In the age of the Super PAC, read the fine print before you donate money to a political candidate. Take, for example, this innocuous-looking screenshot from a page offering donors the chance to have dinner with Donald Trump. How could you possibly guess that the organization behind the page has nothing to do with the candidate—and will certainly not land you dinner with him?
Politico first reported on the page, which "is a scheme run by Ian Hawes, a 25-year-old Maryland man who has no affiliation with Trump or his campaign and who has preyed on more than 20,000 unsuspecting donors, collecting more than $1 million in the process." The fine print of the page—which 21,000 donors likely didn't read—makes it clear that the winning trip is not for an actual dinner with Trump, but for a trip to attend a "Donald Trump fundraising event with other attendees."
Hawes accomplished the scheme with a bit of online manipulation. He formed a PAC, and over the course of a few weeks, spent over $108,000 on Facebook ads to advertise a dinner with Trump. It brought in around $350,000 in donations. $133,000 of the money raised went to a company Hawes owns called CarSoft LLC. Hawes has also set up a site crookedhillary2016.org that looks intended to confuse people with Trump's official LyingCrookedHillary.com site...
Fittingly, Trump's lack of a digital operation is cited as part of the reason for Hewes' scamming success: "Hawes took advantage of a vacuum left by a skeletal Trump operation that had failed to activate supporters online and protect its digital turf; Hawes noted he bought Facebook ads and solicited money via email before Trump ever did, and created the dinner contest first."
http://www.aol.com/article/2016/08/...million-by-25-year-old-maryland-man/21461679/
Politico first reported on the page, which "is a scheme run by Ian Hawes, a 25-year-old Maryland man who has no affiliation with Trump or his campaign and who has preyed on more than 20,000 unsuspecting donors, collecting more than $1 million in the process." The fine print of the page—which 21,000 donors likely didn't read—makes it clear that the winning trip is not for an actual dinner with Trump, but for a trip to attend a "Donald Trump fundraising event with other attendees."
Hawes accomplished the scheme with a bit of online manipulation. He formed a PAC, and over the course of a few weeks, spent over $108,000 on Facebook ads to advertise a dinner with Trump. It brought in around $350,000 in donations. $133,000 of the money raised went to a company Hawes owns called CarSoft LLC. Hawes has also set up a site crookedhillary2016.org that looks intended to confuse people with Trump's official LyingCrookedHillary.com site...
Fittingly, Trump's lack of a digital operation is cited as part of the reason for Hewes' scamming success: "Hawes took advantage of a vacuum left by a skeletal Trump operation that had failed to activate supporters online and protect its digital turf; Hawes noted he bought Facebook ads and solicited money via email before Trump ever did, and created the dinner contest first."
http://www.aol.com/article/2016/08/...million-by-25-year-old-maryland-man/21461679/
