I had to post this because it's so unusual and I've never run into this situation over years of seeing sex workers.
I started texting Sasha, a thin ebony posting on Leolist. Texts were very delayed, never a good sign, but the pictures were enticing, the rate was appealing and the details seemed good. No pictures found on reversed image search. Everything looked good, and I was excited to meet her.
She said she was at Bute and Melville and we arranged a time. When I arrived and texted, she gave me an address on Melville which didn't exist. After 30 minutes of trying to find the incall, and her texts encouraging me to keep looking, it finally occured to me ( brain starved of blood and oxygen, shunted to genitalia) that it was all a scam. I assumed the perpetrators were watching nearby giggling at the fool wandering the street.
No real harm done, and I learned a small lesson.
Don't waste your time with these beauties.
Anyone have an opinion on why someone would pay for ads like these, day after day? Seems like such a waste of time. Hope it's not the beginning of some vigilante trend.
I started texting Sasha, a thin ebony posting on Leolist. Texts were very delayed, never a good sign, but the pictures were enticing, the rate was appealing and the details seemed good. No pictures found on reversed image search. Everything looked good, and I was excited to meet her.
She said she was at Bute and Melville and we arranged a time. When I arrived and texted, she gave me an address on Melville which didn't exist. After 30 minutes of trying to find the incall, and her texts encouraging me to keep looking, it finally occured to me ( brain starved of blood and oxygen, shunted to genitalia) that it was all a scam. I assumed the perpetrators were watching nearby giggling at the fool wandering the street.
No real harm done, and I learned a small lesson.
Don't waste your time with these beauties.
Anyone have an opinion on why someone would pay for ads like these, day after day? Seems like such a waste of time. Hope it's not the beginning of some vigilante trend.