Rep Scam List 2026: Avoid Dishonest Sellers & Scams
Why am I creating this list?
Since I started the "Superfakeswiki" blog, one reader after another has shared their experiences of being scammed with me. These detestable sellers either offer low-quality replicas or, worse, completely vanish with your money, leaving us buyers with nothing but disappointment and anger.
This not only causes financial loss to consumers but also damages the reputation of honest, high-quality replica sellers. Therefore, I have begun compiling these names to expose them here. I hope this opens a healthy dialogue between buyers and sellers, and helps warn our community to stay far away from websites and individuals that bring nothing but trouble!
Which Sellers Are Added to This List?
If a seller or website receives a sufficient volume of verified negative feedback, they will be blacklisted. We specifically target the following behavior:
- Failure to deliver orders on time (without valid reason or notice), or failing to ship completely.
- Abysmal customer service or completely ignoring complaints.
- Demanding sensitive personal information or forcing unsafe advance payment methods.
- Using stolen photos that do not belong to them, or shipping items completely different from the advertised pictures.
- Promising top-tier quality and charging premium prices, only to deliver low-tier budget goods.
High-Risk Blacklisted Sellers (Dishonest Sellers)
- Annie Lin
- Key Details: WhatsApp ending in
*8866/*duo(Formerly known as Lucy) - Scam Overview: A classic "take the money and vanish" exit-scammer specializing in replica jewelry. Her playbook is aggressive yet simple: she acts extremely enthusiastic during inquiries, then strongly pressures or forces buyers to pay via Western Union—a cash channel virtually impossible to charge back or trace. The moment the hundreds of dollars hit her account, Annie Lin severs all communication, ignores messages, and blocks buyers from her social feeds, leaving overseas buyers stranded with zero recourse. Multiple reports show she cuts contact immediately after buyers request or approve Pre-Shipping Photos (PSPs). She previously used a sob story about "leaving the industry to go back to school" to dodge heat, only to return with a new account.
- Key Details: WhatsApp ending in
- Benny (and his accomplice wife Jena)
- Scam Overview: Benny originally built enough goodwill to make it onto community recommended lists, which later evolved into a widespread exit scam involving unpaid debts and unfulfilled orders. Starting in late 2019, Benny aggressively collected substantial up-front deposits from overseas buyers, only to ghost them for months. When issued a final ultimatum by moderators, he fabricated a series of tragic, drawn-out excuses, ranging from "my father passed away" and "unforeseen lockdown impacts" to "our premium imported leather was seized entirely by customs." Final tallies revealed an immense amount of unrecovered money across a massive pool of victims—a textbook case of intentional asset misappropriation.
- Angel (Operates via "QinQin Factory")
- Scam Overview: This seller has demonstrated a malicious pattern of withholding large sums of customer money and relying on endless denials. In a notable incident, a buyer mistakenly transferred $5500 instead of $550 via Bitcoin. Angel immediately denied receiving the extra funds. The community moderation team stepped in for a deep-dive blockchain trace, shattering Angel's lies with on-chain data and historical post history (Angel claimed the associated ID did not belong to them, yet that exact ID had been displayed in their recruitment ads for months). Angel then shifted the blame, claiming an "ex-employee" stole the money. Under intense community pressure, partial refunds were issued in batches, but the complete lack of integrity and deceptive patterns earned Angel an indefinite spot on the scam list.
- Chris (Operates behind "Woopurse" / "Purse Garden")
- Scam Overview: A calculated scammer and serial drop-shipper who aggressively targets community brands. During peak holiday sales, Chris spammed social channels with high-quality, low-price marketing materials to lure buyers. Once paid, Chris either failed to provide international tracking numbers or instantly blocked buyers the moment they asked for help regarding customs delays. More maliciously, after the original scam site Pursegarden.com went under, Chris registered a copycat domain (.ru) utilizing this community's English brand name and forged official customer support emails, actively trying to trick beginners into thinking the site had our official backing.
- Ilona
- Key Details: Email:
Feyre*@hotmail.com/Feyre*@gmail.com - Scam Overview: The ultimate textbook example of a predatory international drop-shipper. She explicitly tells buyers she is based in Turkey, claiming that its proximity to Europe allows her to source premium leather directly from France and Italy. In reality, packages ship directly from domestic warehouses or are rerouted through Vietnam. Ilona is based entirely overseas, has no physical storefront or stall, and never actually handles any bags or materials. Her business model relies purely on extreme information asymmetry to exploit high-tier buyers. She brainwashes customers on social platforms by claiming exclusive "backdoor access to original genuine factories," while selling $100 budget-tier batches (riddled with glaring flaws like bright tomato-red edge paint and terrible handle stamps) for astronomical prices ranging from $600 to $900. She has also been caught hiring paid shills to forge reviews and listing low-end rep watches as "authentic pre-owned" for thousands of dollars.
