6/6/2022

Zoosk Frauds

  1. Zoosk Fraud
  2. Zoosk Frauds Website
  1. Zoosk works with third party partners to review and analyze payment transactions and user behavior data for the purpose of helping to detect and prevent fraud. Zoosk may share certain types of information you provide to the Services, including, but not limited to, user name, age, email, postal code, device information, IP.
  2. Scam from zoosk. A woman I know met a man on kiosk. His name is Daniel Moore and he claims he is a civil engineer and stuck in Dubai doing a 850,000 dollar job. He sent her 2 pictures of himself and I checked them out and found them on Google.
  3. At Zoosk, our community of conscientious online daters is a big part of what makes the site a great place for everyone. Help protect yourself and other Zoosk members by using sound judgment and reporting suspicious or inappropriate people using the Report/Block option. Blocking a member is slightly different depending on how you’re accessing.
jklucero4love@gmail.com

Zoosk Fraud

Zoosk no longer charges an activation fee. In the past, many online daters complained about Zoosk's one-time $24.95 activation fee. This is no longer the case, as Zoosk no longer requires new members to pay the fee. Zoosk customers should be happy to see they're only paying for a subscription plan.

Zoosk Frauds

Zoosk Frauds Website

This guy told me that he was in Baghdad, Iraq and would be retiring from the Army in a month. We emailed back and forth for about 1 month, and he had not received his letter of retirement yet.
Then he finally received his letter and that is when he told me that he received a reward from Iraq government. It was 1 million dollars in gold. Of course I knew right then it was a scam. He needed me to pay for the gold to get tested to see what it was really worth and get the certificates to. When I asked about the cost he claimed he had to check with an attorney that he hired over there.
Because he could not bring it back on the plane and that he would share it with me. Also that his accounts are 'freezed' not frozen...lol. I did some checking into this the next day and then I sent him an email that this was a scam and that I was going to report him to the Army Investigators, and that he would not get any money from me.
I thought for sure that I would not hear from him again, but he sent me a email all mad at me saying he didn't ask me for money and to move on. I replied and told him that really you didn't ask for money and sent him a snap shot of the conversation of him asking me for the money, and never heard from him again.
His name that he went by was John K Lucero, not sure if that is just a name he used from someone or if that is his real name. Oh and the middle initial stands for 'King' because his dad is/was the King of Greece.
So ladies please watch out for this guy, nice looking guy but out for your money. Oh and when I told him he should talk to his mother about doing this for him since we did not know each other that well, she is now sick and in the hospital. This is just sad that people have nothing better to do than to play with peoples emotions and hearts.
And this does not help for real men and women that are looking for a connection with someone.