11.05.2010 - 16:34
UGLY Feral Nigger Sheboon Swindles dumb old Nigger Buck of life saving
KSDK -- She's accused of impersonating a government worker and
swindling an 82-year-old buck out of his life savings. Now a St. Louis
woman is facing criminal charges.
John Henry Dobey said the suspect, sheboon Earnestine Stone, was a
family acquaintance, so he thought he could trust her. He was wrong.
Dobey had hoped to leave his Norf St. Louis home behind, in favor of
senior living at the Renaissance Place off Grand. He thought he was
filling out paperwork and paying money to make that dream a reality.
"I just wanted to be over there because all of it seems nice," he
said.
Dobey thought the money was going for rent, insurance, lawyers and
moving costs. In total, he paid out $80,000 in cash -- his entire life
savings. He handed it all over Stone, thinking the nigger was working
with the St. Louis housing authority. She wasn't.
Dobey said he actually spoke to someone on the phone who told him to
give Stone the money.
"I talked to a supposed-to-be case worker, and they would tell me to
give the money to Earnestine. And they'd come by and pick it up," he
said.
None of it was true. It went on like this for 18-months, until a
nigger friend, William Smith, got suspicious.
"I said let's go check this out. You're giving these people too much
money, and then it's cash," Smith said. "I said, 'Do you have any
receipts?' He said, 'No, they don't give me receipts.'"
But it wasn't until they showed up at the Renaissance Place offices
and started asking questions that their suspicions were confirmed.
Employees there had no record of Dobey in their system. And they said
Earnestine Stone never worked with the housing authority or the
Renaissance property.
St. Louis Police promptly began to investigate, charging Stone with
theft and false impersonation. They believe there may be other
victims.
"This is one of the dirtiest scams that I've seen in a long time,"
Smith said. "And it's being ran on elderly people and lord knows how
many other people she has run this on."
For Dobey, a move is farther off than ever. He's just trying to make
ends meet. But he hopes others will learn from what's happened.
"Check yourself. Be careful," he said.
A check of Stone's record shows a prior arrest for theft and for
impersonating a law enforcement officer. She is being held on $75,000
cash-only bond.
