Culture IGN: A Prominent Accessibility Advocate Worked With Studios and Inspired Change. But She Never Actually Existed. - "And at the end of this investigation, we are of the belief that these three do not exist."

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Source: https://www.ign.com/articles/a-prom...nspired-change-but-she-never-actually-existed
Archive: https://archive.is/Gn58R

A Prominent Accessibility Advocate Worked With Studios and Inspired Change. But She Never Actually Existed.​

In 2019, the games accessibility community mourned the death of Susan Banks. Now, evidence suggests she may have never existed to begin with.​

Posted Aug. 23, 2024, 6:59 p.m.

[Disclosure: The author of this piece was an editor at Can I Play That from September 2019 through January 2021, and was also the recipient of awards at the Game Accessibility Conference in both 2021, 2022, and 2023.]

On March 4, 2019, the accessibility community mourned a prominent advocate: Susan Banks. Banks’ partner, Coty Craven, announced her passing on social media platforms such as Twitter/X. The industry lamented the loss of an individual that helped raise awareness for accessibility in games, particularly for Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals.

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Banks’ death marked a significant loss for the video game accessibility community. She regularly interacted with developers from studios like Ubisoft and The Coalition, pushing for better options and designs. She helped to revolutionize games journalism through the creation of Can I Play That, a site dedicated to the coverage of accessibility and the disabled perspective. An award was even named after her posthumously, to be given to disabled individuals in games that uplift their communities and educate others on the importance of accessibility.

However, in the years since Banks’ alleged death, mounting evidence and accounts from those close to her work suggest that she was not the person she claimed to be. In fact, some are convinced that Banks may never have existed at all.

Embedding In Communities

Banks first appeared in the gaming industry in August 2015. An X/Twitter account called ‘OneOddGamerGirl’ appeared to share the perspective of a “Deaf, Muslim, queer, disabled, gamer nerd” through accessibility reviews and interactions with varying studios and advocates. These posts regularly explored topics like Deaf and hard-of-hearing accessibility in games, living with mental health-related disabilities like schizophrenia, racism, and being in a queer relationship.

Prior to Banks’ introduction to the gaming industry, she allegedly escaped oppression and emigrated from Turkey with her sister and established herself in Chicago, building a life around her interests and disabilities, according to a former business associate of Craven's. Her various jobs are said to have included being a professional model, an asset manager at a financial firm, and a professor of Deaf Studies at Gallaudet University, the leading university for Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals in the United States, all before the age of 30. IGN reached out to Gallaudet University’s Deaf Studies program for comment, and they replied stating that nobody by the name of Susan Banks was ever employed at the University.

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In addition to the posts on X/Twitter, a now defunct site purported to belong to Banks included accessibility reviews that were featured in profile and community pieces across multiple publications. These posts, which argued for more inclusive design and accessible features, soon attracted the attention of developers like Ubisoft and The Coalition. These articles, interviews, and social media posts became a fixture within the then-relatively small accessibility community.

It’s during this time that founder and executive director of AbleGamers Mark Barlet notes that Banks’ advocacy, particularly on social media, made them cross paths. “Susan came on our radar in 2017. We were introduced to her on Twitter. We have some hashtags that we always follow, and her work started popping up.”

According to an AbleGamers employee, Banks would regularly reply to conversations posted by individual members of the charity, as well as the main organization account. At the time, the accessibility community was intimately aware of those within it due to the select number of consultants and representatives. And as awareness grew along with the accessibility community, Banks became a prominent advocate within the space.

Coty Craven and Susan Banks

Banks was never alone with her work. While in Chicago she allegedly met Coty Craven, who she originally hired to walk her dog, according to private messages between myself and Craven. Shortly after their introduction, Craven announced to friends and family on social media that the two had entered a romantic relationship.

