Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - INTERVIEW: AI Voice Scam with April Monroe
Episode Date: September 11, 2025Sharon Brightwell thought she was hearing her daughter, April Monroe, in distress on the phone, sobbing, begging for help, and requesting money. But it wasn’t April. It was a scammer using AI to per...fectly clone her voice, preying on Sharon’s love and fear to extort a large sum of cash. In this episode, April joins Nicole to share the shocking details of the voice-cloning scam, how her family reacted in real time, and the emotional and financial toll it took on all of them. Scams, Money, & Murder is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Scams, Money, & Murder! Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Crime House.
She thought her kid was banged up.
She thought my life was over.
She thought a poor baby was dead.
And this poor mother now has to live with the fact that her baby was killed in an accident of someone's stupidity, texting and driving.
As they say, money makes the world go round.
What many don't talk about is the time it made people's worlds come to a screeching halt.
Whether it's greed, desperation, or a thirst for power, money can make even the most unassuming people do unthinkable things.
And sometimes, those acts can be deadly.
This is Scams, Money, and Murder, a crimehouse original.
I'm your host, Nicole Lapin.
Every Thursday, we alternate between covering infamous money-motivated crimes.
and gripping interviews with the experts or those who were directly involved themselves.
Crime House exists because of you.
Please rate, review, and follow scams, money, and murder wherever you get your podcasts.
And for early ad-free access and bonus content, subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Now introducing our hottest exclusive, Friends, the One with Multi-Drop.
Your favorite classic television show is being reimagined into your new favorite casino game,
featuring iconic images from the show, spin our new exclusive, because we are not on a break.
Play Friends, the One with Multidrop, exclusively at BenMGM Casino.
Want even more options?
Pull up a seat and check out a wide variety of table games from blackjack to poker.
Or head over to the arcade for nostalgic casino thrills.
Download the BetMGM Ontario app today.
You don't want to miss out.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor.
Free of charge.
BetMGEM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario.
Reading, playing, learning.
Stellist lenses do more than just correct your child's vision.
They slow down the progression of myopia.
So your child can continue to discover all the world has to offer through their own eyes.
Light the path to a brighter future with stellar lenses for myopia control.
Learn more at SLR.com.
And ask your family eye care professional for SLR Stellist lenses at your child's next visit.
Imagine hearing your kid's voice on the phone, sobbing and in distress.
stress, begging for help. It is every parent's worst nightmare, right? I know it's mine. That's
exactly, though, what happened to a woman named Sharon Brightwell, who received a call from her
daughter, April Monroe, or so she thought. In reality, a scammer used AI to perfectly clone April's
voice and used it in a frantic phone call to call her mother. The call sent April's family into a
spiral of fear, leading them to hand over a large sum of money. April is now here. April is now
here to share all the details of how the scammers used her voice to prey upon her family,
how her family reacted, and how they're now coping with the emotional and financial aftermath.
April, thank you so much for being here. Yeah, thanks for having me. I really appreciate you
walking us through this story because it is absolutely terrifying. Can you take us back to the
beginning? Because before you received a call from your family, this was a pretty ordinary day for you.
I'm a radiology student, so I'm at a clinical site.
And every day around lunch, I usually check in on my kids.
And they were checking in with me.
And then I get a call from my friend.
And she's like in panic voice, she's like, April, your mom's been scammed.
I need to put you on a three-way with her.
And I'm like, what?
So she gets on a three-way and she's making sounds that I have never heard my mother make ever, like, screaming.
So I walk outside and I'm like, what has happened?
happen. And so apparently, my voice had been cloned, called her around 1130. Nothing would have
convinced her that it was not me on the phone. I had been in an accident, texting and driving,
hit a pregnant woman. Apparently, I was arrested for texting and driving. Didn't know you could
get arrested for that. I was all banged up, apparently, so they took me to an infirmary because I was
being detained also. And so I'm telling her all of this, and then I hand the phone over to someone
who claimed to be a detective, and then another person that was like a bonds guy saying that
this is what had happened. The pregnant lady and the baby are in the hospital. They're not doing
well. Her bail will be $15,000. So all that's going through my mom's mind is I have to
help my kid. She's about to finish school. All these things are going through her head. And so
she pretty much does what they ask her to do. And no questions asked. But at this
same time, my son, who was there, this is still summer at this point. We have Life 360 and it's pretty
accurate. And he's like, Nana, I still see her at her clinical site. She questioned it. They were
able to explain that away. We took her back over that way because that's where the accident happened.
