Post by Kentucky Fried Scambaits on Jan 11, 2024 15:46:37 GMT
Mods/admins please delete if this is not allowed but I came across this scam website while in a non scam bait community. They offer on their website "Med Beds" which are usually marketed to a certain social/political demographic in the US as a way to scam money out of them. For this other community I did some investigation and got some kudos for my "Sleuthing Skills" (so to speak). I will at times include copied information from that site and my own new insights on this scam.
lifeforcemedbeds.com/
This website is a little bit better done than most scam sites but like all scam sites... it seems they spend a lot of time on certain parts for no real gain and other parts they don't even try.
www.amazon.com/Teacher-Lanyard-Silicone-Breakaway-Teachers/dp/B09H2TJJHQ?th=1
and
lifeforcemedbeds.com/about-us/
Notice the picture for Aviana Plumme CEO / FOUNDER, is the same woman in the Amazon picture showing of a teachers lanyard. She's wearing the same shirt and in front of the same white board in both photos, only difference is one she is not wearing the lanyard being sold and has her head slightly to the side smiling.
I am 100% sure this is the same woman in both pictures.
Also check out the following: www.crunchbase.com/person/aviana-plummer
If you add an R to her last name (Plumme to Plummer) you can get more results of supposed women using the same image.
*******
Also a couple interesting links... evidently the location of this company that is selling these (supposed) med beds is a house that is listed on Zillow...
www.zillow.com/homedetails/4181-Arapaho-Dr-Powder-Springs-GA-30127/14340649_zpid/
lifeforcemedbeds.com/about-us/ (Scroll down and check out their address for their company... it's a residence that was at one time for sale on Zillow).
*******
lifeforcemedbeds.com/blog/
The BLOG portion of their site oddly has a lot of reviews/statements/gibberish written in Latin for some reason. I guess they expect people to look at that and think it's just some foreign language of some other customer and not dwell further into it.
I tried to use Google translate and it's pretty much gibberish with oddly the same word appearing twice in a row. Also a couple of the "Blogs" are word for word the same...
A taciti cras scelerisque scelerisque gravida natoque nulla vestibulum turpis primis adipiscing faucibus scelerisque adipiscing aliquet pretium. Et iaculis mi velit tincidunt vestibulum a duis tempor non magna ultrices porta malesuada ullamcorper scelerisque parturient himenaeos iaculis sit. Scelerisque sociosqu ullamcorper urna nisl mollis vestibulum pretium commodo inceptos.
Ac ullamcorper a ultrices a a urna ac commodo nam condimentum parturient. Libero suspendisse facilisis parturient elementum curabitur. Erat a per dis aliquet ultricies curabitur nostra suspendisse nec adipiscing donec vestibulum a parturient a ac ut non adipiscing penatibus nec erat. A at nec rutrum nam molestie suspendisse scelerisque platea a ut commodo volutpat ullamcorper.
Translates to:
A silent tomorrow chocolate chocolate pregnant and born no vestibule turpis first adipiscing faucibus chocolate adipiscing trucks price. And the target of my target will be the target of the vestibulum. Scelerisque sociosqu ullamcorper urna nisl mollis vestibulum pretium commodo incepts.
And ullamcorper a ultris aa urn and commodious for the sauce they will give birth. The free hanging element will be taken care of. It was a by push trucks ultrices will be taken care of our suspended nor adipiscing until the vestibule a gave birth a and so that no adipiscing was not A but nec rutrum for the employee suspended the scalpel street a so commodore volutpat ullamcorper.
This Latin to me is odd and I am sure only used because the website template they used had a blog section they didn't know what to use for. So I guess they are trying for customer reviews and hoping someone who glances at it think "ah, someone who speaks a foreign language from me left that" but imagine the work that went into making this latin blog/review... they had to of either just wrote whatever random Latin words they know and/or looked up random Roman and/or church texts from centuries ago and used them randomly? To me that seems to be a lot of work for diminished results as what they got from it really didn't do much for them. They spent all that time doing that and other areas where a simpler edit to their site would of helped their scam site seem more legit.
