to push and when to pull back. And I’ll tell you this: The average person will NEVER see them coming. They are masters of illusion, puppeteers pulling the strings of your very reality.
But here’s where it gets even deeper. The scammer isn’t just after your money; they’re after your confidence. They feed on your trust, your belief that the world is inherently just.
Once they shatter that, they’ve got you right where they want. And then, they strike.
So, how long can they go on? As long as it takes, my Slay motivation tribe. AS LONG AS IT TAKES. Until you’re left broken, questioning every decision you’ve ever made, and they disappear into the night with everything they came for. They are patient. They are persistent. They are the ultimate predators of the social world.
But don’t get it twisted. You CAN protect yourself. You can become AWARE and VIGILANT. Never let your guard down. Keep questioning, keep evaluating. Empower yourself with KNOWLEDGE. Scammers thrive on ignorance, and the best way to beat them is to become smarter, sharper than they ever anticipated.
So stay alert, stay WOKE, and don’t let these upper-level slimeballs take what’s rightfully yours.
That’s the real game.
CHIEF UNMASKER OF SLAYLEBRITIES OUT.
Don’t be fooled it’s not just Nigerians involved in romance and 419 scams
Hundreds of alleged online scammers have been arrested in a raid at a luxury office block in Nigeria that investigators said was operating as a multi-storey hub for romance and cryptocurrency frauds.
Anti-corruption officials said that the operation in Lagos was their biggest ever round-up of “Yahoo boys”, named after the search engine that first provided free email accounts.
Most of the 792 suspects are Nigerian, but 148 Chinese and 40 Filipinos were among the foreigners who investigators said were recruiting and training local people.
“Nigerian accomplices were recruited by the foreign kingpins to prospect for victims online through phishing, targeting mostly Americans, Canadians, Mexicans and several others from European countries,” Wilson Uwujaren, from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, said.
“Once the Nigerians are able to win the confidence of would-be victims, the foreigners would take over the actual task of defrauding the victims.”
Images of the operation at Big Leaf Building on Victoria Island showed a vast call centre had been set up for teams working shifts to snare victims across all time zones via social media and messaging platforms.
Once targets were seduced by a sham romance, they were pressured to transfer money for fake cryptocurrency schemes and other non-existent investments, investigators said. As officers seized cars, computers, phones and stashes of Sim cards, rows of suspects sat in the building’s car park waiting to be ferried into custody.
Uwajaren said that the arrests on December 10, after months of surveillance, underscored President Tinubu’s commitment to rooting out corruption and criminal gangs. Romance fraud has existed for centuries, but social media and online dating have led scams to become more sophisticated and frequent.
Many cases are linked to Nigeria, where corruption is endemic and opportunities are scarce for its young, tech-savvy population.
Christine Brown, a British pensioner, travelled to the west African state last year to recover £20,000 that was stolen by a Nigerian conman posing as an American entertainer.
Brown, 71, petitioned the agency that carried out last week’s operation after losing her life savings in transfers, bitcoin and gift cards to a fraudster calling himself John Barrowman.
In Britain, reported incidents rose by 20 per cent last year, though because some are embarrassed at being duped, the crime is under-reported. In a third of the 8,792 reported cases fraudsters using fake social media pictures and profiles spent more than a year using various tactics to win their victims’ trust, the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB), run by the City of London Police, said.
British victims are being robbed of about £100 million each year. Men were more susceptible to scammers than women, accounting for 52 per cent of victims, though women tend to lose more money: £9,083 on average, compared with £5,145 for men. Those aged between 55 and 64 are the most likely to be conned, though those aged over 65 tend to lose more money, according to analysis of customer data by Lloyds Bank.
Uwajaren said those arrested would soon appear in court. The investigation would, he told reporters, expose the exaggeration that Nigerians are expert fraudsters. The locals arrested had no idea which company they were scheming for, had no letters of appointment and were typically paid in cash or from a personal account.
“Foreigners are taking advantage of our nation’s unfortunate reputation as a haven of frauds to establish a foothold here to disguise their atrocious criminal enterprises,” he said.
SOURCE: THE TIMES
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