Woman Leaves Rich Husband For Fake Brad Pitt, Believing He Needed Money After Jolie Divorce
A French woman was scammed out of €830,000 (approximately $855,000) by a con artist impersonating Brad Pitt using artificial intelligence (AI).
Anne, a 53-year-old interior decorator, quickly became the laughingstock of the francophone internet when French TV channel TF1 aired a documentary exposing her demise on January 12.
According to the documentary, a scammer used AI-generated media to gain Anne’s trust, ultimately convincing her to divorce her husband and deplete her savings to support the alleged “Brad Pitt.”
- A fake Brad Pitt conned a French woman, Anne, into losing €830,000 (approximately $855,000) using AI trickery.
- Anne divorced her millionaire husband after being deceived into supporting the scammer's fake medical needs.
- French TV channel TF1's documentary on Anne's scam led to severe online harassment, prompting the network to remove the show.
Amid widespread online harassment, Anne is now reportedly hospitalized for severe depression following three attempts to take her own life.
TF1 has consequently apologized and removed the documentary from its online platform.
A French woman was scammed out of €830,000 (approximately $855,000) by a con artist impersonating Brad Pitt using AI
Image credits: focusminutes
“Since the broadcast, Anne has faced ridicule online, with many mocking her supposed gullibility, a quick and easy judgment given the growing number of sophisticated scams targeting vulnerable people,” the French network wrote on Tuesday (January 14).
“In response to the widespread mockery and the smear campaign she became a target of on social media, we decided, in collaboration with the victim, to remove the replay of the broadcast to halt the phenomenon,” Grégoire Marçais, deputy director of TF1’s production company, added.
Anne has since broken her silence and expressed her anger in an interview with Legend TV on Tuesday.
Image credits: Gilbert Flores/Variety
She criticized TF1‘s Sept à Huit, the name of its documentary series, for misrepresenting her story.
“I’ve never cheated on my husband in my life because I am a kind-hearted woman, not crazy or naive as some claim on social media,” Anne said.
She added: “I just wanted to help someone. I admit I was deceived, and that’s why I spoke out – I am not the only one in this situation.
Anne, a 53-year-old interior decorator, quickly became the laughingstock of francophone internet
Image credits: dailyzap_tv
“Maybe not for this amount, but I was scammed, and now you know who I am, and I stand by that.”
According to the victim, TF1’s intentions were misleading, as she explained: “I have no roof over my head.
“My life now consists of a 6 square meter box with a few boxes inside. This is what I have left.
Image credits: focusminutes
“As for the scammers, I said more than 40 times, maybe more, that I didn’t believe it. I clearly said that photo was fake.
“But in the report, none of that was mentioned. The journalist stayed for two days to interview me, and he only chose what would tarnish my image.
“It was all about getting views.”
French TV channel TF1 aired a documentary exposing her demise on January 12
Image credits: dailyzap_tv
Anne further exclaimed: “I’m a sensible woman. If you had been in my place, you’d have fallen into the trap.
“If someone comes and talks to you kindly, says things you’ve never heard from your own husband, yes, yes, you fall for it.
“That’s how it happened.”
@mvza.8 #brad #pitt #bradpitt #anne #interview #arnaque #tf1 ♬ son original – Mvza.8
Anne was hit with a wave of ridicule on social media after she fell victim to a scam orchestrated by someone posing as Brad Pitt.
The bizarre tale began in February 2023 when Anne, new to Instagram, created an account, initially to share vacation photos of skiing trips with her husband and daughter, Madame Figaro reported on Tuesday.
Soon, Anne was reportedly approached on social media by a woman claiming to be the Hollywood star’s mother.
According to the documentary, a scammer used AI-generated media to gain Anne’s trust
Image credits: osint_random/TF1
“Brad Pitt” subsequently contacted Anne, which left her skeptical at first. Nevertheless, Anne eventually fell for the honey trap.
Over the course of a year, Anne was swayed by AI-generated photos and videos of Brad and became convinced that she was in a long-distance romantic relationship with him despite never meeting him.
“I had someone who showed interest in me and my work when my own husband didn’t care,” Anne recalled in the documentary.
@samyximillion après le montage est bien fait #bradpitt #arnaque #fyp #anne ♬ Risa Loca – la nutela
She added: “I loved the man I was talking to. He knew how to speak to women. These are photos he made for me.”