Within months of Craven’s introduction of Banks, Craven claimed Banks had been hospitalized after dropping a KitchenAid mixer on her foot, according to both an anonymous former business associate of Craven's I spoke to, and my own past conversations with Craven. Several hours later, her leg was allegedly amputated, and nearly 48 hours after the first operation, her other leg was amputated as well. The anonymous source mentioned above claims they then contacted West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park, Illinois where Banks was said to be recovering according to the source who saw this information on social media. When they contacted the hospital to send flowers, the hospital said there was no patient by that name. This resulted in the source seeking a third-party opinion due to fears of Craven allegedly misrepresenting himself and taking advantage of clients through sympathy.

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“[Craven’s] work affected me personally, and for me to continue any form of a working relationship with [Craven], I needed to feel comfortable that I was right in my assumption about his storytelling,” they said. “I knew I couldn’t find proof. I had searched for all the ways I knew to look for the existence of a woman named Susan Banks and her sister, Tubi Hamid, and couldn’t find anything. To secure my business and make sure my interactions were aboveboard, I wanted to bring in a professional to tell me whether I was right in my hunch.”

According to the source, Craven allegedly received gifts and consistent praise and attention every time he would post about Bank's ailments or recoveries. In order to prevent any legal ramifications, particularly if Craven was misleading clients, the source hired a private investigator, a retired Chicago police officer, who previously worked with an associate of the source. The goal of the investigation was to find concrete proof of Banks’ existence. Several days later, the investigator returned with no information. No immigration record, address, employment record, marriage license, or birth certificate was found. Banks, according to the investigator, was not a real person. IGN received the receipt of the investigation and can confirm the source was billed for these services.


Years after this event, Banks and Craven entered the gaming space with relative success. Banks’ advocacy became the subject of numerous stories. From stories in Digital Trends, to a spotlight posted by AbleGamers, all interviews with Banks were conducted the same way – through email or private messages on X/Twitter or facilitated by Craven. According to AbleGamers Senior Director of Development, Steven Spohn, most interactions with Banks were on X/Twitter, except when sending her interview questions for the spotlight piece through email or emails connecting her with others in the industry.

“I never spoke to either [Banks or Craven],” Spohn said. “It did not seem odd at the time because I have many Deaf friends who also like to avoid Zoom calls if possible because texting is easier. And because other people were interacting with them, I assumed they were real. There are many people I have met on Twitter that I have never met anywhere else.”

Spohn sent IGN several emails of his interactions with Banks, with one of them including her stating “I’m available via email or Twitter DM, whichever you prefer.” These behaviors are identical to her interactions with everyone else we spoke to or observed. Communicating over text or emails is common for Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals. Platforms like Discord don't offer captions, and many services' captions can be difficult to read based on aspects like accents, Internet connections, and even microphone levels. It's not suspicious for somebody with alleged disabilities like Banks’ to request these accommodations. However, throughout all conversations, reactions, interviews, or posts, no one had ever seen or heard Banks by herself outside of her social media profile or with Craven. IGN also reached out to the author of the Digital Trends story, and he confirmed that he had conducted the interview through email, explaining that Banks stated it was the easiest form of communication.

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In 2019, Craven announced that Banks had died, shocking the accessibility community. In a private conversation between myself and Craven before I began reporting on this story, Craven claimed that Banks died while playing games from a stroke. In another private text conversation with a different individual viewed by IGN, Craven claimed she died while streaming, and that at least one other person had a clip of her death. But IGN could not find evidence of any streams or video footage containing Banks. One day after her death, Craven acknowledged her passing by mentioning the dozens of notifications Banks' account was receiving. No obituary was uncovered for a person fitting the description of Susan Banks in Oak Park, Illinois.

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From a memorial post created by AbleGamers, to a dedication of her work at the Game Accessibility Conference, the industry mourned the loss of a member of an already intimate community. And with the precarious nature and health predicaments of disabled individuals, seemingly losing someone to a sudden cause like a stroke caused immense feelings of grief, especially for an individual as impactful as Banks. Even years after her death, the industry continued to mourn her loss and celebrate her work and impact, something Craven frequently and publicly acknowledged for years, thus attracting the attention of developers across studios.