So that was the closest place to take me. So they were just able to kind of piece things together that
looking back doesn't make sense, but did at the time to them. So she went and got cash, pretty big chunk.
And they also told her, like, don't tell the people at the bank what it's for.
That should have been a flag, but it wasn't.
She had to lie to them to tell them what it was for, because, I mean, it's a large chunk of money.
So they're going to ask why.
And they told her to put it in a box and that a bonds courier, which is not a thing, will come and pick it up.
And they literally came to her driveway in a Black Tahoe, and this guy that was dressed nice, got out and put it in the back seat.
Asked her, is it okay to put it in the backseat? That made me think that he didn't really know what he was picking up. And he took off and only then did a little flag race for her. Like, this seems really weird. So this guy picks up the money from your mom. He takes off, but that wasn't the end of the story, right? What happened next? They had called back. They had called her back and said the baby died. And now things have escalated because now it's like vehicular homicide. And they're going to need more money, which is not a restaurant. You don't get your bill.
the same day you're at the hospital. They don't even know what's being done yet. That didn't register
at the time. And so she was about to go get more money. But because it was at the bank and they're not
going to let you pull out more in the same day hours apart, she called my best friend for help.
And that's when my best friend, Leslie, like, screamed at the phone. Like, do not. This is a scam.
Like, she's screaming, no, no, no. And my mom was in shock. Like, are you serious right now?
and she's like, I'm going to put her on a three-way call.
And that's when they called me.
And my mom still couldn't believe that I was actually me talking on the phone because, again,
nothing was going to convince her that that wasn't me in the beginning.
So I left the clinical site, and so I rushed back over there.
And even my son was waiting in the driveway, sitting on the bed of his truck.
And when I drove up in the driveway and my car was not harmed, I got out unharmed.
He bent over and puked.
and because that's how convinced they were.
Even talking to me on the three-way call,
they were still not totally convinced that I was okay.
And so for the next couple hours,
I just hung out with my mom because she couldn't stop hugging me
and she couldn't crying because she just couldn't believe that that had happened.
Couldn't believe it.
And, you know, granted, she's dealing with a lot with my dad.
His health declined really quickly and unexpectedly,
and she's learning things that was always his responsibility before.
So her brain wasn't completely on guard, but at the same time, when are we not all dealing with something?
So we're not always going to be on guard.
You know, most of us would have fallen for that.
They did a very good job.
They knew everything about me, even to the point where I apparently was telling her not to tell the kids.
How did they even know I had kids?
It was wild.
I'm speechless.
It's so insane.
I mean, beyond using your voice, you know, how do you?
Do you think they knew you were a person of fate?
You had kids.
They used a lot of specifics about you.
They did.
So months ago, this was before all this, just for funsies, me and my son were like
chat GPTing ourselves.
And they knew, tell me something about April Monroe, Plant City.
Like you give it a little bit of specifics.
It knew I was like a soccer manager from my daughter's team for years.
It knew that my daughter was a high school soccer player, knew that she was.
like had a good GPA and was in the top whatever of her class. Like they knew a lot about both
kids. They knew a lot about me. So there's one thing. Then you have social media, which even if your
account's private, I'm sure there's a way. There's loopholes everywhere. And a friend that's a
retired police officer told me that if you're ever on any recorded phone calls with insurance or
anything like that, those are all recorded. You get letters in the mail all the time. Oh,
there was a data breach with this company. You know what I mean? So there's real.
Really a million ways they could have gotten information.
