Orlando
Last Updated: January 29, 2026
The text you've provided includes multiple indications of potential fraudulent activity, primarily involving alleged scams involving advance payments for services that were not rendered. Here’s how the text explicitly describes deceptive or fraudulent behavior:
Several users report having paid for custom videos or session deposits and never receiving the product or service:
"She's also deleted all of her social media which is never a good sign. I paid for a custom with her as well so we'll see what happens."
"I can say on my end she also flaked on the custom I had paid her for..."
"That is so shitty. I know she gave a vague 'gotta get my shit together,' but she owes an explanation to everyone that she stiffed out a deposit or custom."
Why it’s fraudulent: Taking money for a product/service (such as a wrestling session or custom video) and not delivering it, especially with no refund or communication, is a common and classic form of fraud. This falls under deceptive financial gain.
Users describe behavior known in fraud terminology as an “exit scam,” where someone with an established reputation returns briefly to collect payments and then disappears:
"This is surprising... weird to actually come back and start doing sessions before deciding to just exit scam and disappear."
"Two recent complaints on her SG profile. Odd that she would do this given her positive history. Maybe she came out of 'retirement' for a quick cash grab."
"Sucks if she actually came out of retirement just to scam and disappear."
Why it’s fraudulent: Establishing trust/credibility to attract multiple clients before vanishing with their money is a well-documented scam strategy. This demonstrates intent to defraud through deception.
"She (or the guy who was booking her sessions) was scamming close to a decade ago. I remember threads about it."
Why it’s fraudulent: This suggests a history of deceitful conduct involving third-party impersonation or repeated scams — matching a broader pattern of intentional financial deception.
"Account takeover by a fraudster is another possibility."
This reflects community uncertainty about whether the deceptive behavior was due to the original person being replaced, or if it was the same person resuming activity with fraudulent intent. Though speculative, these discussions acknowledge fraud as a likely explanation.
"Haven’t heard anything, so going to chalk it up as a loss."
"I emailed her after she disappeared and to my shock, she responded today."
Lack of consistent communication after accepting money is a hallmark of online fraud.
While the thread overall is a mix of user impressions and experiences discussing adult-themed private wrestling sessions, several participants offer direct testimonies describing financial loss, missed services, abrupt disappearance of the service provider, and a pattern of emerging complaints consistent with online scam behavior.
These factors combined represent clear indicators of fraudulent activity, making the text relevant to discussions about scams, especially those involving advance payment fraud or deceit for financial gain.