She Exposed Her Cousin For Trying To Scam $5,000 Out Of People Online By Using Her Pregnancy To Gain Sympathy

This woman has a 21-year-old cousin named Amanda, and back in September, Amanda met her 19-year-old baby daddy Cody.
Amanda only knew Cody for two days before moving in with him. They had their own apartment for three months but didn’t pay the rent for the majority of their time there.
“During these months, Amanda was also living off of the money family and family friends would loan her with the promise of paying it back,” she explained.
“Instead of paying them back, she prioritized getting her nails done, going to the salon, and buying other non-essentials (she also used the money that was loaned to her to buy these things instead of food, gas, or other essentials that she claimed she needed to buy.)”
Amanda and Cody were told they were getting evicted from their apartment unless they paid the money they owed to their landlord.
The young couple then learned that Amanda was pregnant, so they left their apartment and belongings behind and moved in with Cody’s family.
Well, Amanda and Cody didn’t live in the house; they lived in a camper outside, and Amanda wasn’t permitted inside unless someone was home and there with her.
Amanda still failed to get a job and waited for Cody to come home from work to do all of the chores around the camper.
Back in May, Amanda and Cody moved in with Amanda’s parents and said they would be working on getting their lives together.

Krakenimages.com – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only, not the actual person
Her entire family believed that Amanda and Cody would make it happen, but it never came to fruition.
Amanda and Cody have hopped between different jobs since May and have held four jobs each for less than a week.
They also spent a bit of time as delivery drivers, using a car that was uninspected, uninsured, and unregistered.
Earlier this month, Amanda and Cody got into an accident, but they were ok. Amanda did go to the hospital, but she only had a few bruises, and her unborn baby was fine.
Post accident, Amanda got a rental car to drive around in, but she chose to stop working. Amanda and Cody’s friends and family started helping them financially.
“Recently, I discovered Amanda had created a GoFundMe page, claiming to be a “starving” mother-to-be needing help with medical bills,” she said.
“This was far from the truth. Amanda receives state assistance and is on her father’s insurance, which fully covers her medical expenses (she has only been to the hospital that one time and did not go to a follow-up appointment; she has not obtained any medical expenses aside from a copay that her mother paid).”
“I couldn’t let her scam $5,000 from well-meaning people, so I shared her story across Snapchat, Facebook, and TikTok, echoing a post her aunt, Mandy (49F), had already made. To add to this, a local food bank once dropped off food for her, but Amanda didn’t even want or use it all because she was hoping for cash instead. This further convinced me that she was exploiting people’s goodwill.”
After she exposed Amanda on social media for being a scam artist, Amanda’s grandma and mom have been calling her nonstop and saying she needs to say sorry to Amanda.
They are also imploring her to publicly apologize on her social media posts since they think Amanda is ready to take responsibility for her actions. She doesn’t see how she owes Amanda an apology, but she’s still left wondering if it was wrong of her to share on social media what Amanda’s really up to. What do you think?
You can read the original post on Reddit here.
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