Do you have any sense as to why you were targeted and how the scammers design their story to hit your sweet, poor mom, where she was most vulnerable?
I don't think it was a personal attack at all, but I do think it's the boomer generation.
Because, I mean, every time you see someone's account on Facebook has been hacked, who is it?
It's someone in the boomer generation.
They can find all your connections, you know, like she's listed as my mom.
My dad's listed as my dad.
It's real easy to connect everybody.
Anything that we post is all family.
So all they needed to know was the touch point was family, faith, anything that along those lines, they're going to get you pretty hard.
Kids, you know, break you down.
They disarmed her immediately.
How old is your mom?
She's 59 going on 60.
And you mentioned your mom was told to bring a large sum of money.
She went to the bank.
it sounds like. How much money was that?
15 grand. And what does that mean for your family? What kind of money is that for your family?
It's a lot. They don't have a lot. They're on a fixed income. My dad, he had to quit work
unexpectedly and quicker than he planned because of a surgery that had caused like a snowball
effect of other things. And he is in probably mid to late stages of dementia, which all happened
within less than a year. So it's been insane. And so he's not working. They get a very fixed income
just through Social Security and things like that. My mom's a retired school teacher. And so that's what
they live on. They have a little nest egg of savings, but even taking that was a pretty good chunk.
I mean, it's good to know, like, how much you mean to your parents when they'll go and take out a big
chunk of money for you. But knowing what that was, you know, comparison to what they have, like,
It was a lot. They need, you know, repairs to the house. You know, they've got to deal with a new roof. Like, just things like that that costs a lot of money. And that was, you know, that's a new roof.
I mean, the police, it sounds like, have told you that the likelihood of getting any of that money back is zero. It's pretty zero. Yeah. One of my friends had given me the idea to start a go fund me. So I'm like, well, why not? Let's just give it a shot. They were able to recover a good chunk of that. Not all of it, but more than half. So that was a blessing for them.
And how do you think they've dealt with that financial loss on top of this emotional one?
They had no choice but to deal with it and just kind of get over that initial nausea, that that money is gone, and that, you know, it's just money.
You can always make more. But with them at this stage, it's hard for them to make extra. They'll be feeling it for a bit. But getting some of that back has helped a lot. They'll be feeling the emotional part of that for a long time.
The new BMO ViPorter Mastercard is your ticket to more.
More perks, more points, more flights.
More of all the things you want in a travel rewards card, and then some.
Get your ticket to more with the new BMO ViPorter MasterCard and get up to $2,400 in value
in your first 13 months.
Terms and conditions apply, visit bemo.com slash ViPorter to learn more.
Get to Toronto's main venues like Budweiser Stage and the new Roger Stadium with Go Transit.
Thanks to Go Transit's special online e-ticket fairs, a $10 one-day weekend pass offers unlimited travel on any weekend day or holiday anywhere along the Go Network.
And the weekday group passes offer the same weekday travel flexibility across the network, starting at $30 for two people and up to $60 for a group of five.
Buy your online go pass ahead of the show at go-transit.com slash tickets.
Scams like this don't just affect their victims financially.
They affect them psychologically as well.
So how has April's mother been dealing with the psychological turmoil from this scam?
Well, for her definite exhaustion on top of everything else that she's dealing with
because she also lost her father the month prior.
So my nanny has been also living there.
So she's almost 90 comes with her own needs.
You know, she wanted to do the podcast, but she didn't feel like she had the
emotional ability to go through rehash everything again because of the amount of emotion that came
out that's nothing I've ever witnessed of her or really anybody so it was very very traumatizing so
I think it's probably PTSD anytime she needs to like rehash anything yeah because you know she
thought her kid was banged up she thought my life was over she thought a poor baby was dead and
this poor mother now has to live with the fact that her baby was killed in the accident of someone's
stupidity, texting and driving, all these things. You know, they've lost money. The amount of
emotions felt within an hour's time is like very, very traumatizing on your system. Like, I can't
even imagine. I mean, I was just witness to it and it was a lot. But just for her to go through
all of that dealing with what she's dealing with was, it was a lot. And it's still triggering,
I guess, if you bring it up, it's just kind of like, you know how you feel that in your gut.
