
I need your help! I'm sorry to ask this but my dad was recently scammed, and I would greatly appreciate if you could read the details here:
https://ko-fi.com/post/Scammed-Help.....ase-O4O416YAZ3 I am grateful for any assistance, even if it's simply helping to spread the word.
Check out additional teaser art from Chocolatekitsune! https://support.the.choco.one/2024/.....cy-fundraiser/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Drifty got much more than expected when he pulled the popper's string.
After a rough year it looks like he is getting a do-over.
Or maybe quite a few do-overs.
Happy New Year!
Art ©
https://ko-fi.com/post/Scammed-Help.....ase-O4O416YAZ3 I am grateful for any assistance, even if it's simply helping to spread the word.
Check out additional teaser art from Chocolatekitsune! https://support.the.choco.one/2024/.....cy-fundraiser/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Drifty got much more than expected when he pulled the popper's string.
After a rough year it looks like he is getting a do-over.
Or maybe quite a few do-overs.
Happy New Year!
Art ©

Category Artwork (Traditional) / Baby fur
Species Snow Leopard
Size 1079 x 782px
File Size 61.9 kB
Scam recovery services are often scammers themselves. In fact when I first posted about this on twitter, I got a reply from one in less than 30 seconds - obviously they hadn't actually read about the situation and it was just a bot looking for keywords. I would need to know a genuine and reliable service.
The police and FBI took reports but did nothing more. The bank, lifelock, and insurance said they couldn't help because it wasn't identity theft. The operator of the bitcoin kiosk and the lawyer never even responded. All of this was despite us providing the kiosk's unique transaction IDs that could have been traced and acted on at the time. So in the end, no official entity was of any help at all.
The police and FBI took reports but did nothing more. The bank, lifelock, and insurance said they couldn't help because it wasn't identity theft. The operator of the bitcoin kiosk and the lawyer never even responded. All of this was despite us providing the kiosk's unique transaction IDs that could have been traced and acted on at the time. So in the end, no official entity was of any help at all.
Not that I know of. I think it's because it wasn't a digital scam, it was all by phone. So it's much harder to track down. There's no real digital fingerprint, only a phone number that can be spoofed, burned, etc. The scammer payback people specialize in cybercrime activities where they can hack the scammer.
Comments