She continued: “He sent me pictures, and when I searched for them, I couldn’t find them anywhere.
“So I thought: these must be photos he made just for me.”
He ultimately convinced Anne to divorce her husband and deplete her savings to support the alleged “Brad Pitt”
Image credits: osint_random/TF1
At one point, the grifter escalated the deception by proposing to Anne, which led her to divorce her then-husband, a millionaire, and receive a €775,000 (approximately $798,500) settlement.
Anne subsequently gave her entire settlement fortune to the fake Brad Pitt, who at the time claimed to have kidney cancer.
The fraudster explained that he needed money for surgery, as his accounts were supposedly frozen due to a divorce from Angelina Jolie.
Image credits: LEGEND
“It was hard for me to do, but I thought I might be saving a man’s life,” Anne recounted in the documentary. In total, she transferred a whopping €830,000 to the scammer.
A French hacker has since announced that he successfully tracked down Anne’s swindler and claimed he was optimistic about recovering the money she lost.
“In Anne’s case, we traced these scammers to Benin,” Marwan, the hacker, explained on Legend TV.
Anne was hit with a wave of ridicule on social media after she fell victim to the scam
@thatzoejames Fake Brad Pitt had Anne spending almost a million in medical bills. #bradpitt #anne #haitiantiktok ♬ original sound – James 🇭🇹🇭🇹
He further explained: “Romance scams typically originate from Nigeria, Benin, or other parts of Africa, though occasionally from the Philippines.
“The scammer converted everything into cryptocurrency.”
According to Marwan, the scammer initially funneled the money into foreign bank accounts before converting it into cryptocurrency.
Image credits: osint_random/TF1
The hacker revealed: “We tracked the funds and identified the wallet address currently holding the money.
“We even discovered the scammer’s house, name, and other significant details.”
He continued: “We gained complete access to the scammer’s device by sending a phishing link, which he clicked.
“This gave us full control of his phone.”
Amid widespread online harassment, TF1 apologized and removed the documentary
Image credits: NetflixFR
In a surprising turn of events, Marwan uncovered that Anne’s scammer had also been impersonating another well-known celebrity.
He said: “In addition to posing as Brad Pitt, this individual was also pretending to be Keanu Reeves, the actor from John Wick.
“It was too much, so we reported him to local authorities. As of now, everything is in motion, and I expect he’ll be arrested in the coming days.
“We are hopeful Anne will recover her €830,000.”
Image credits: osint_random/TF1
According to the hacker, Anne wasn’t the scammer’s only victim, as he said: “We identified around 30 victims, including those targeted by the Keanu Reeves persona.
“This individual has been exploiting the identities of Brad Pitt and Keanu Reeves, deceiving at least 30 people.”
He added: “As of today, Anne is confirmed to be the most significant victim of celebrity identity fraud scams worldwide.”
A French hacker has since announced that he successfully tracked down Anne’s swindler
Image credits: LEGEND
Similarly to Anne’s ordeal with the Brad Pitt scam, Katherine Goodson, a 67-year-old widow from San Diego, California, fell victim to a romance scam involving a fraudster impersonating Keanu Reeves, losing over $60,000 and ending up homeless.
The Keanu Reeves scammer groomed her for over two years, exploiting her loneliness and vulnerability.
Experts warned that such scams prey on emotions through tactics like love-bombing, urging for stronger education and community support to protect potential victims.
“It’s terrible how scammers prey on people’s kindness and trust,” a reader commented
One can only sigh. Famous people aren't interested in you. As soon as someone you haven't met asks for money, end it there and then, however heartless it seems.
"TF1 has consequently apologized and removed the documentary from its online platform." - they had the decency to realize they're further destroying her life, but Bored Panda has decided to share the story with pictures of her and screenshots from the documentary. Shame on you, Andréa Oldereide!!
I've now seen it on FB twice now as well. Nobody got past the headline apparently when I pointed this out.
Load More Replies...I’d suggest it’s not so much stupidity as a desperate need to be loved. It’s stupid, yes, but surely that’s not a reason to not feel sorry for them. They were scammed, ridiculed online, alongside mental health issues. I do feel sorry for her. It’s easy to just call it stupid and mock them, but no one deserves this kind of treatment.