When something, you know, goes bad in life, you bring it back up.
And it's, you just have that feeling in your stomach that's just like, ugh.
So we want to spare Mama that visceral reaction.
Yeah.
How do you think it's changed the way you and your family trust people?
We don't answer anything anymore.
We answer no calls.
But, I mean, if it is us, we, you know, if something sounds off, we have our little word, a family code word.
And if we call and we're in a panic, there's a code word that we have to verify.
that you're who you say you are, but even like things that come through the mail, things that come
through our texts, and they're just getting more and more sophisticated. And so you have to just
kind of be just on guard all the time and understand who's not going to call you or who's not
going to text you on your phone. On guard with everything, because you have to be because it's just
getting smarter and smarter. And it's only going to continue to get smarter. Yeah, the technology
is absolutely terrifying. It sounds like your voice was cloned perfectly. It was.
Have you or law enforcement been able to piece together how these criminals might have gotten a recording of your voice?
Nothing that they've said, but all I can think of is just through other recorded calls or social media because not long before this happened, I was studying and my cat likes to sit on my homework every single time I'm trying to do something.
And so I video recorded it and was talking to the cat.
And there was no sounds in the background.
So it was a very clear audio of my voice.
and it was short, but enough.
That was all on social media, too.
So they had plenty of access to it.
Has law enforcement given you more information as to how these scams take place and who ends up being victims?
So they did recently find out that it traced back to, I want to say India is what they said,
but Uber is very much in profile right now.
They don't know how much Uber is aware.
how much the drivers are aware, like when the guy picked up the money, he took the box and asked if he could put it in the back seat, almost as if he needed to know if it was fragile, kind of like if he didn't know what it was.
So I don't know if there's like a head person, and then the drivers are the middle man who may not know anything, and then there's the people getting this money.
So I don't know if there's some connections in there, but I do know that they're under high investigation right now through this scam.
The officer actually this past week brought in like a folder of a lineup and asked my mom, could she pick out the driver?
Was any of these people looking like the driver?
And she picked him out.
She knew exactly what he looked at.
Wow.
Yeah.
So again, I don't know if that guy knew anything.
If he's got caught up in a really bad deal, which is possible, it would be smart to not involve these people and knowing what they're doing.
So you arrive at your parents' house.
This guy likely a random driver who wasn't involved directly.
has already picked up $15,000 in cash from your mom.
But things don't end there.
What happened next?
So I get to my parents' house.
Not 10 minutes later, they call again asking about this other chunk of money.
That was their last call, was asking for more money because now things have escalated.
Now it's homicide.
That's when they had called my friend to help.
They called back while I was there, and I'm like, oh, you bet.
Answer that phone.
Answer it.
Let's tell them that you have it because I wanted them to come back.
I was ready to go out there.
Like, I'm not very big person, but I was about ready to go, like, put someone on the ground
and get the money back out of the back seat.
I was ready.
And so I wanted the cops to meet us there.
Call the cops.
Call the guy you already talked to because they had already called the cops at this point.
And can you be here?
And then the guy's there.
And you're like, we're handing him to you.
I mean, that seems like a really good setup to me.
Well, they thought that would put everybody in danger.
because they don't know if they're armed.
But I'm like, well, that's why you're there.
Like, you're armed.
Like, that's why we're calling you.
But they didn't feel like that was a good idea.
So we just didn't answer the phone and was told to block the number and not pick up again if they called.
By the police.
Yeah.
And the police were going to handle it on their end.
But I was like, they could have been right here in the driveway.
But I guess that's not how they work.
