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Double Dose aka No Pain No Gain

Online session provider solicited non-refundable PayPal “friends and family” deposit under false pretenses, then canceled services, refused refund, and used abusive language—indicating an intentional scam for financial gain.

Last Updated: May 29, 2025

Review

The text you provided explicitly describes fraudulent activity through several key elements that align with deception for financial gain and intentional scams:

  1. Request for Payment via "Friends and Family" (to Bypass Buyer Protection):

    The person identified as "Double Dose" (formerly "No Pain No Gain") asked for a deposit to be sent via PayPal’s “friends and family” option. This method is specifically designed for personal transfers and does not offer the buyer protection PayPal provides for regular transactions. Requesting funds this way for a business transaction or service is deceptive because it eliminates the sender’s ability to dispute the charge if the agreement is not honored.

  2. Failure to Render Promised Service:

    The sender paid for a session (implied as a physical or personal meeting) scheduled in December. The provider postponed and ultimately did not fulfill the service, claiming various issues like expired passport and a blocked PayPal account. However, she continued to take deposits for future sessions in other locations, which suggests a pattern of behavior resembling a scam — collecting funds with no intention or ability to deliver promised services.

  3. Use of False or Misleading Claims:

    The excuses given for not returning the money — such as the PayPal account being blocked — do not align with the transaction details, particularly since the money was sent via “friends and family,” which would go directly into her account and be accessible unless there was major account fraud. Her contradictory responses (e.g., saying the account is blocked, but she’s still accepting money) point to deceptive intent.

  4. Explicit Admission of Refusing to Refund:

    In her hostile email reply, she states:

    "I will certainly keep your money and never give it back to you and I don’t care what you say about it."

    This is a clear admission of intentional theft — refusing to return a payment for a service not rendered, while displaying contempt for the customer's concern.

  5. Ongoing Pattern and Multiple Victims:

    The thread contains multiple mentions of others with similar experiences — canceled appointments, lost deposits, and fake profiles using the same photos or aliases. This indicates a systematic approach to deceiving people, not an isolated incident. The mention of "Queen Al Capone" as a possible alias and links to profiles on other sites contributes to the appearance of a professional scam operation.

  6. Third-Party Involvement Confirms Concern:

    The platform SessionGirls was contacted and eventually removed her profile, further supporting the claim that the individual was engaging in unethical behavior or possible fraud — enough to warrant blacklisting from a directory service.

In summary, the fraudulent aspects include:
- Misrepresentation to solicit deposits without intention of delivering service.
- Evasion and refusal to return funds.
- Using untraceable payment methods for business transactions (to avoid accountability).
- Continuation of similar behavior under different names or websites.

These components together provide clear evidence of intentional deception for financial gain, which constitutes fraudulent activity.