First name, Last name: Olena Komarovska
Country, City: Ukraine, Kramatorsk
E-mail: ol.hairstyle@gmail.com
Samples of her messages: Hi! What is your name? I'm glad you wrote) I would like to get to know you better. It's important for me to understand you as a person and to know your goals, especially in terms of finding a soulmate. Can you describe yourself? What qualities do you consider the most important in yourself? What qualities are you looking for in your partner? I will be very much looking forward to your answer. If you have any questions, you are welcome too)) Best wishes, Olena)
Scheme fraud: Scam pattern: “blocked at the border because of parents in occupied zone” and demand for a €5,000 bribe
A man meets a woman who presents herself as a young Ukrainian from the combat zone in eastern Ukraine. She says she has now moved to Lviv, where she supposedly received a brand-new Ukrainian international passport so she can travel to the EU and join him in Germany. To make the story believable, she repeats that everything is legal and that she is already preparing to cross the border into Poland. In a case like this, the first step should always be to verify the Ukrainian woman and her story professionally before paying anything.
After some time, she introduces a dramatic obstacle. According to her, Ukrainian authorities at the border will not let her leave the country because her parents live in Russian-occupied territory in the east. She claims that because of this, her case has been handed to an “investigator” and that she is now under a special legal restriction that prevents her from exiting Ukraine. The entire situation is described only in private messages; she does not provide any official documents, case numbers or verifiable contacts of real state authorities.
The key element of the scam is the demand for a large “fee” to solve this supposed legal problem. The woman says the investigator offered to “forget the case” and avoid court if she pays a bribe of €5,000. She insists that she has done nothing wrong, but that this is how corrupt officials work in Ukraine and that it is the only way to be allowed to cross the border. She pressures the man emotionally, repeating that without this money she will be “trapped” in Lviv and their relationship will be over. In many similar cases, the same photos reappear on different sites, including subscription platforms, which is why some victims later use tools like finding a girl from OnlyFans by her photos to see where else her images are used.
By this point, the victim has already invested heavily. He has paid around €7,500 to finance her “escape” from the war zone and relocation to Lviv. Now she says she is “caught” there, that the officials know he is supporting her financially, and that they are expecting him to come up with the €5,000. She portrays herself as a helpless prisoner of corrupt authorities, counting on his guilt and sense of responsibility. In reality, scammers often recycle the same pictures and identity across dating sites, webcam platforms and adult chats, which can sometimes be uncovered by tracking whether the same woman is working as a webcam model from Ukraine.
Several red flags appear: she allegedly cannot leave Ukraine but still keeps her passport; no official documents or proofs about any court case or legal restriction are provided; everything relies on the word of an unnamed “investigator” and an unofficial cash payment. The real goal of the scheme is to push the man into sending one more large transfer “to save her from prosecution,” after he has already been financially drained. A careful man would stop and order verification of the Ukrainian woman and her documents instead of paying a fabricated fine based on an emotional story about occupied territories and corrupt officials.