Then again if these people were better at managing their time and resources they likely wouldn't be scammers and actually working legit jobs...
lifeforcemedbeds.com/
This website is a little bit better done than most scam sites but like all scam sites... it seems they spend a lot of time on certain parts for no real gain and other parts they don't even try.
www.amazon.com/Teacher-Lanyard-Silicone-Breakaway-Teachers/dp/B09H2TJJHQ?th=1
and
lifeforcemedbeds.com/about-us/
Notice the picture for Aviana Plumme CEO / FOUNDER, is the same woman in the Amazon picture showing of a teachers lanyard. She's wearing the same shirt and in front of the same white board in both photos, only difference is one she is not wearing the lanyard being sold and has her head slightly to the side smiling.
I am 100% sure this is the same woman in both pictures.
Also check out the following: www.crunchbase.com/person/aviana-plummer
If you add an R to her last name (Plumme to Plummer) you can get more results of supposed women using the same image.
*******
Also a couple interesting links... evidently the location of this company that is selling these (supposed) med beds is a house that is listed on Zillow...
www.zillow.com/homedetails/4181-Arapaho-Dr-Powder-Springs-GA-30127/14340649_zpid/
lifeforcemedbeds.com/about-us/ (Scroll down and check out their address for their company... it's a residence that was at one time for sale on Zillow).
*******
lifeforcemedbeds.com/blog/
The BLOG portion of their site oddly has a lot of reviews/statements/gibberish written in Latin for some reason. I guess they expect people to look at that and think it's just some foreign language of some other customer and not dwell further into it.
I tried to use Google translate and it's pretty much gibberish with oddly the same word appearing twice in a row. Also a couple of the "Blogs" are word for word the same...
A taciti cras scelerisque scelerisque gravida natoque nulla vestibulum turpis primis adipiscing faucibus scelerisque adipiscing aliquet pretium. Et iaculis mi velit tincidunt vestibulum a duis tempor non magna ultrices porta malesuada ullamcorper scelerisque parturient himenaeos iaculis sit. Scelerisque sociosqu ullamcorper urna nisl mollis vestibulum pretium commodo inceptos.
Ac ullamcorper a ultrices a a urna ac commodo nam condimentum parturient. Libero suspendisse facilisis parturient elementum curabitur. Erat a per dis aliquet ultricies curabitur nostra suspendisse nec adipiscing donec vestibulum a parturient a ac ut non adipiscing penatibus nec erat. A at nec rutrum nam molestie suspendisse scelerisque platea a ut commodo volutpat ullamcorper.
Translates to:
A silent tomorrow chocolate chocolate pregnant and born no vestibule turpis first adipiscing faucibus chocolate adipiscing trucks price. And the target of my target will be the target of the vestibulum. Scelerisque sociosqu ullamcorper urna nisl mollis vestibulum pretium commodo incepts.
And ullamcorper a ultris aa urn and commodious for the sauce they will give birth. The free hanging element will be taken care of. It was a by push trucks ultrices will be taken care of our suspended nor adipiscing until the vestibule a gave birth a and so that no adipiscing was not A but nec rutrum for the employee suspended the scalpel street a so commodore volutpat ullamcorper.
This Latin to me is odd and I am sure only used because the website template they used had a blog section they didn't know what to use for. So I guess they are trying for customer reviews and hoping someone who glances at it think "ah, someone who speaks a foreign language from me left that" but imagine the work that went into making this latin blog/review... they had to of either just wrote whatever random Latin words they know and/or looked up random Roman and/or church texts from centuries ago and used them randomly? To me that seems to be a lot of work for diminished results as what they got from it really didn't do much for them. They spent all that time doing that and other areas where a simpler edit to their site would of helped their scam site seem more legit.
Then again if these people were better at managing their time and resources they likely wouldn't be scammers and actually working legit jobs...