Two months ago, I shared the strange story of a man who tried to lure me into a romance scam on Instagram — claiming to be a wealthy oil rig engineer from California, currently working off the coast of Scotland.
“Bobby Brown” told me he was the divorced father of a nine-year-old. His Instagram profile showed Bobby hiking mountains, standing by a river, posing in front of sunlit vineyards.
He started love-bombing me daily with flattering messages and within weeks, proposed.
“I want you to be MINE and I want to love you til the end of the world,” he wrote.
I eventually called him out. Told him I was a journalist, had never believed he was the man in the photos and asked for an interview.
He admitted he’s actually a 26-year-old Nigerian. He claimed he lives in poverty and said he preys on women using photos stolen from an attractive man’s Facebook page.
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But the story was just beginning.
Two weeks after it aired on CBC television, an email arrived in our Go Public in box.
“I am … shocked,” wrote the sender. “Seeing me on your news!”
Turns out, the real Bobby Brown — or at least, the man in the scammer’s photos — is Sigi Fink, a weatherman from Italy, working for the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation.
When someone sent him the story, he played the video in disbelief.
“I was like, ‘Oh my gosh,'” said Fink. “My heart was beating faster. My mouth was hanging open.”
WATCH | Fink ‘shocked’ by use of photos:
‘I was shocked,’ says real man in photos used in romance scam
4 days ago
Duration 0:41
Sigi Fink, a meteorologist in Vienna, shares his reaction when he saw his picture on CBC News following a romance scam involving his photos and a Go Public reporter.
Fink, 39, is well-known in Austria, Germany and parts of Switzerland.
No wallflower, he posts a lot on social media — often shirtless, or working out at the gym — and two years ago was voted sexiest man in Austria.
Fink said he likes to use his face “for good” — entertaining people with his weathercasts — but our story, he said, was the opposite.
“It’s quite a terrible thing to see your face in a news story where people are being harmed,” he said, in an interview from Vienna.
Losing control of one’s image is a growing problem in today’s social media climate, says Nafissa Ismail, a professor of psychology at the University of Ottawa.
“Most of the time people are completely unaware that their pictures are being used for any purpose other than one that they have been wanting to use it for,” she said.
Having a romance scammer steal and use photos can be quite traumatic for an innocent person, says Ismail.
“You feel like you’ve been robbed and used in a way that was totally against your values, your morals, your ethical practice.”
Romance scamming is a growing problem, as more people spend time online, according to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre. It says people lost a reported $15.6 million in romance scams in 2013. In 2023, that figure had ballooned to more than $52 million.
Dozens of fake profiles
Fink, the weatherman, says he first noticed clouds on the horizon about two years ago.
Every so often, someone would forward a phoney Instagram account that was using his social media pics.
But recently, “fans send me a fake profile every day,” he said. “The scammers are also tagging me. ‘Liking’ my posts. Even using my real name on their fake accounts.”
Being in the limelight is one thing, says Fink, but to find himself suddenly in Canada’s news concerned him.
“I thought, ‘I have to tell people I’m innocent,'” he said. “I’m a good guy. I tell the weather. It just feels horrible.”
“The person may also feel some level of responsibility,” said Ismail. “While I didn’t commit this scam and I was not involved, I sort of was indirectly involved.”.
Fink says sometimes women figure out he’s the actual face in the photos and end up reaching out to him, which is what A.H. did recently.
The 42-year-old lives near Salzburg, Austria, and fell for a scammer using photos of Fink’s mug.
CBC News has agreed not to use A.H.’s full name, because she worries about her safety.
Her scammer claimed to be an American oil rig engineer working overseas, just like Bobby Brown, but said his name was “Dave Owen.”
“He asked me every day how I was doing, how my day was,” said A.H. “It felt like I found my soulmate.”
Six weeks after connecting, “Dave” claimed he’d lost his credit card.
Requests for money became daily occurrences.
Before long, she’d sent $10,000.
She says when she finally stopped sending money, the scammer told her to pray for her safety, warning that he knows where she lives and works.
WATCH | Who is ‘Bobby Brown’?
Go Public’s Erica Johnson meets man whose face was used in effort to scam her
12 hours ago
Duration 2:10
CBC’s Erica Johnson updates her recent Go Public story about an online romance scam by meeting the man whose face was used to target her. Turns out he’s a well-known personality in Austria.
One night, while scrolling through Facebook, she stumbled across an account with the exact photos her love interest had sent her.
“I saw the name. Sigi Fink. Weatherman,” said A.H. “I had to throw up. I thought I was going to collapse. I knew that I had fallen for a scammer.”
And not just any scammer. After a bit of digging, Go Public figured out it was the same one who claimed to be “Bobby Brown”.
“I have to laugh,” said A.H., despite her devastating experience. “We have the same scammer!”
When I checked that Nigerian scammer’s Instagram account, he seemed to be doing quite well – recently posting a video that showed him modelling what appeared to be new gold chain necklaces and a new Apple watch.
I told him we now know the actual person in the photos he’s ripped off; that it’s causing Fink stress.
“I’m very sorry,” he wrote. “How I wish I could apologize to Fink in person.”
I also told him we’d found A.H., one of the women he’s conned — not just financially, but emotionally.
“Honestly, I’m sorry,” he wrote. “I regret what I have done.”
A.H. says she doesn’t believe him, and has filed a police report.
Be vigilant
Fink also went to the police, anxious to keep his name clean.
