Peruvian 'Tinder scammer' and her 'modus operandi' to bring down her victims

The woman talked to her accomplice to find out what steps she should take to dope her victims.

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The chats of Peruvian 'The Tinder Scammer'. Video: Sunday a day.

Alexandra Dayanara Oré Morales (28), known as 'The Black Widow' or 'The Tinder Scammer', is in prison after being accused of to dope domestic and foreign businessmen to steal large sums of money and jewelry from them.

The thief used the app to flirt and convince her victims to meet each other while planning each hit with her partner, César Enrique Villa Torrecello. He was the brains: he managed social media profiles and uploaded suggestive photos and videos, and he was the one who kept his agenda to point out the unsuspecting.

“He made appointments in hotels, restaurants or in the buildings of his victims who were financially sound and could be widowed or separated, people who were not too dangerous or resistant to being able to contact them and have meetings in the departments (of the victims),” said the commander of the Peruvian National Police José Tellez, head of Dirincri Surco, to the program Domingo al Día.

The couple of the Peruvian 'Tinder scammer', through Whatsapp messages, directed her at what point to supply the sleeping pill.

“Change. Remember the time. There's traffic. Look nice and change”, read in the conversation that Oré Morales had with Villa Torrecello. She asked him how she should be dressed and he guided her little by little. After finishing switching, the woman wrote back to her accomplice to start contacting users on the dating app.

Already at the victim's house, the scammer said that they are drinking wine and that the person with whom she was keeping an appointment was shorter than her. “We're drinking wine and I'm going to tell him to buy more. He's flatter than me,” he writes.

“He doesn't have a watch, but he does have his jewels on. His apartment is a little empty because he has come back to live here,” he says. Villa Torrecello asks him to buy a little more than three wines “to ensure, that's it”.

“We have had half a wine and now he has opened a red wine, he just doesn't know how to order. The good thing is that there is not much to look for,” replied the thief.

“By the time I gasp (sleep) you will know everything there is. Plates watches, laptops, perfumes and their jewelry. Maybe he has a few more jewels in his jewelry box,” replied his accomplice.

THE COORDINATIONS

After an hour of this appointment, the conversations resumed on Whatsapp. There Villa Torrecello asked him to hurry to dope his victim so that they can proceed to steal everything in the house. He even rebuked him why he was online if they had to follow a plan. Peruvian 'Tinder scammer' replied that the victim had not yet fallen, but that he was a little drunk.

“He thinks I'm going to stay. Should I wear my pajamas to make him feel confident?” asked the woman.

However, her partner pressured her not to eat and to make sure she takes all the sleeping pills “to deprive herself, remember that she has to spend 20 or 30 (minutes) before she falls asleep,” she commented in the conversation.

CAPTURE

Commander José Tellez said that some victims fell asleep and others did not, however, on one occasion one of these people quickly noticed and asked the condominium guard to call the police, who arrived and was captured by the Monterrico police station.

When she was discovered, Oré Morales sent audios to her accomplice, although it is unknown what she said to her because she deleted them, and then reproached her for feeling cornered by the authorities: “Disappear, don't come back to my life, get out. I was very noble to you. They won't let me go. They already took my record.”

According to police reports, exposed by Domingo a day, Peruvian 'Tinder scammer' is involved in three other cases: she stole items and material goods for amounts over 40,000 dollars.

“There are conversations where they rise in tone and intimate photographs are shown. And the injured person, unintentionally, shows part of the environment where he lives. The recommendation is that, as much as possible, they try not to show their goods and objects on social networks because they are hacked by criminal gangs that are going to end up extorting money, Tellez said.

In Oré Morales there are several crimes such as aggravated theft, in the form of 'pepeo and illicit drug trafficking, so she can be sentenced to about 15 years in prison while Villa Torrecello is being searched by the authorities; she was already in jail for a robbery of a jewelry store in Surquillo.

“Avoid going to these social networks to try and find the woman of your life. It is best not to take them to their apartments because it is the privacy of their home and it is feasible that they can be robbed”, concluded the head of the Dirincri Surco.

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