How did you think of that in the thick of all?
of this. I watched too much true crime. It sounds like it. Like, they're going to show back up. Let's
tell them we have it. I will be ready for these people. I mean, you're, you sound amazing under
pressure. Well, I hope so. When they called back and they had this new demand, which is just a whole
other level of audacity. Yeah, like another like 10 grand, something crazy. And she was going to do
it. So at that point, you'd already involve the police. And they put the cabosh on
you talking with them again. Yes. And since then, how have they been helpful or unhelpful in
tracking them down? They've been really good about keeping my mom up to date. Like, they'll call
her on a weekly basis and say, this is where we're at. Or even if, you know, nothing's been
further. Like, this part takes a while. You know, it's a process. I understand that. But at least
they are following up and it's not just, well, you know, that's just another crappy thing that
happened that we're not going to be able to get to. And we're just not going to. And we're just not going
to, like, bother with our resources. But they really are putting time and effort into getting
to the bottom of it because it's happening more and more and more. And it's only going to continue to
happen. So they've got to get to the bottom of it. No doubt. So it sounds like the scammers are
somewhere overseas. And at some point during the scam, if somebody seems like they're playing along,
they'll order an Uber courier to go to the person's house to pick up the cash without them
knowing what the package is, which is how the platform works.
Yeah, so they probably have some kind of hub.
Maybe in every state, every city, who knows, like how extensive this thing goes?
But yeah, that's what it sounds like, okay, they took the bait.
We need a package courier for this.
And then, you know, package couriers are a thing for Uber.
Like, they do it all the time.
You know, there's a thing that comes up.
Oh, I'll take that one.
If I'm a driver, you know, like, oh, okay, because if I need the money, I'm going to pick up
whatever's in my area.
I feel like they don't know.
I feel like these people don't know what they're
picking up. And they're getting looped into this horrible, horrible operation.
Unbeknownst to them. Right. It sounds like your family members, specifically your son,
tried to challenge the story. He did. And that's the interesting thing with them being
such different generations. Like, he's a generation that is up to day with all of the things.
And my mom's the one that they're the generation that aren't. And so you had him, you know,
seeing me on the Live 360. She's right here. They were convincing enough for him. And
him too. He heard the call. He was listening to the whole conversation. So they were enough to
convince a very diverse generation. Live 360 is basically like find my phone. Yeah. I mean,
it's super accurate. Like, I mean, they stalk me. I stocked them. Well, you want to see where they are.
Right. So what do you think it was that they were able to say? How did the scammers shut down
your son's questions? Well, being that I was at a hospital, it just worked out.
that that's where I was. And that's where they had taken me as well was to a hospital because I was
all banged up. So had I been, you know, at a different job site or, you know, I also worked for a
marketing company, had I been at that office, that would have been a much bigger red flag.
Had they seen me at the marketing company building rather than the hospital. But since it was
the hospital, it was just a perfect storm of coincidence. But that's actually where I was.
and I was just working.
Even though it was April's mom who had lost the money to a scammer,
her 16-year-old son was also impacted emotionally.
As April mentioned earlier, when she arrived home that day,
her son literally threw up with relief.
So how has the trauma of this scam affected him?
I guess it probably makes you a little bit callous to things now,
like you don't trust anybody, trust anything, so it's good and bad.
He's definitely had his share of,
like understanding what scams are now. It's definitely had a toll on him, but he's learned
at least early to where now he knows moving forward as an adult once he gets up into the real
world, starts making his own money to be super careful. So since then, how have you talked about
scams? It sounds like you came together, came up with a safe word. Do you believe every family should
have that? Absolutely. Like if you're going to do anything, have a safe word. Have a couple because, I mean,
Our devices are listening to us apparently all the time.
And even questions, even personal questions, could be answered by somebody else.
So safe words would be a really good thing.
So explain how you guys have talked about safe words and potential scenarios or those could come into play.
If one of my kids calls me and they've been in an accident or if they suddenly need money somewhere or anything that just is kind of out of the every day, there's going to be, okay, what's our code?
first off. And if they can't answer that, then I'd be like, okay, well, let me call you back.
And then I'm going to hang up and call my kid back and make sure that that's them.