Load More Replies...I get that scams with sob stories can trap people. I worked for an online forum for many years and I could tell you some stories. But posing as a celebrity???? I don't care how sophisticated AI is, did she really think "yup, Brad Pitt was surfing and found me on social media and fell in love, sounds legit". Sorry, no. And if you are sceptical, just block. There is no obligation to talk to people.
Anne further exclaimed: “I’m a sensible woman. If you had been in my place, you’d have fallen into the trap. LOL, no I wouldn't have! And no, you're not sensible. Those pictures are so obviously fake.
I hate it when people claim that "it can happen to everybody". No, it can't. Luckily many are not that naive and gullible.
Load More Replies...I know there are scammers who are great at what they do regarding manipulation, convincing and choosing the right target but I still can't get my head round how people can honestly believe they're in a relationship with these ultra famous celebrities. At the very least, where do they get the confidence to think that the celeb wants little old you from the middle of nowhere, off the internet. She also mentions that she "just wanted to help someone", would she have sent the money if it was regular, non-famous, Chris Farley looking dude? I doubt it.
Nobody deserves being harassed or scammed, but anybody who falls for this kind of scam should never be allowed to leave the house unsupervised again. This lady is not an illiterate peasant living isolated in a tiny village. She has money and the means to find all the help she wanted, either a therapist, a private detective or a lawyer. Don't people use their brain every now and then?
I have a feeling it was all her husband's money. Can't imagine someone like her being able to save up €830k
Load More Replies...A few years ago, I put a Christmas present in my sister's mailbox for her. She left it there thinking it was the anthrax poisoner targeting Her. That she was so special, the person was going after Her. It's called the Main Character syndrome. I had to tell her she wasn't that special. We don't talk anymore, LOL
Load More Replies...I'd imagine with International online scams like these it would be difficult to seek justice.
Look, there are sophisticated scams - we were discussing this literally this morning in my office - and then there are people who think a multi millionaire celeb needs money...
Those pictures are so bad. Brad Pitt is rich. Brad Pitt doesn’t even know she’s alive
As the global rise in propaganda and misinformation show, people have little defense against manipulation via electronic media and AI. Just look at all the insane things folks have believed in the past few years. She only lost money. The US lost its republic
Those pics are so obviously fake. I worked as a paralegal for years and we had a couple clients lose a lot of money. One in a fake lottery win and the other a fake romance. They were both shocked to learn that there was no way we could get their money back.
Sad that this happens, but good grief, a 5yr old could spot all the photo's being photoshopped/fake, not one looks remotely genuine, and the photo 'during brads surgery' is unbelievably laughable. This isn't just loneliness we could empathize with, this is desperate stupidity.
Famous people are just like anyone else and they can fall in love with normal people (us). We just don't move in their circles and meeting hem is a very rare opportunity. What is not normal, is when famous, rich people ask for money to normal people. That's when we need to raise our red flags and make sure that we are not being scammed- AI is a real danger because it can reproduce voices, pictures, texts and documents that are so real that's difficult to distinguish the fake from the real. Anyone, despite their computer literacy and age, can fall for the scam. Let's not judge. Anyone can be a victim or a target to these unscrupulous people.
Famous people are like any other person and they can fall in love for normal people. We just don't move in their circles. What is not normal is famous, rich, people asking us, the normal people for money.
I was contacted by "famous people" on Instagram, and it was pretty obvious to me that none of them would ever contact me and that's all fake. There is also type of scamming mostly on Facebook where you get invite from quite attractive person, with fairly new profile and usually they are stationed somewhere outside of USA, as soldiers, medical staff, engineers etc. If you accept their friend request they will contact you and be quite nice and seem interested in you. Then they will ask you to invest into something. Instant block. They are easy to recognize, mostly new profiles, 3-5 photos, good looking, almost no information, generic names that are like too common to google... Just ignore them, all scammers.
One can only sigh. Famous people aren't interested in you. As soon as someone you haven't met asks for money, end it there and then, however heartless it seems.
"TF1 has consequently apologized and removed the documentary from its online platform." - they had the decency to realize they're further destroying her life, but Bored Panda has decided to share the story with pictures of her and screenshots from the documentary. Shame on you, Andréa Oldereide!!
