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I used a website called Seeking Arrangements and met a sugar daddy. He asked for my email login, online banking login, routing, account number, Facebook, as well as my address which is the only thing I gave him since it’s a PO. I’ve been extremely vague just to see if this is real.

I don’t plan to give him anything because I have only been talking to him for a few months and I feel conflicted. I doubt that he is trying to scam me but I suspect that he has some kind of master plan. With things such as Venmo, Zelle, and Cashapp, what is the need for “put me on his payroll?”

He claims that he is in another country on a business trip. He said that he tried to send me a gift but he lost access to his card. He is now asking to deposit more than 10k into my account and have me wire it. Is this a l classic way of scamming people? If so, is it common that they spend months creating a relationship with you to catfish you?

Rodrigo de Azevedo
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Madi
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1 Answers1

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With things such as Venmo, zelle, cashapp what is the need for “putting me down in his payroll.”

If he were a real sugar daddy, then he'd do this to hide the payments from his wife.

He also claims that he is in another country on a business trip and lost access to his card because he tried to send me a gift

and is now asking to have his work deposit more than 10k into my account and have me wire it.

Are these all classic way of scamming?

Absolutely.

A legitimate businessman would have someone at his company contact his bank and send a new card to his hotel.

so, is it common that they try to catfish you and spend months creating a relationship with you?

He's working other women at the same time.

I’ve been extremely vague just to see if this is at all real, but I can’t seem to break through to him.

You want to believe, because you want a sugar daddy.

RonJohn
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