Are there any other safeguards that you guys have in place, like for anybody listening to this
right now who might find themselves on the other end of a call like this? What do you think is
the most important thing they can do? Our phone company, and I'm not sure if every phone company
has it, but I know that for the one I have, they offer like a call blocker. It's like an app that will
block out spam calls. And so it just helps. It doesn't catch all of them. And if you know there's
a spam call and you reject it, it will pick it up the next time as a spam call. But it's just kind of
an extra wall that will block out calls. That's another little safeguard you could put on your phone.
And I know they have regular apps too. That might be free. But just don't pick up the phone.
If it doesn't look familiar, if you don't know the number, sometimes even if it does look
legit, wait for that to, you know, leave you a message because there's a lot of companies that
would seem important that aren't going to call you, like the IRS scheme that went on, you know,
years back and still goes on, like, they're not going to call your phone. A bail bondsman is not
going to call your phone. A sheriff will call you, and then it probably will come to your house
to talk to you, but no bondsman is ever going to call you and ask for money. There's almost no
company that's going to call you and ask you for immediate money or cash, maybe just keeping
those in mind and asking more questions, pausing, you know, just kind of thinking about
what you're, who you're on the phone with, calming down enough to ask questions.
So was the original call to your mom from your phone? Because that's a scam that's going on
too, where it actually looks like it's coming from your number. No, because they said they had
confiscated my phone. So it was a different call. It's a different number, but I think it was like a
Tampa number, like a local-looking number.
So they said they were the sheriff or the who?
I think the first guy said he was like a detective, and then he handed the phone to a bail
bondsman, which they're not ever in the same room together.
They're not hanging out with the person they've just detained.
Like, you're not all just hanging out in the hospital room.
Maybe a sheriff and a person, but not a bail bondsman also.
You're never going to have those people in the room together.
It is completely understandable that your mom would have gotten.
caught up in the emotions around this and that she wasn't able to think logically.
That is by design, though.
That's what these scammers do.
Has your mom blamed herself for this?
Oh, yeah.
The amount of embarrassment that she has felt, I'm like, Mom, we need to, like, share this.
I know it's hard and it's a lot and you feel silly, but people need to know because other
people are going to fall for that.
And I might have fallen for.
Anybody could fall for it.
I put the story out there, and I put a more extensive one in the GoFundMe, and the
amount of outreach, the amount of traction that it's gotten has been insane. And that has helped. But yes,
she was very, very embarrassed. Definitely felt like she was not on her A game. And so, you know, you can't
give a hundred to everything. And when you're already splitting yourself in 10 pieces, your brain's
not going to work right. That's for everybody. You can't give 100 to everything. Something's going to
suffer. And on that day, it was her logic. And that could be anybody on any given day. You have a bad day at
work, you know, something bad happens or something not even that bad happens. You're just not
on your A game. It can happen to anybody. Yeah. She's hearing what she believes to be her daughter's
voice. And so it's such a new scam. Right. It's a different level. Yeah. Like, I will go to jail
for my daughter, my kids. So yeah, if my kids called and it was that, I would do anything I needed
to do for them. Or like, if I actually did do that and I killed somebody because I was being dumb,
you leave my butt in jail.
Like, just let me sit there and think about what I have done because that's dumb, you know.
So I'm like, if that does happen, don't mail me out.
Let me sit there.
Through this and sharing your story on GoFundMe and elsewhere, have you heard from other people who have experienced something similar?
Yes, like almost exact, maybe not as direct as a daughter, but like a nephew, a grandchild, a cousin, somebody along those lines.
probably someone they knew, probably looking at their social media that they spent
time with and were close to. I mean, grandparents that have been taken for even larger amounts
than that. Even in other states, I have family members who were called. A little different
scenarios, but same kind of gist, like, you know, someone needed to be bailed out and they
needed money, and they were able to stop it immediately.
Wendy's most important deal of the day has a fresh lineup. Pick any two breakfast items for $4.
New four-piece French toast sticks, bacon or sausage wrap,
biscuit or English muffin sandwiches, small hot coffee, and more.
Limited time only at participating Wendy's Taxes Extra.
This episode is brought to you by Square.
You're not just running a restaurant.
