Woman Arrested After Writing Handbooks on How To Profit Off 9/11 Victims

Talk about scum of the Earth.
Patricia Wutaan is a 55-year-old scam artist of the most vile sorts. She was recently arrested for writing online handbooks about how to profit from sensationalized stories involving fake 9/11 victims. So… that’s really f*cked up.
The care worker – whatever the f*ck that means – apparently made a profitable living from her side job, in which she would write emotional scripts that centered around losing loved ones during the Twin Tower attacks.
According to Mirror, one script read:

“I am a widow. Lost my husband to 9/11 terror attacks in New York.”
“He made it out of the collapsed building but he later died because of heavy dust and smoke and he was asthmatic.”

Another was more detailed:

“I’ve not been in a relationship since demise of late husband. I am in London to meet family attorney of late husband to negotiate on how to clear the identified assets he left me.”
“He left me a vague will with some conditions to meet before I could access the assets and cash he left me in his will.
“I must be able to prove to the family attorney that I have moved on with my life and show I am engaged with someone else.”

Some scripts were also accompanied by thorough instructions for delivery: “Stay calm and moody until you get his final word,” “let him do most of the talking, be sad and worried about taking care of bills for rest of the month,” “when he asks what he can do to help ask him for $2000 – $3000.”
Charming, but it gets worse.
The woman really went full-out in the operation, sending con-artists fraudulent documents like photocopies of fake passports and drivers’ licenses to use against lonely men. When police searched her home, officers apparently found an “Aladdin’s cave of fraudsters’ scripts and false IDs.”
Luckily she got what she deserved; Wutaan was sentenced to two years in jail after being found guilty on two counts of possession of articles for use in fraud. She was also found guilty on three counts of money laundering, linking to the $100,000 fraud of a Swiss man.
[H/T: BroBible]

Exit mobile version