Texas Couple Accused of ‘Scamming Tens of Millions From African American Community’
An celebrity D.J. who uses the name D.J. ASAP, aka Marlon Moore, and his wife LaShonda have been accused of ripping off tens of millions of dollars from people through an illegal pyramid scheme. The couple is now being sued. For over a year the couple who has been featured on a reality show Family or Fiancé, has been operating a pyramid scheme targeting Black people in Prosper, Texas, NBC Dallas reported.
The couple created a company called BINT Operations L.L.C. BINT stands for “Blessings In No Time.”
Earlier this week, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the Moore’s, saying BINT is an “illegal pyramid scheme … [and the Moores had used it] to scam tens of millions of dollars from members of the African American community throughout the nation.”
One of the people who was allegedly scammed by the couple is Rosetta Fleming, a retired teacher in Mississippi who was referred to the company by a relative after hearing the Moore’s promises.
“They promised that they would give you a refund if you were not satisfied,” Fleming said. “They wanted to say it’s for Blacks, they wanted to say it’s to build the Black community is what they wanted to say,” she added.
The BINT network charges an initial fee of about $1,400 and every member that Fleming recruited, most of whom are members of the Black community, were supposed to get more than $11,000 in compensation.
“…I kept thinking to myself, ‘Oh, I need $11,400. I can get out of debt’,” Fleming said.
According to another lawsuit filed on Wednesday by the Federal Trade Commission and the Arkansas Attorney General, members formed a board.
When Fleming and her husband spent about $7,000 and were never paid and never advanced, they requested a full refund. BINT they would give them a refund. However, seven months later, they’re still waiting.
“I was so mad at them that they did all of this and they got this and they took our money,” Fleming said.
In the program’s Zoom calls, Fleming says she frequently attended, members in December wanted their refunds.
“Guys, we are working all refunds, we had an active refund list and before that refund list got too long we wanted to go ahead and say hey, ‘Lets go ahead and shut it down’,” Marlon said.
LaShonda said she and her husband have received death threats.
“Since January 2021, the State has received nearly 200 consumer complaints against Defendants alleging over $700,000 in losses of monies contributed to Defendants but never refunded,” According to the Texas AG’s lawsuit,
“The Moore’s SCAMMED, CONNED, HOODWINKED over 8,000 Black and Brown people during a pandemic,” one alleged victim wrote in the lawsuit.