Profiting from Alleged Lives

On February 11, 2019, several weeks before Banks’ apparent death, Craven created a GoFundMe for the launch of Can I Play That, a website dedicated to reviewing games and analyzing the industry from an accessibility lens, which was announced on both their social media account and the one allegedly managed by Banks. After Craven announced that Banks had died, organizations like AbleGamers directly shared the GoFundMe campaign, encouraging others to donate in her memory. According to Mark Barlet, the decision to share the campaign link on social media was due to what he believed to be Banks’ work and dedication on behalf of the accessibility community. “If we tweeted this, it’s because we thought we were supporting someone who we genuinely had spent time elevating and supporting the work that they were doing,” Barlet said.

Craven used the sympathy generated by Banks’ death to push himself into the spotlight. For years, he continually posted on social media about her passing, her legacy, and her impact on the industry. These conversations continued through numerous recognition profiles about Craven. He even had the opportunity to publish stories about his experience with grief, especially pertaining to Banks’ death.

In 2021, the Game Accessibility Conference presented an award titled the “Susan Banks Advocacy Award” to an individual who upholds the accessible mission and uplifts disabled voices. In 2022, the International Game Developers Association (IGDA) received an email from an anonymous source questioning whether Banks had ever actually existed.

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“My thoughts were that someone seemed concerned about our community being taken advantage of, and that they wanted to let me know,” remembers IGDA executive director Dr. Jakin Vela. “After processing the conversation, it seemed to me the worst-case scenario was an individual was perhaps progressing accessibility initiatives in conjunction with a pseudonym. I did not see much of a concern there considering how often people receive hate and harassment for advocating for DEI issues in the games industry.”

An IGDA volunteer familiar with the situation explains that when informed of the incident, Craven claimed the questioning was affecting his mental health, and wanted to simply remove Banks’ name from the award. Even when offered legal support, Craven wished to forget the situation. In December 2022, the award honoring Susan Banks became the “Advocacy Award,” and any mention of Banks ceased.

Beyond the Life of Banks

Since Banks’ death, Craven has posted about two similar romantic relationships with fellow games accessibility advocates: Tubi Hamid and Damaris ‘Deb’ Burrell-Vaughan. Both have also had their existence questioned.

Like Banks, Hamid’s first mention was on Craven’s social media pages in 2012. Every story or post of Craven’s would include responses from both Banks and Hamid. And like the anonymous business associate explained about Banks, nobody ever saw Hamid outside of profiles on social media. IGN’s source also notes the same private investigation of Banks failed to uncover any evidence of Hamid’s existence.

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Approximately two years after Banks’s alleged death, Hamid was introduced to the industry through posts on the now deleted @TugBoatHamid X/Twitter account and a Medium page. The archived X posts discussed Hamid’s apparent relationship with Craven, game accessibility, and experiencing the industry through the lens of a person of color.

But Why Tho co-founder Kate Sánchez recalls what it was like to interact with Hamid’s account through private messages with Craven and other conversations (Disclosure: Sánchez contributed to extensive research for this story).

“I had interactions with Tubi quite a bit on Twitter, always around race and disability, as well,” Sánchez said. “I’ve been very vocal about the importance of including non-white people in the disability and accessibility space, and Tubi would often have the same views or echo them. Beyond Twitter, Craven would relay messages between me and Tubi, usually around race and disability.”

In 2021, Can I Play That ran a story with Hamid’s byline, published and edited by Craven, detailing her experience as a deaf person of color in the gaming industry. The story details her connection with Banks, and even advertises Craven’s work and business ventures. That year, her story was nominated for the “Best Journalism” award by the Game Accessibility Conference. Throughout this time, Craven also acted as a judge for the Conference Awards. However, during this period, Hamid suddenly disappeared, deactivating her social media accounts and leaving the industry.