You're building something big.
And Square's there for all of it.
Giving your customers more ways to order,
whether that's in-person with Square kiosk or online.
Instant access to your sales, plus the funding you need to go even bigger.
And real-time insights, so you know.
it's working, what's not, and what's next. Because when you're doing big things, your tools should
to. Visit square.ca to get started. I'm Dennis Cooper, host of Culpable, and I want to tell you
about this case I've been following in a small Ohio town. When 17-year-old Danny Violet stormed out
of his house one afternoon in 1998, his family thought it was just another episode of teenage
angst, and he'd return home safely. The longer it went, the more worried I was because he never
disappeared like that.
But their worst fears materialized
when his lifeless, asphyxiated body
was later found in a nearby
cornfield. He asphyxiates
in a cornfield? You can't
hang yourself from a cornstalk.
The rumor mill in this small town
has brought many theories, but the question
remains, what happened to Danny?
Did they get scared and have
to dump the body? Was this
just all good fun that went
bad? Because
if you are doing acid,
God knows the different possibilities.
From Tinderfoot TV, an all-new season of Culpable is available now.
Some of the Playbook is the same with these scams.
A call will come through from someone saying that they have been detained because they violated the law or they killed someone.
So what commonalities has April seen as she's learned about other versions of this scam?
Yeah, I think the big one is that they've been.
detained, whether it's been for a vehicular thing or not. I don't know all the stories. That seems
probably the most plausible for people, because if they had said, oh, she, you know, robbed a bank,
like, no one's going to believe that, you know. But accident, yeah, because that can happen to
anybody at any moment. And so that's probably the main one, but definitely the bail. I've heard that
one on many occasions. Even prior to this happening, I knew that this was something going around.
How did you hear about it just through social media?
I don't even remember.
It might have been just like listening to a podcast and news or, you know, like NPR or something like that, just coming through with it.
I have no idea.
I had heard about it just right before it happened.
And I was like, I should probably tell my parents about that.
And then it happened to them.
So I'm like, okay.
Next time I hear about anything, immediately tell them immediately.
Well, I think you're right.
There's a special place in hell for scammers who prey on.
elderly people. Right, especially if their lines of work have not been on a computer or, you know,
because I mean, you can have people in that generation whose lines of work are on the computer and
they are up to date with everything. But with them, like, my dad was an AC guy and my mom was a teacher,
like they're just, you know, middle class working people and they could care less about technology
and they hate having to log into everything and remember 67 passwords. That's where they are. So
keeping up with all of this is it's too much and these scammers know that they're not going to
educate themselves to the extent that they need to in order to to not be scammed and now how have
you guys worked together as a family to help educate them more anytime that there's anything on
the computer that my mom wants to look at or whatever she always texts me or text you know
another family member like does this look real or even like some of the news outlets that have
reached out. One of your people from the station reached out to me. We initially ignored it because
we're like, we don't know who's real, who's not. So we just kind of let it go with you guys and
like a couple others that have reached out saying, oh, I'm from Fox or I'm from ABC or whatever.
I'm Googling who they say they are. And if they're legit, they're legit. But yeah, I mean,
there's been messages that have come through her Facebook from other stations around the country.
There was even one from Australia that was like, we would like to have you on our show or whatever.
And she's like, I don't know, this doesn't look real.
And I'm like, I don't know either.
I have no idea.
So we just kind of say no to everything.
That's a really scary way to live, too.
How have you worked with your mom to verify emails?
I mean, they're really getting so, so spot on.
I even found myself questioning, like, is this from actual Yahoo the other day?
Or is this from something that looks exactly.
the same. Yeah, we've done the same thing even like through work because it'll just say
their name. And so you rarely go and look at their email address when it's from your coworker
or, you know, and so it looks like something legit. And then you're like, there's something in it
that's off. And if you know the person well enough, you know how they talk, you know how they write an
email, something will be off. And so I've told her, look at the actual email address. Like if it's
an actual company, like let's say it's PayPal or your bank or something like that.
it's not going to be, you know, something, something at gmail.com. It's going to be at PayPal or
at GTE or, you know, whatever your bank is. It's going to be professional. It will have that tag
and it won't be a hotmail account. It's, you know, which a lot of the times if you look,
it's at something weird.com, you know, nothing professional, nothing you've ever heard of.