I've now seen it on FB twice now as well. Nobody got past the headline apparently when I pointed this out.
Load More Replies...I’d suggest it’s not so much stupidity as a desperate need to be loved. It’s stupid, yes, but surely that’s not a reason to not feel sorry for them. They were scammed, ridiculed online, alongside mental health issues. I do feel sorry for her. It’s easy to just call it stupid and mock them, but no one deserves this kind of treatment.
Load More Replies...I get that scams with sob stories can trap people. I worked for an online forum for many years and I could tell you some stories. But posing as a celebrity???? I don't care how sophisticated AI is, did she really think "yup, Brad Pitt was surfing and found me on social media and fell in love, sounds legit". Sorry, no. And if you are sceptical, just block. There is no obligation to talk to people.
Anne further exclaimed: “I’m a sensible woman. If you had been in my place, you’d have fallen into the trap. LOL, no I wouldn't have! And no, you're not sensible. Those pictures are so obviously fake.
I hate it when people claim that "it can happen to everybody". No, it can't. Luckily many are not that naive and gullible.
Load More Replies...I know there are scammers who are great at what they do regarding manipulation, convincing and choosing the right target but I still can't get my head round how people can honestly believe they're in a relationship with these ultra famous celebrities. At the very least, where do they get the confidence to think that the celeb wants little old you from the middle of nowhere, off the internet. She also mentions that she "just wanted to help someone", would she have sent the money if it was regular, non-famous, Chris Farley looking dude? I doubt it.
Nobody deserves being harassed or scammed, but anybody who falls for this kind of scam should never be allowed to leave the house unsupervised again. This lady is not an illiterate peasant living isolated in a tiny village. She has money and the means to find all the help she wanted, either a therapist, a private detective or a lawyer. Don't people use their brain every now and then?
I have a feeling it was all her husband's money. Can't imagine someone like her being able to save up €830k
Load More Replies...A few years ago, I put a Christmas present in my sister's mailbox for her. She left it there thinking it was the anthrax poisoner targeting Her. That she was so special, the person was going after Her. It's called the Main Character syndrome. I had to tell her she wasn't that special. We don't talk anymore, LOL
Load More Replies...I'd imagine with International online scams like these it would be difficult to seek justice.
Look, there are sophisticated scams - we were discussing this literally this morning in my office - and then there are people who think a multi millionaire celeb needs money...
Those pictures are so bad. Brad Pitt is rich. Brad Pitt doesn’t even know she’s alive
As the global rise in propaganda and misinformation show, people have little defense against manipulation via electronic media and AI. Just look at all the insane things folks have believed in the past few years. She only lost money. The US lost its republic
Those pics are so obviously fake. I worked as a paralegal for years and we had a couple clients lose a lot of money. One in a fake lottery win and the other a fake romance. They were both shocked to learn that there was no way we could get their money back.
Sad that this happens, but good grief, a 5yr old could spot all the photo's being photoshopped/fake, not one looks remotely genuine, and the photo 'during brads surgery' is unbelievably laughable. This isn't just loneliness we could empathize with, this is desperate stupidity.
Famous people are just like anyone else and they can fall in love with normal people (us). We just don't move in their circles and meeting hem is a very rare opportunity. What is not normal, is when famous, rich people ask for money to normal people. That's when we need to raise our red flags and make sure that we are not being scammed- AI is a real danger because it can reproduce voices, pictures, texts and documents that are so real that's difficult to distinguish the fake from the real. Anyone, despite their computer literacy and age, can fall for the scam. Let's not judge. Anyone can be a victim or a target to these unscrupulous people.
Famous people are like any other person and they can fall in love for normal people. We just don't move in their circles. What is not normal is famous, rich, people asking us, the normal people for money.
I was contacted by "famous people" on Instagram, and it was pretty obvious to me that none of them would ever contact me and that's all fake. There is also type of scamming mostly on Facebook where you get invite from quite attractive person, with fairly new profile and usually they are stationed somewhere outside of USA, as soldiers, medical staff, engineers etc. If you accept their friend request they will contact you and be quite nice and seem interested in you. Then they will ask you to invest into something. Instant block. They are easy to recognize, mostly new profiles, 3-5 photos, good looking, almost no information, generic names that are like too common to google... Just ignore them, all scammers.
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