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Craven’s alleged third partner was introduced to the public in 2023, once again on social media platforms like X/Twitter. Unlike Banks and Hamid, Deborah (Deb) Vaughan has no Twitter account of her own, instead updating people through self-published stories on Medium, as well as anecdotes given by Craven. According to private conversations between myself and Craven, Vaughan was allegedly a close family friend of Banks, and the two reconnected after Banks’ death in 2019 before entering a romantic relationship in 2023.

Similar to Banks and Hamid, there are no pictures of Craven and Vaughan together. Instead, Craven posted on X/Twitter screenshots of alleged text conversations between the two. Each post provides a glimpse into their alleged relationship, but without showcasing any physical interactions. The profile picture of Vaughan within these screenshots appears to be a photoshopped stock image from 2015.


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Vaughan was instrumental with the creation of Craven's latest venture, the Game Content Triggers Database, a source that volunteers and developers can use to display potentially triggering themes, scenes, or objects in games. Her presence in the industry is relatively isolated to her Medium page and activity within the Database Discord server. Like the previous two partners, stories about representation were crucial to Vaughan’s work in the industry.

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According to Vaughan’s introductory post within the Discord server, as well as an article published on the Database by Craven, she is a registered therapist specializing in PTSD and trauma. She has “a long background in psychology and mental health,” and is also “Deaf so I know a bit about ableism.” Her posts extensively explore topics like mental health themes in games, racism, the disabled experience as a Deaf person of color, and more recently, experiencing life while receiving intense cancer treatments for stage IIIB colorectal cancer. And much like Banks and Hamid, IGN was unable to find any individual who had seen her in-person or on a video call. IGN was also unable to find a registered therapist by the name of Deborah Vaughan or Damaris Burrell-Vaughan fitting her description in Michigan, Illinois, or her supposed home state of Missouri.

According to Sánchez, Vaughan’s presence in the industry is intrinsically tied to her race:

“I knew specifically that Coty had messaged me asking for non-white people to be involved because per Coty’s words, it was only white people who volunteered their time,” Sánchez said. “I wanted to provide the depth and exploration at least for my identity, which is Latina. I only found out that Coty had a partner named Deb after I joined the Database and tried having conversations about race there. Coty had messaged me that Deb was his new partner and was going to be central in diversifying who was contributing to the Database.”

Craven claims he was in talks to sell the Database to companies like Amazon based on messages between Kate Sánchez and Craven. No further conversations about an acquisition occurred after that message. Amazon declined to comment for this story.

Aside from the Database, Vaughan’s stories on her Medium page openly discuss sensitive topics like the death of a child, intense racial violence, and proper representation in games. One story, Feeling Seen — Finally — in Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, published on October 26, 2023, five days before the creation of her Discord account, extensively acknowledges and praises Miles Morales and his girlfriend, Hailey Cooper. Vaughan recognized their importance as being role models for Black, disabled individuals, namely young children. Her story recounts what is described as her own experience as a disabled, Black woman, noting that Hailey made her fall in love with games. This story attracted the attention of a senior designer at Insomniac Games who worked on the creation of Hailey and wanted to show his appreciation by leaving a comment.

“I'm a Senior Designer here at Insomniac and your article was just shared with myself and others here who worked on Hailey,” he said “Reading your article brought literal tears to my eyes. I'm so glad that you felt seen. When we were creating Hailey, it was always from a perspective of ‘You know what, she needs her shine too! How can we show that she too is a superhero in her own way.’ So just reading through your article just now and knowing that you felt seen is one of the crowning achievements in my career! I hope your kids enjoy the rest of the game and have a great day!”


