
First, some background: On
September 2, Dwayne Johnson posted a video in which he warned his fans
of the dangers of being duped by people who were pretending to be him on
Facebook.
Three days later, I wrote a piece saying that I would investigate this story. After the man himself shared my piece,
numerous people replied to his tweet, telling of their interactions
with people pretending to be Dwayne Johnson. I replied to every single
person, messaging them on Twitter and writing on September 15 about
their strange experiences.
One
story emerged after I wrote the above piece. It started on September
20. Sandra*, a 56-year-old woman from Alabama, messaged me on Twitter.
“I have everything from conversations to bank accounts names
everything,” she said. I didn’t know what she was talking about so I
asked her to clarify. She told me that since November 2016 she had had
conversations on Twitter with someone she believed to be Dwayne Johnson.
She had screenshots she was happy to show me.
Sandra’s
story began, she said, when the scammer approached her. His opening
gambit was to tell Sandra that the pair of them had met before, years
ago. Incredibly, this happened to be true – as a flight attendant for
Delta Airlines, Sandra had actually met Johnson on a flight. He would
love to see her again, the scammer said. “But,” she told me, “Then came
the story.”
He
was under house arrest, he claimed, and had to wear an ankle bracelet.
His partner Lauren (Johnson has been dating Lauren Hashian since 2007)
was trying to take their daughter Jasmine away. She was trying to make
him pay $150,000 and he needed money for his court appearances. (Between
July 2017 and July 2018, the real Dwayne Johnson made approximately
$124 million.)
Sandra said that the person speaking to her was whoever operates the account ‘Therock_mini’.
Like the dozens of fake Dwayne Johnsons (who, ironically, retweeted
Johnson’s warning about scammers pretending to be him), he has created a
Twitter profile that features Johnson’s face and (slightly edited)
Twitter bio. (Sandra said that the scammer claimed his media team
operated his official account.)
When
I asked her why she took the bait, Sandra said it was because it was
too difficult to imagine that the mention of their previous encounter
could have been fabricated. She said that he also told her about things
before they came out on Johnson’s social media accounts: Lauren being
pregnant with their daughter Tiana, for example. “He gave me every
reason to believe him,” she said.
The
pair of them would talk for hours a day, she said. He told her he was
involved in dealing cocaine and had only got off because he was famous.
As a result of his sideline as an apparent drug kingpin, his bank
account had been frozen and he had to use a friend’s account so that
nothing could be traced back to him.
But this story doesn’t just involve a Dwayne Johnson impersonator. Sandra said she also believed that Tyrese Gibson – Johnson’s co-star in the Fast and Furious films – and Joyce Meyer – a Christian author in the US with almost six million Twitter followers – was involved in trying to funnel money to Johnson.
The scam accounts in question are ‘7Tyrese’ and ‘J0ycemeyer’,
the second of which at the time of writing has been temporarily
suspended. Joyce’s involvement in the scam was critical, Sandra said; it
confirmed to her that Johnson was the real deal. “Why would I doubt a
minister?” she asked me. “If a woman of God was involved I believed it.”
Sandra
said that after a month they began to profess their love for each
other. “I did fall in love with him,” she said. “He made me trust him.”
He told her that his life with Lauren was over. Their relationship was a
sham, he said, only upheld for show because he was planning a bid to
be President of the United States.
Sandra said that a month into their Twitter conversations, he asked her to marry him.
She said yes.
The
pair of them planned a wedding together, she said. He began to give
Sandra his surname, calling her Sandra Johnson, and saying that he
wanted her granddaughter to call him ‘big daddy’. She sent me a photo of
a dress and said, “The dress he wanted me to wear for him to propose to
me. Lol.”
Sandra
said that on no fewer than six occasions she went to the airport to
meet her future husband. On no fewer than six occasions he stood her up.
His reason for not showing up was always the same: his private jet had
broken.
She
said that he wrote so many romantic poems for her that she grew sick of
them. I asked her to send me one. After copying the words into Google I
discovered that one of the results is a link to male-scammers.com, a
website that explains how to spot the signs of an online fraudster.
