 
 
The Australian woman who admitte of loosing her money in fake marriages 
A heartbroken grandmother identified simply as Suzie, has admitted to being 'gullible' and 'brainwashed'
 in the past after she lost a total of $480,000 over the course of three
 separate online relationships is now warning others about the dangers 
of cyber love.
According to Dailymail UK,
 while speaking in an interview with A Current Affair, the woman 
revealed how she sold her home and parted with close to half a million 
dollars in order to continue transferring money to her romantic partners
 overseas.
She said; 'Maybe that's what I was doing: buying love,' she reflected, adding that 'When I think back now I think that's what I was doing.'
But despite still being married to one of her scamming suitors, Suzie seems to be waking up to the sobering realisation that 'Men aren't all they're cracked up to be.'

It just took three particular men to do it. The first one called 
himself David Fisher: a charming British gentleman, by all online 
appearances.
David sweet-talked his way into gaining access to Suzie's bank 
account so that he could buy a laptop he wanted - and eventually rorted 
the Australian grandmother out of her father's $76,000 inheritance 
before disappearing from her life entirely.
The next man appeared on the scene shortly thereafter: this time, 
in the form of an American, Taliban-fighting soldier by the name of 
Johnson Williams.
When Johnson started asking for money, Suzie sold her house to fund it. 'I went along with it because I felt: 'Wow, I've actually got somebody in my life now, and I'm committed to this man,' she said.

Of course, that man too turned out be an extortionist in disguise -
 and when Suzie's bank looked deeper into the transactions, they found 
that at least five other women were also sending him money under the 
false pretense of a relationship. The funds were being wired to Ghana, 
as it turned out.
The third time Suzie found love was with a man named Godfrey 
Kyzungo, from Uganda, whom she met on Facebook. This time Suzie went to 
Africa to meet her courtier in person, and even went so far as to marry 
him in the flesh before regularly sending him bank transfers.
But Suzie has since confessed that she believes Godfrey's motives were simply to marry her for the money and move to Australia.
Now, she's looking into having her marriage to him annulled, and 
speaking up to let others know that the internet dating scene is rife 
with scam artists.
Her hope is that other men and women don't fall for the same tricks that she did. 'These people are evil how they manipulate your mind,' she says.
No comments:
Post a Comment