- Country
- New Zealand
- What happened
- Peter accepted what looked like flexible online work reviewing products. A manager monitored his progress and built trust, then required financial investments to unlock higher-value tasks and commissions. After paying into the scheme, Peter lost nearly NZ$22,000. When he had no money left, the fake supervisor pushed him to borrow from friends or take a loan. Police said similar Wellington cases included losses over NZ$100,000.
- Pressure pattern
- Easy-money job offer, fake manager oversight, escalating task top-ups, and pressure to borrow when funds ran out.
- Pause point
- Before paying the first training or progress fee to unlock higher-value tasks and commissions.
- How Pausier may have helped
- Pausier could have helped by slowing the payment moment, prompting checks on the employer, payment destination, and why a job required Peter to send money first.
- Source quote
- It's very convincing.