Miami
Last Updated: March 23, 2026
Here’s an analysis of how the text explicitly discusses alleged fraudulent activity such as scams, theft, or intentional deception for financial gain:
Direct accusations and claims of scams:
- “sent a deposit and she stopped responding. Seems like she might be a scammer”
This statement directly alleges that the person in question took a deposit (implying payment ahead of services rendered) and then ceased all contact, which is a classic description of a scam—accepting money with no intention of delivering what was promised.
Implied deception and lack of delivery:
- Multiple posts reference difficulties in communication, dodging questions, and failing to provide clarity about services (e.g., “she dodged every question”, “she didn’t understand a any session term”, “difficult to keep up communication: she obviously forget all we talked about 2 days after”, “right away stays on premium”). While these alone are signs of unprofessional behavior, combined with claims about taking deposits and giving nothing in return, these add to the portrait of intentional deception.
“Write an email and you’ll find out she’s taking $500 to literally do nothing.”
This again alludes to accepting payments but not providing the agreed services, consistent with fraudulent activity.
“She is a total shyster.” — ‘Shyster’ is a term for someone practicing fraud or deception, especially for profit.
Allegations of bait-and-switch or false advertising:
- “I've heard she uses other women's photos on her SG profile” — Using photos of someone else to advertise services one does not actually provide is deceptive marketing and can be considered fraudulent.
Taken together, the text contains several explicit claims of deceptive behavior for financial gain, most notably the allegations of taking deposits then disappearing, failing to deliver services paid for, and using deceptive advertising. These are all hallmarks of fraudulent activity such as scams or intentional theft. There are also repeated uses of pejorative language such as “scammer,” “shyster,” and “fraud” that clearly connect the described behaviors to recognized forms of financial deception.