VIDEO: REAL Tinder HORROR Stories! You Won’t Believe What Happened!
People need love and social interaction and even a way to have fun and release tension and this is why there are so many dating apps. These apps serve a good purpose most of the time, even thought they have been a little perverted in time. Still, this doesn’t mean that everyone that’s there wants to hook up or start a relationship.
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Some people are there because it’s an easy way to trick people to meet with you so that you can harm them. And the criminals and thieves know this all too well. Some people found out in a horrible manner, while others were really close to getting a really bad life lesson. The best lesson here is to be careful or just delete the app.
According to therichest.com, there are many people that have had a bad time on dating apps.
A couple who met online in the peninsula area south of San Francisco connected in a way that couples rarely experience. David Cooper of Redwood City and Keyana McLish of San Pablo decided to go all Bonnie and Clyde on the city of San Mateo after knowing each other for a few weeks.
Keyana drove getaway while David wielded the shotgun, robbing victims randomly on a spree that terrorized the town. In one incident, they chased a man back to an apartment complex before he was accosted and relieved of his valuables.
Eventually, the pair were identified as the culprits after one of the victims managed to get a decent look at the crime couple.
Internet matchmaking is famous for the falsehoods that some people portray to make themselves look more datable by manipulating their profile picture and personal information.
An eighteen year old man from the Bronx found this out in the worst way possible when he arrived at an apartment building on East 181st Street after connecting with a date.
After knocking, the front door swung open to reveal a dude with a taser instead of a woman. The suspect took the man’s cell phone before fleeing the premises. Incredibly, the NYPD found him on the same website, using a different profile that featured a real picture of himself.
A man in Chicago met a woman on a dating site, arranging a meeting in an apartment building on the south side of the city. He followed the woman, whose name he didn’t know, into a unit before realizing that the place had no electricity or heat.
As he made a prompt exit, he was met by a trio of men. They dragged him to another apartment, beat him with a metal pipe, removed his clothes and tied him up.
Somehow, he ended up freeing himself and ended up fighting back against Jyrail Gentry, one of the assailants, after the other members of the crew left. The police were called after residents noticed the brawl. When the police met the victim, he was left with only white long underwear and a t-shirt, both of which were covered in blood.
The former deputy chief executive of the Maori Language Commission in New Zealand met a nice man online, communicating through social media outlets. As Sharon Armstrong and the unknown male became closer, the two decided to have a romantic first date in England.
However, before she left, he asked her to pick up some “sensitive documents” in Argentina while making the trip to England. In Buenos Aries, as she attempted to board a Biritsh Airways plane with these “sensitive documents”, law enforcement found 5 kilos of ‘Columbian marching powder’ hidden in a secret compartment.
The man deleted his Facebook profile and disappeared while she was in jail, along with the Argentinians who gave her the suitcase.