Female Scammer Alice Behrens_Eunice

Alice Behrens_Eunice

Female Scammer Alice Behrens_Eunice


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Scam Danger: 
85%

Details

First Name: Alice
Location [Address]: Los Angeles
Age:
Birth Date:
Aliases:

Reports :


I honestly didn’t expect to run into something like this, but that’s exactly how these scammers catch people off guard.

The Facebook profile “Alice Behrens Eunice” looked normal enough at first. Nothing about it screamed fake. A woman in uniform, decent number of friends, a profile that looked active—basically everything you’d expect from a real person. That’s what makes this so irritating. It wasn’t some obvious scam account. It was built just well enough to make you hesitate before questioning it.

When we started talking, it felt like a normal interaction. Just basic conversation, nothing weird in the beginning. But that didn’t last long. The tone changed quickly, and not in a natural way. It felt like someone was trying too hard to be friendly, too interested, too soon. It didn’t feel like a conversation—it felt like I was being worked on.

What really started bothering me was how things didn’t line up.

She claimed to be working with the American Red Cross, but the photos clearly showed a U.S. Army uniform. That alone was enough to make me pause. Then I noticed something even worse—the name on the uniform didn’t even match the name on the profile. That’s not a small mistake. That’s straight-up sloppy scamming.

And the whole story about being in Kabul while also presenting a U.S.-based background just didn’t sit right. It wasn’t impossible, but the way it was presented felt off. Like someone pieced together random details without really thinking about whether they made sense together.

The photos didn’t help either. They looked way too clean and staged. Not the kind of photos people usually have on their personal Facebook. It felt like they were pulled from somewhere else and reused. The more I looked at them, the less believable the whole thing became.

But what really gave it away was the way the conversation kept pushing in one direction.

There was this constant attempt to build some kind of connection fast. Not in a natural way—more like forcing it. It didn’t feel genuine at all. It felt like someone trying to gain trust as quickly as possible for a reason.

And let’s be honest, it doesn’t take much to see where that kind of conversation is heading.

Even though nothing direct happened while I was still engaged, it was obvious this wasn’t going anywhere good. It felt like the setup phase—like I was being slowly pulled into something that would eventually turn into a request or some kind of manipulation.

That’s when I stopped.

I didn’t entertain it any further. No personal info, no emotional investment, nothing. I just cut it off.

What annoys me the most is how deliberate this whole thing is. This isn’t random. Someone took the time to create a fake identity, pick convincing photos, use trusted names like the Red Cross and the military, and then try to play a role. That’s not just dishonest—it’s straight-up predatory.

There’s nothing real behind that account. No “Alice,” no story, no truth. Just someone sitting behind a screen trying to fool people.

And the worst part? If you’re not paying attention, it can actually seem believable for a while.

That’s exactly why I’m putting this out there. Because this kind of scam doesn’t always look obvious. Sometimes it looks normal—until you start noticing the cracks.

And once you see those cracks, the whole thing falls apart fast.


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