The Erotic Highway

Re: Sort of a different scam
jazzman121847 107 Reviews 48 reads
posted

It's one sort of scam or another. The sender is baiting you to reply saying "wrong number ". Then the sender will continue to engage with you to try to win your trust. Eventually they will play their con game hand and try to separate you from your money.

I recently got favorited by a SB in Boise Idaho and one from Kansas City, MO.  However, they are the same girl! one of the photos used in both profiles was the identical picture.  They were both nicely written, and the girl is gorgeous.  But I live as far away from both of those cities as they are from each other.  What point is there for her (if it is a her!) to be doing this?

I forgot to swap out the photos.  🙄😂🤣
Just kidding! Wasn't me!

DCGuido54 reads

While DC is home, I'm back in my mid size rust belt hometown for some family reasons.  Noticed the same thing, same picture but different name.  They're still on SA and thought from the start it was a bot

joedp69 reads

That must have been 10 years ago....profile of a 18 y.o. blonde babe says she is on state side. Once the conversation starts, she is in Nigeria for a modeling gig. They didn't pay her. So, she asked if I can send her some money LOL. No thanks, Mr. Monday (yeah Nigerians name themselves on the week of the day they were born)!

My text number has been getting an occasional "wrong number" messages, introducing themselves.  One today said "Hi, I'm Amy."  I give out my txt number to sugar babes on sites, so I am never sure who is contacting me if they forget to mention their site name.  So i have to dig around with questions.  Finally she sends a pic of a cute Asian chick and asks if I am Mr. Wang.    In the past after it is determined that I am not who they were trying to contact, they pivot in trying to get friendly, make something out of this "accidental" meeting.  Obviously preying on the loneliness of some people.  I figure they have my text number but not my name or any other data.  Initially I put it up to a legit wrong number, but after several of them in a row, seems more intentional.  They don't get far.  As soon as the pivot, I stop responding.

I've had many of these lately too.  I'll get a text from an unknown number saying something like, hi Amanda, see you later at the party!  Obviously meant to look like an innocent wrong number.

It's one sort of scam or another. The sender is baiting you to reply saying "wrong number ". Then the sender will continue to engage with you to try to win your trust. Eventually they will play their con game hand and try to separate you from your money.

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