So for her, I'm just, if you see something that looks like, something you should look at, look at the
actual email address that it's from. If that doesn't seem professional, then it's a scam, period.
What are some of the more wild stories that you've heard so far now that you've connected with
other victims? There was one that was a family friend whose parent is in a nursing home,
and they contacted him sounding like his nephew and needed bail money, and it was a much larger
amount. I'm thinking it was like 50 grand, and he gave it. And then there's been others who have been
kind of close and they were able to call somebody else like another family member and that
person was able to sell them, no, you need to question that, you know, don't do it. That's probably
a scam. Do you guys stay in touch or share best practices now that you've connected with other
victims? If they're like a family friend or whatever we do or if, you know, someone who I haven't
talked to in a long time comes across something similar, they'll reach out and be like,
this just happened, you know, and it's usually just like a phone call or somebody needing
money for something that just sounds legit for a minute until they're able to like just pause
and understand that it's not. And it sounds like you guys are taking a lot of steps to protect
yourself, heal as a family from this type of attack in the future. Would you leave our listeners
with any last piece of advice? Yeah, definitely. The code word would be the big
biggest one, just have maybe two, a couple of code words that you know that it's that person. Even if
the phone says it's that person, they come through panicked, needing money, anything like that.
I think some of them are even asking for gift cards. Question that. Definitely question that.
Take a pause. Say, let me call you right back. Or ask for a code word. Usually if you call back,
it's not the same person you were just talking to. They're going to be like, what are you talking about?
And, you know, keep up to date with what's going on, but there's many, and they keep getting creative.
Like, once this one gets shut down because everybody knows about it, they're going to come up with something else.
Viruses do the same thing, and that's what these people are.
Yeah, I think that's one of the things that we've noticed in covering these types of scams is that it's a game of whack-a-mole.
Yeah.
Once we publicize or talk about one, they're already on to the next.
They're already on to the next.
and, you know, using AI for things.
AI is also intelligent.
It can learn, which is very creepy.
You know, it learns and adapts and evolves, which is crazy.
So it's going to keep doing that, and it's not going to slow down anytime soon.
So I guess just keeping up to date with that and being on your guard, always be careful with what you put on social media.
I'm not saying to keep everything private, but, I mean, the more private, the better.
How many people really need to know where you had dinner?
I mean, we all love to do it because it's exciting.
And we want people to know that this place is good or whatever, but maybe be selective.
They don't need to know your whole life.
Did you ever think that you would become a scam advocate or victim's advocate?
No.
No.
What's your hope with the work and the discussion about this that you're now having?
Well, one that, you know, that my family doesn't ever get touched by this again, but just that other people can warn
their family members who aren't going to listen to a podcast about it or see a lot of news
about it, that they can, by word of mouth, go and let them know, because especially people
who don't get on social media and things like that, they're not going to know all of this
information. And these people are banking on that. If you have a grandparent or a parent,
you know, anybody really, just let them know, like, this is going around. Just kind of be on
your guard. April, thank you so much for being here and sharing your family's
story. Of course. I really appreciate you guys taking it and keeping the message going.
Scams Money and Murder is hosted by me, Nicole Lapton, and is a Crime House original powered
by Pave Studios. My guest today was April Monroe. Here at Crime House, we want to thank each and every
one of you for your continued support. If you like what you heard here today, reach out on all social
media at Crime House. And don't forget to rate review and follow Scams Money and
murder wherever you get your podcasts. Your feedback truly makes a difference. And for ad-free listening
plus early access and bonus content, subscribe to Crimehouse Plus on Apple Podcasts. This episode was
brought to life by the Scams Money and Murder team. Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon,
Stacey Warnker, Sarah Camp, and Paul Liebuskin.