Fink says the police officer took his statement, but warned him there was likely little that authorities could do.
Ismail says there are things people can do to slow a scammer’s scheme. First: Be vigilant about who can see your details online.
She says people should occasionally do a reverse image search using their online photos, to see where else they turn up – reporting anything illicit to the social media platforms.
“Keeping a general eye on the situation could … detect them early enough, before there’s actually been a financial scam,” she said.
Fink says he has done that, but it’s time-consuming and doesn’t seem to be making a difference. He also says he loves engaging on social media, and says he can’t lock down his accounts due to his job.
Instead, he says, he’s trying to make peace with the fact that there’s little he can do — comparing romance scammers to the tentacles of an octopus.
“They reach everywhere,” said Fink.
Then he pulled out his phone and recorded a video — him in Vienna, me on the phone in Vancouver — a “story” to post on his Instagram account.
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PORT ALBERNI, B.C. – RCMP say the body of a second person has been found inside their vehicle after a road washed away amid pouring rain on the west coast of Vancouver Island.
Police say two vehicles went into the Sarita River when Bamfield Road washed out on Saturday as an atmospheric river hammered southern B.C.
The B.C. Greens say Sonia Furstenau will be staying on as party leader, despite losing her seat in the legislature in Saturday’s provincial election.
The party says in a statement that its two newly elected MLAs, Jeremy Valeriote and Rob Botterell, support Furstenau’s leadership as they “navigate the prospect of having the balance of power in the legislature.”
Neither the NDP led by Premier David Eby nor the B.C. Conservatives led by John Rustad secured a majority in the election, with two recounts set to take place from Oct. 26 to 28.
Eby says in a news conference that while the election outcome is uncertain, it’s “very likely” that the NDP would need the support of others to pass legislation.
He says he reached out to Furstenau on election night to congratulate her on the Greens’ showing.
But he says the Green party has told the NDP they are “not ready yet” for a conversation about a minority government deal.
The Conservatives went from taking less than two per cent of the vote in 2020 to being elected or leading in 45 ridings, two short of a majority and only one behind the NDP.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 22, 2024.
Toronto FC captain Jonathan Osorio is making a difference, 4,175 kilometres away from home.
The 32-year-old Canadian international midfielder, whose parents hail from Colombia, has been working with the Canadian Colombian Children’s Organization, a charity whose goal is to help disadvantaged youth in the South American country.
Osorio has worked behind the scenes, with no fanfare.
Until now, with his benevolence resulting in becoming Toronto FC’s nominee for the Audi Goals Drive Progress Impact Award, which honours an MLS player “who showed outstanding dedication to charitable efforts and serving the community” during the 2024 season.”
Other nominees include Vancouver Whitecaps midfielder Sebastian Berhalter and CF Montreal goalkeeper Jonathan Sirois.
The winner will be announced in late November.
The Canadian Colombian Children’s Organization (CCCO) is run entirely by volunteers like Monica Figueredo and Claudia Soler. Founded in 1991, it received charitable status in 2005.
The charity currently has four projects on the go: two in Medellin and one each in Armenia and Barranquilla.
They include a school, a home for young girls whose parents are addicted to drugs, after-school and weekend programs for children in a disadvantaged neighbourhood, and nutrition and education help for underprivileged youth.
The organization heard about Osorio and was put in contact with him via an intermediary, which led to a lunch meeting. Osorio did his due diligence and soon got back to the charity with his decision.
“It was something that I wanted to be a part of right away,” said Osorio, whose lone regret is that he didn’t get involved sooner.
“I’m fortunate now that to help more now that I could have back then,” he added. “The timing actually worked out for everybody. For the last three years I have donated to their cause and we’ve built a couple of (football) fields in different cities over there in the schools.”
His father visited one of the sites in Armenia close to his hometown.
“He said it was amazing, the kids, how grateful they are to be able to play on any pitch, really,” said Osorio. “But to be playing on a new pitch, they’re just so grateful and so humble.
“It really makes it worth it being part of this organization.”
The collaboration has also made Osorio take stock.
“We’re very fortunate here in Canada, I think, for the most part. Kids get to go to school and have a roof over their head and things like that. In Colombia, it’s not really the same case. My father and his family grew up in tough conditions, so giving back is like giving back to my father.”
Osorio’s help has been a godsend to the charity.
“We were so surprised with how willing he was,” said Soler.
The TFC skipper has helped pay for a football field in Armenia as well as an ambitious sports complex under construction in Barranquilla.
“It’s been great for them,” Figueredo said of the pitch in Armenia. “Because when they go to school, now they have a proper place to train.”
Osorio has also sent videos encouraging the kids to stay active — as well as shipping soccer balls and signed jerseys their way.
“They know more about Jonathan than the other players in Colombia,” Figueredo said. “That’s the funny part. Even though he’s far away, they’ve connected with him.”
“They feel that they have a future, that they can do more,” she added. “Seeing that was really, really great.”
The kids also followed Osorio through the 2022 World Cup and this summer’s Copa America.
Back home, Osorio has also attended the charity’s annual golf tournament, helping raise funds.
A Toronto native, he has long donated four tickets for every TFC home game to the Hospital for Sick Children.
Vancouver’s Berhalter was nominated for his involvement in the Whitecaps’ partnership with B.C. Children’s Hospital while Montreal’s Sirois was chosen for his work with the Montreal Impact Foundation.
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This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 21, 2024.