
TMZ Finds Its Niche as Honeypot for Ransom Spammers
The Nancy Guthrie disappearance saga is now two weeks in the making, with virtual nonsense media coverage. TMZ, in particular, has found new fame — and media attention — as it has been the recipient of Guthrie ransom and tip emails. Now, the original ransom note received by TMZ sought $6 million in Bitcoins for the return of Mrs. Grace, but it offered no vehicle to prove she was still alive, whether through a FaceTime chat, phone call, photo, or whatever. Another email evidently threatened her demise (which I’m pretty sure has already transpired). Then, after the FBI started offering rewards for tips leading to the 84-year-old’s whereabouts or kidnappers’ identity, TMZ got another email, promising to reveal the identity of the perpetrator, or perpetrators, depending on which passage of the email you read. Of course, the email sender wanted payment up front, at least half of the $100,000 reward. Let’s see, pay $6 million for the return of Mrs. Guthrie without having any proof she is still alive, or how about $50,000 for half a tip of who did it? And we’re supposed to take these emails seriously? TMZ main man Harvey Levin definitely hopes we do. He’s been
TMZ Finds Its Niche as Honeypot for Ransom Spammers
Pima County Sheriff Breaks His Silence — Big Mistake
Discombobulator Discombobulates the Combobulated in Venezuela During U.S. Invasion
No Saving the SAVE Act without Ending the Filibuster
Into the Same Climate You Cannot Breathe Twice
