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Loulou

Multiple users identify a recurring scam involving fake session profiles impersonating women using stolen images and false information to solicit deposits, warning others not to send money.

Last Updated: May 05, 2025

Review

The text explicitly describes activity consistent with fraud by highlighting several key indicators of deceptive behavior intended for financial gain:

  1. Impersonation and Misrepresentation:

    Multiple commenters observe that the person behind these accounts is using photos and information that don’t match typical physical plausibility (e.g., a woman described as 6 feet tall and only 120 pounds) or linked Instagram accounts, suggesting that the individual in the images is being impersonated. This kind of impersonation is a hallmark of deceptive scams to create false trust and credibility.

  2. Reused Contact Information Across Fake Profiles:

    It’s mentioned that multiple profiles (e.g., "Loulou", "Jaja", "Jada") use the same phone number. This is a red flag for coordinated fraudulent activity. It implies that a single scammer (or group) is creating numerous fake personas to lure more victims.

  3. Requests for Payment with No Verification:

    The text includes repeated warnings not to send deposits. In scams of this nature, fraudsters typically solicit advance payments (deposits) for in-person "sessions" that are never actually intended to take place. Once money is sent, the scammer disappears or continues to string the victim along.

  4. Lack of Legitimate Reviews or History:

    The profiles in question are noted to have no verifiable reviews or session history, which is suspicious in communities where legitimate service providers often have reviews confirming prior positive interactions.

  5. Excessive Service Listings / Too Good to Be True:

    The user "Domme Kat" appears to offer “every possible service,” which some users point out as unrealistic and indicative of a profile designed to attract the largest number of potential victims. Overstated claims without verifiable backing are commonly used in scams.

  6. Site Circumvention and Abuse:

    It is stated that the scammer was “able to make three accounts and pass through the site's registration”, further indicating an intention to deceive both the platform and its users.

  7. Pattern Recognition:

    Multiple users recognize a pattern of behavior that matches prior scams ("I made a thread about an account that was very similar", and “the guy behind it is just being lazy at this point”), indicating that this is not an isolated case but part of repeated fraudulent conduct.

Conclusion:

This conversation explicitly discusses a coordinated fraud scheme involving impersonation, false advertising, manipulation of online platforms, and attempts to solicit unearned money (deposits) from unsuspecting users. The contributors in the thread identify and dissect the scam, warning others against becoming victims — thereby clearly describing fraudulent activity.