Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Scams

As much as I hate to talk about this, but the truth must be told.
Remember the story of the young teen Jason Reeves? The boy who drowned in the lake?
Alyson's story :

Last week, on Tuesday night, Jason was out fishing a tournament on Bob Sandlin Lake and ran across someone yelling for 911 help. He jumped out of the boat and swam over to an area where a bunch of people were gathered around. There was a 17 year old boy who had drowned. The crowd around him had frozen and didn’t know what to do. Jason having experience in life saving measures from Special Forces jumped in the middle and took over the situation. He gave people certain jobs to do and ran the group doing CPR on the boy. Though they tried for 45 minutes before the ambulance got there, they were not able to save him.

The REAL story?

A 17-year-old Mount Pleasant boy drowned near the swim platform at Lake Bob Sandlin during an outing at the lake Tuesday evening. Eligio Juarez, a member of the Class of 2009 at Mount Pleasant High School, was with family and friends at the lake when the drowning occurred.

"According to his mother, he couldn't swim," said Texas Parks and Wildlife (TPW) Game Warden Jerry Ash, who was called to the scene last night at approximately 8:15 p.m.

"The young man went under the water and was found and brought to the surface by friends and family who began cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)," said Ash.

When EMS personnel arrived on scene, they continued CPR and transported the youth to Titus Regional Medical Center by ambulance.

"Efforts to revive him continued at the hospital, but they couldn't revive him," said Ash. Juarez was pronounced dead at the hospital by Precinct 2 Justice of the Peace Paula Dyke.

Paul Harris, TPW manager at the Lake Bob Sandlin State Park, said friends of the boy told him Juarez had been playing with them and shouting for help when he was not in trouble.

"He was about half way out to the swim platform and had apparently been bobbing around, splashing and telling his friends that he was in trouble when he actually wasn't" said Harris.

"Then when he disappeared, it took them a few minutes to realize it, look for him and find him," Harris said.

Soon after the happening, Alyson, on scapes website posted HER made-up story, and made people feel sympathy, causing people to donate money to scapes site so she could "send it to the family".

SCAM. she just wanted the money.
REAL story proof here: http://www.dailytribune.net/articles/2008/07/02/news/01.txt

Its a shame she would actually go THAT far for money.

Posted By Waronwowscape on this topic:

Ok, so admittedly, the idea of helping out this family sounds very attractive morally. In fact, I wouldn’t mind lending them a hand myself. But the problem people have with Peyton isn’t a problem with maturity. If Peyton had at the very least informed the WoWscape players that she was going to be breaching the TOS they agreed to, this issue might not have as much merit. But even if she had, the agreement and pretext that most people donated under was that all donations go towards WoWscape’s server maintenance. Here’s why: how do we know Peyton actually donated this money back to the family? We don’t. WoWscape isn’t supposed to be a charity. If I were Peyton and I honestly wanted to help this family, I would’ve contacted the family and asked them to setup a PayPal account and informed them that I was instructing a large community of their situation and that we would try to help as much as possible.

The simple fact is: Peyton’s own facts don’t add up. She has spun a story full of so much lies that it’s getting hard to remember which lies she needs to remember in order not to contradict another lie. And it’s getting obvious.

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