The
list of ‘warning signs’ the site has compiled reads almost
note-for-note like the behaviour Sandra has described to me. The site
warns, for example: “Be very careful when someone expresses their love
for you online after just a few simple correspondences. While you may be
worth it, chances are you are either dealing with a child or a scammer.
Regardless of how serious he sounds, be very careful before making a
commitment, and especially before sending off money.” Sandra says that
in her case he didn’t tell her he loved her straight away; he waited at
least a month. This was another reason she believed him to be genuine.
But soon, inevitably, came the requests for money.
“I had to go bankrupt… I lost everything”
This
year, on Valentine’s Day no less, the scammer ordered Sandra to send
him an iTunes gift card. The iTunes gift card trope is a common strategy
in the arsenal of scammers, as I wrote previously. The play is in fact
so common that variants on the scam have been reported by both Apple and
the BBC.
Convinced
that she was speaking to the real Dwayne Johnson, Sandra said that she
simply paid the scammer the money whenever he asked for it. The amounts
would vary but, as you can see from the photos below, she claimed to
have sent him up to $40,000 at a time. This was two months after they began talking.
Over less than two years, Sandra sent the scammer around $345,000.
She
told me she had so much money to part with because she went through a
divorce with her husband, a colonel and financial advisor. When I ask
her how she felt when she sent the money to the person she believed to
be Dwayne Johnson, she said: “I really believed that I was helping my
husband.”
It was decision that would bring her to almost complete financial ruin.
“I
had to go bankrupt,” she said. “I lost everything.” Eventually the bank
notified her ex-husband about the increasingly large transfers and he
made her talk to the FBI. “Why would he choose you when he could have
anyone he wants,” he said.
Not
only did ‘Joyce’ provide bank details to which Sandra should send
money; Sandra sent me screenshots of conversations she said ‘Joyce’ was
having with the fake Dwayne Johnson on Google Hangouts, in which the
pair talked about Sandra and the devotion she had shown him.
What
this would have meant was that either Sandra was being scammed by one
person with multiple accounts or that she was being scammed by three
people working together. Either scenario conjures up an incredibly
bizarre image. Sandra believed it was the latter because in their
messages to her they all spoke differently.
I
asked Sandra how she could possibly keep to herself the fact that she
was due to be married to Dwayne Johnson, one of the most famous men on
the planet. “He said that nobody would believe me until he came out and
made it public,” she said.
She said that she also believed that Dwayne Johnson had bought a home in which the pair would live together.
Just
over a year into their 20-month correspondence, she began to suspect
that something was wrong. She had become used to requests for money, but
@J0ycemeyer and @Therock_mini were now asking her to sell her house and
send them the money. “He kept asking me for money after he said that his was released and not frozen anymore,” she said.
The
reality slowly began to sink in and Sandra realised the man she was
still calling her husband was a scammer. From that point on, she never
sent him another dollar.
Near
the end of their conversations, angry at her refusal to send him more
money, the scammer was threatening to poison Sandra - in typically
bizarre language.
I
asked if she ever thought it was suspicious that the scammer’s English
was so bad. As before their was always a ready response, in this
instance the fraudulent Dwayne Johnson would explain away any mistakes
by saying, “My damn finger is so big.”
I
asked if she ever thought it was suspicious that the scammer’s English
was so bad. As before their was always a ready response, in this
instance the fraudulent Dwayne Johnson would explain away any mistakes
by saying, “My damn finger is so big.”
Sandra
seemed to be in an extremely vulnerable position, being manipulated
emotionally and financially by three different fraudsters at the same
time. ‘Joyce’ begged Sandra not to leave the scammer because God brought
them together. This was soon after her divorce, she said. After being
married for 25 years, her husband had left her for her best friend. She
needed love, and @Therock_mini had provided it.
“I
know when this comes out I’m going to be trashed by people and it
breaks my heart,” she said. “They don’t understand I wanted to die.”
Sandra
said that a little over two months ago, she and @TheRock_mini had their
final conversation. It had been seven months since she had sent him any
money but he had fruitlessly continued to try to bleed more out of her.
After their final interactions @TheRock_mini blocked her.
And this is where the plot thickens.
