This is another case of what is called “double courtyard scam”
February 5, 2025 at 14:59
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- A man of Georgia called Travis Payne shared the story of its Rolls-Royce Cullinan volley.
- The SUV was recovered from the dealer by crooks who have changed the delivery address.
- The buyer says his Rolls-Royce is now motivated by a famous singer in Mexico.
The delivery service of an exotic car should be a unique experience, a unique experience, filled with anticipation, excitement and perhaps some party photos for social media. But for a man of Georgia, this dream quickly turned into a nightmare when his Rolls-Royce Cullinan was stolen before she went to her alley.
Travis Payne, director general of an exotic car dealer, bought a Rolls-Royce Cullinan Noir 2020 from a seller in Arizona last summer and arranged to be shipped to his home in Atlanta. The plan was simple: the transport company would collect the car and delivered it in a few days. But when the car has never arrived, Payne discovered that the transport company had not even relied on the hand.
Plus: Joyrider steals $ 400,000 Rolls Royce Cullinan, crashes in drivers Drive-Thru a few minutes later
In an interview with the Youtube Vinwiki channel, Payne explained that he had been the victim of a “double central courtification scam”. Essentially, the crooks have manipulated the details of the delivery, by relaxing the SUV in a different place in Los Angeles. A separate transport company, completely ignorant of fraud, picked up the cullinan of the arizona seller using legitimate documents.
Payne tried to call the associated number with the modified delivery address, but no one answered. A neighboring company told him that they had not seen his Rolls-Royce, but admitted that they had received several calls from owners of exotic cars dealing with strangely similar problems.
After following the transporter transporter, Payne discovered who had taken delivery of his car and managed to obtain a phone number. Hoping to solve the problem without involving the police, he contacted the person, to receive an impassive response: “Nice car, mother $ @.” To make matters worse, the GPS Tracker of the SUV had been deleted, leaving Payne without any means of locating it.
Social media at the rescue
The days passed without sign of Rolls-Royce, a less common specification with a black exterior and white seats with black inserts and red piping. Then, in a bizarre turn of events, a random user of social media spotted what looked like Payne in a Tiktok video. Skeptical but full of hope, Payne compared the Starlight roof model – a unique feature for each Rolls -Royce – and confirmed that the video of the video was indeed his.
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The tracing of the social media post led Payne to a Mexican dealer called Alvarez Exotics, who would have detained the family of the professional boxer Canelo Álvarez. As Payne found it, the Cullinan had been wrapped in white and equipped with different alloy wheels, although the personalized interior remained intact.
A high -level buyer and a legal brick wall
At first, concessionaire employees seemed cooperative. But when Payne asked for a diagnostic analysis of the SUV, their attitude has changed and they suddenly became useless. Shortly after, the Rolls-Royce was sold to the Mexican singer Luis Conriquez, who then published photos of the interior of his Instagram profile.
According to Payne, the singer published selfies with the professional boxer and his brother who owns the dealer. In a final effort to resolve the case before becoming a public, Payne contacted her lawyer who refused to cooperate due to the lack of evidence.
After the story has become viral, the current owner of the SUV was bombed with comments on his Instagram page, accusing him of flashing a stolen vehicle. The Mexican singer has not yet displayed an official declaration, leaving little time if he was aware of the car’s disorder past before buying it.
Meanwhile, months after the initial purchase, Payne is always without the cullinan for which he paid, another recall that in the world of high -end car sales, all fairytale contents do not end in a Happy delivery of the aisle.