First name, Last name: Kyrylo Slozhynskyi
Country, City: Ukraine, Zhytomyr
E-mail: kyryloslozhynsk2004@gmail.com
Samples of her messages: I'm renting an apartment now. But I don't know what I'll do next month. I spoke to a lawyer today, and he told me they'll help me leave Ukraine for 1,500 euros. If I'm in an irregular situation, they guarantee everything will be fine. Yes, you can help me transfer the money to my bank account.
Scheme fraud: “Kyrylo Slozhynskyi” contacted the victim on a dating site and built a sympathetic backstory: his father had “died in combat in Donbass in 2024,” and he was living with his mother at 88 Kyivska Street, Building 2, Apartment 1 in Zhytomyr. From the outset, his email looked suspicious—it reused a common namesake and appended “2004” as a likely birth year. Despite frequent written exchanges and photo sharing, he repeatedly refused any video call without giving a reason.
About a month after first contact, he announced that his mother had suddenly “died” in a domestic accident. He immediately asked for money to “privatize” a state-owned apartment so it wouldn’t be reclaimed through inheritance. Shortly after, he requested additional money to bribe Ukrainian army recruiters to avoid being sent to the front, while simultaneously claiming he was only 21 (which conflicted with the 25-year conscription threshold he himself cited).
The victim reached out to us in time and used our Ukrainian ID card verification service (Check Ukrainian Passport). Following the check, the identity card he provided was confirmed to be fake on multiple points, validating the pattern of deception and preventing further financial loss.