Over
the weeks in which Sandra told me her story, there were plenty of
moments where I began to doubt what I was hearing from her. Where I
thought that maybe her story was too extraordinary to be true; too ridiculous to be real.
On September 29, I realised that it was.
Sandra’s
story, although extreme, was in keeping with the experiences of plenty
of people to whom I had already spoken, and the many gullible fans to
whom The Rock was addressing his original video on September 2.
Given
how dramatic it was, I requested evidence every step of the way, asking
that she show me proof that she had actually parted with thousands of
dollars of her own money. She was consistently odd and spoke in strange
English despite claiming she was from Alabama. But, often to my
surprise, she managed to provide the evidence I needed in order to
believe her.
Sandra
had told me early on that, because it involved money laundering, the
FBI were investigating her case. I asked her for details about which FBI
agents she had been in touch with, so that I could try to speak to them
– if we protected the identities of everyone involved, maybe it would
be all right to publish a piece about her story.
This was when Sandra got weird.
Having
told me she was going to visit the FBI that day to talk about her case,
she sent the following message: “Omg Ralph I was supposed to drop
something off and he is not here. The lady said that he would not be
back till Monday. What now ? I asked her if she thought he would have a
problem with this and she said: “well they are looking to see what they
can do. How to approach it. What now I’m crying and she was rude.”
This was extremely suspicious. Why would the FBI agent abandon her? Why would he not pass on any contact details?
I
then asked Sandra for the name of the FBI contact she had allegedly
arranged to see. “Jenkins,” she said. Then “Jud sorry.” “Jud Jenkins?” I
asked. “No agent Jud,” she said. “Jenkins is my son’s boss. Sorry.”
Incredibly odd. I asked her again for the full name of the FBI agent.
Then came the message that meant I was certain Sandra wasn’t being
straight with me.
“Mr
Jones, Sandra is my sister she has had emergency surgery. They removed
her gallbladder. I had to drive down here in the middle of the night. My
sister explained last night a little of this not much. When she gets
back to room and awake enough can I text you back? My name is Dan
Cottle*!”
How
strange. Despite presumably being from Alabama as well, Sandra’s
brother also writes as though his words have been passed through Google
Translate. He also seems to have effortlessly accessed Sandra’s
(private) Twitter account and messaged me, a total stranger, immediately
after discovering his sister needed emergency surgery.
I
asked ‘Dan’ if he knew anything about the FBI investigation or his
sister’s interactions with the fake Dwayne Johnson. He said that
Sandra’s gallbladder had ruptured and that he would talk to her son
about the scammer conversation. I am yet to hear any more from him –
although I have seen Sandra tweeting from her account while apparently
being one gallbladder down.
The
implications to this development are seismic. Is Sandra a scammer
pretending to have fallen in love with a scammer? Somehow, she has
managed to produce screenshots for conversations she may never have had
with a fake Dwayne Johnson, as well as conversations she may never have
had with a fake Tyrese Gibson and a fake Joyce Meyer. Not only this; she
even produced evidence that she had sent money to various people in
various countries because she thought they were The Rock. If this wasn’t
true, and she didn’t in fact believe these people were The Rock, what
the hell is going on? And, if the receipts were genuine (they’d
certainly be convincing fakes), to whom did she send so much money?
If
the whole thing was a ruse to trick me, what did Sandra hope to gain
from it? It wasn’t publicity, given that she asked for her name to be
changed. It might be money but, given that I am the person writing about
why people should definitely not send people money on the internet, it
seems like an ambitious gambit. So far she’s succeeded only in giving me
two weeks of Rock Reports and a lot of questions.
I
have to admit that, although I had my doubts, like any journalist I
wanted to be the one to have brought an extraordinary story to people’s
attention. So I downplayed the elements that aroused my suspicion: the
inexplicably strange English; the extraordinary gullibility; the
incredible quantities of money.
I
was willing to let these inconsistencies slide for the sake of a scoop.
I was desperate for Sandra’s story to be true. I wanted her to be real,
just as she said she wanted The Rock to be real. Now I’m left here,
unsure what was true and what wasn’t, clutching thin air.
No comments:
Post a Comment