- Key Details: Email:
- Jennifer (Operates under "Maison Legrande" / "Lacrene Boutique")
- Key Details: * Instagram:
maison_legrande/lacrene_boutique- WhatsApp:
+1 440 435 ***9,+1 438 300 ***5,+1 406 282 ***5,+1 667 262 ***7(VoIP burner numbers, changes frequently)
- WhatsApp:
- Scam Overview: A highly aggressive, shameless veteran of the classic Bait and Switch. She spins elaborate fairy tales claiming all her bags are "custom-molded and hand-stitched by an elite artisan team led by herself in Seoul/Tokyo," when her stock consists entirely of low-tier budget batches from mass-production markets. Her public albums heavily steal real-product photos from high-end authentic consignment shops in Seoul (like
@lamaisonh.official) for deceptive marketing. When buyers receive items that are sized incorrectly and look entirely inferior to her promotional videos, confronting her results in severe verbal abuse or getting completely ghosted. Shockingly, she has used customers' real names and overseas addresses to threaten them with international doxxing if they do not delete negative reviews. She changes her Instagram handle constantly once exposed (past aliases includejenys_boutique,luxurypoints,by_lynnie,j.luxury,hermes_xo,luxurygemsss).
- Key Details: * Instagram:
- Kinga
- Key Details: WhatsApp:
+86 151 **** 4001/ ID ending in*mwb - Scam Overview: Based on multiple verified reader complaints, Kinga has exhibited clear scam patterns. In one major instance, a buyer reached out for help after her package appeared to be lost or seized by customs, and Kinga immediately blocked her. In other transactions, she completely refused to provide tracking numbers or any proof of shipment whatsoever. Once she secures the funds, she cuts off all communication on both WhatsApp and WeChat, leaving buyers entirely in the dark.
- Key Details: WhatsApp:
High-Risk Fraudulent Websites & Social Accounts
The following websites and accounts are pure fishing traps. They use scraped images, possess zero physical inventory, and will simply steal your money without shipping anything:
- The "Winnie" Network:
- Websites:
ebaags.co/ebbaag.com/ebbaag.co - Support Emails:
[email protected]/[email protected] - Associated Aliases: Winnie Jim (Also operates
E8BAG.COM/CHANELPURSES.RU/CHEAPHANDBAGSUK.RUvia[email protected]) - The Trap: Uses variations of "ebag" for domain phishing and fake big-brand clearance sales. They never ship items because they have zero inventory and rely entirely on stolen photos. Many victims report identity theft and subsequent credit card phishing attempts.
- Websites:
- AAA Phishing Sites:
- Websites:
aaashirts.ru/aaashirt.ru - The Trap: Buyers report a complete blackout of communication immediately after sending money. A straightforward cash-grab operation.
- Websites:
- atelera.co
- Reader Story: "I was baited by their gorgeous website and fast pre-sales chat. I dropped $2,000 on a haul, but the dream shattered when the box arrived: inside were two low-tier bags in completely wrong models. They cold-bloodedly denied a refund and now they’ve completely ghosted me on my remaining 3 orders."
- The Hook: They flood Facebook with ads using stolen studio photos from authentic luxury consignment sites to lure you with a tempting $200+ price tag. Since they are advertising rare, old authentic models, they don't even have the replica batches in stock—they will just ship you whatever cheap trash they find to cover their $100 ad costs. Wake up, babes.
- The PurseValley Syndicate:
- Websites:
pursevalley.ru/pursevalleyvip.cn(Associated with Perfect Watches, Spotbags) - Operator: Eva Knox (AKA Sophia Nolan)
- The Trap: Infamous in the replica industry. The operator, Eva, runs a fake review blog called Spotbags to shill and direct traffic to her own scam site, PurseValley. They never send PSPs, overcharge drastically, lie about quality, and have even been caught stealing saved credit card data. Though raided and seized in a joint operation previously, the current clone sites popping up under the same name remain highly dangerous.
- Websites:
- Instagram Accounts to Block (Sourced from Community Reports):
vintage_mood87premium_bus_istanbulbstdesignergguw83sunshie707_jewelryNuyyu8827d- Note: Other platforms like BEAUBAGSLOVE, aaapurse.ru, Copycat France, and Babareplica have been fully verified as low-tier dropshipping traps or total scams. Avoid at all costs.
🛍️ Shopping Red Flags to Keep in Mind
- The price is suspiciously low.
- A complete lack of legitimate, accessible contact information.
- No clear return or refund policy.
- Abysmal, generic, or missing product descriptions.
- Poorly designed, sketchy, or severely outdated website interfaces.
🚨 What Should You Do If You Get Scammed?
Even if you find yourself in this situation, there is still hope if:
- The product quality is far below what was agreed upon.
- You received completely the wrong item.
- The product failed to arrive within a reasonable timeframe.
First step: Always try to communicate calmly with the seller to figure out what happened, and attempt to negotiate a partial refund if possible.
Real Talk: If a seller has completely stopped responding or blocked you, realistically speaking, it is very difficult to get your money back. However, I highly encourage you to email me directly with screenshots and details of which website or seller ripped you off, whether it was for handbags, shoes, or watches. I will verify the evidence and update this blacklist regularly. Every single report you submit helps keep our community safe and forces these scammers out of business!