It takes a real low-life to try to exploit someone in a time of grief.
The world’s most popular golf influencer, Paige Spiranac, is experiencing it first-hand — and warning her fans to be wary of the scam.
Earlier this week, the blonde bombshell was hit by tragedy when her dog, Niko, died suddenly.
“I loved you for your whole life and I’ll miss you for the rest of mine,” the 31-year-old posted to her social media accounts.
But as support poured in for the former college golf champion, something more sinister was afoot.
On Thursday, after first thanking her fans and followers for their support, Spiranac then had to clear the air over a nefarious scheme aimed at preying on their sympathy.
Spiranac warned that scammers were pretending to be her in order to exploit those hoping to help in a time of need.
“I can’t believe I even have to write this,” the golf influencer posted to her X account. “Someone is pretending to be me online and asking people to donate money to a fund for my dog who just died. It’s a scam.
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“Please do not donate. Block and report. Thank you!”
Spiranac had received a ton of support after announcing the death of Niko, with her post on X receiving more than 2,200 replies.
“Niko was so unbelievably lucky to have you and your family. My heart breaks for you all. The worst pain in the world,” TGL’s Samantha Marks wrote.
Kayce Smith of Barstool Sports replied, “I’m so sorry, my love” with a crying emoji.
This isn’t the first time that Spiranac, who boasts more than 5 million followers across her social media platforms, has had to warn her fans to be wary of imposters.
Last year, she shared a story about a “scary” imposter trying to use her likeness.
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Spiranac warned fans of a potential scam aimed at trying to cash in on her massive social media following, sharing a Photoshopped picture that someone had sent.
“This is honestly so scary!” the former low-level professional golfer said. “They took a screenshot of a video I did a couple years ago holding a head cover and photoshopped a sign in.
“PSA do not talk to anyone claiming to be me! I’m not on any chat apps. I will only ever respond from my verified social media accounts and my passes account. Please report and block anyone claiming to be me!”
The 31-year-old former San Diego State and University of Arizona star has taken swings at her imposters before, posting a screenshot of two fake accounts sniping at each other over which one was the real Spiranac.
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“I can’t make this up,” Spiranac posted on social media in February 2023. “Fake me is calling out other fake me.”
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