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Through this story, Medium’s gaming-centered publication Crossplay, created and owned by Sean Berry, invited Vaughan to become a writer. According to a comment left by the owner of the site, he immensely enjoyed her story and wanted her to become a frequent contributor. He also notes that one of Craven’s stories was also featured on his site. Approximately one month later, he received a reply stating “I would love to have it included in your publication and I really appreciate you taking the time to read it!”

Shortly after, Vaughan was listed as a writer for Crossplay, but only for her Spider-Man 2 piece.

Despite not having a social media account like Craven's previous partners, Vaughan's alleged life and family drew the attention of thousands through Craven's personal social media account. On May 13, 2023, Craven published a post on X/Twitter about a 96-year-old woman named Bess, who he claimed was Vaughan’s mother. Roughly one month later, Craven updated his social media to explain to others that Bess fell in love with gaming, especially The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, sharing a screenshot from a supposed conversation between the two detailing the elderly woman’s fascination with playing the game. The post received approximately 596,000 views, 12,000 likes, roughly 3000 reposts, and 23 comments. Several hours later, Craven shared an essay published on Crossplay about playing Breath of the Wild with Bess.

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Months after the original post, on February 15, 2024, Craven announced that Bess had passed away in her sleep at the age of 97. That same post also advertised the essay he published months prior. The announcement of Bess’s death received approximately 3000 likes on X/Twitter. Vaughan’s introductory interview published by Craven on the Database website explicitly mentions Craven’s relationship with Bess, citing it as integral to the founding of the site. IGN was unable to find an obituary for a woman fitting the description of Bess in Missouri during the alleged time of her death.

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Vaughan's mentions on Craven's social media and activity within the Database Discord have largely ceased since March. Her last message to the server noted that both her and Craven were incredibly busy with work, and had not abandoned the project. However, their involvement with the Database has yet to be seen. As of June, she was still active on her Medium page, publishing an article exploring EMDR therapy, but no longer interacts with the gaming industry outside of her personal publication.

Moving Forward

IGN reached out to Craven ahead of publication via email. He responded, requesting that we not publish the piece but forcefully declining to comment further. Shortly after that, he began deleting his presence on social media. Currently, his X/Twitter, LinkedIn, the Game Content Triggers Database, the Database’s associated Discord server, and Vaughan's Medium page have been removed.

Reporting on these allegations is no small task, especially when this story highlights multiple prominent advocates within the accessibility and disabled community. For months, myself, IGN editors, Kate Sánchez, and Matt Donahue cross-referenced multiple conversations between ourselves and Craven, conducted extensive interviews with multiple sources, and spent dozens of hours analyzing social media profiles, as well as Discord messages. To even posit the notion that three advocates are allegedly fake is admittedly hard to believe.

And speaking as a disabled individual, writing a story like this is no easy feat. The disabled community is incredibly close. We defend each other's work, and especially our existence within the greater gaming industry. To bring forth a story like this required immense dedication, determination, and an understanding that the accessibility and disabled community will ultimately need to heal from such a piece. However, after countless hours and weeks, we truly believe this is a story worth reporting, not only to highlight the unique nature of this case, but also to allow the varying impacted communities time to process and rebuild.

Each of Craven’s partners embedded themselves into varying marginalized communities, with each allegedly being Deaf, a person of color, queer, and having some form of major health episodes like cancer. And through Craven’s varying social media accounts and presence in the industry, he was able to ensure each partner remained visible. Their work, whether written or through social media advocacy, reached thousands. From AAA studios to different community spaces, Banks, Hamid, and Vaughan entrenched themselves into the gaming industry.
For approximately 10 years, the gaming industry has consistently supported Craven and his three partners. From awards, to recognition, to funds shared for alleged partners, Craven has cemented himself as an authority within the accessibility space. Yet, no evidence proves their existence. And for a community that consists of numerous marginalized identities, losing trust in prominent figures because of alleged lies is harmful to the overall support and acceptance of these groups in games.

Grant Stoner is a disabled journalist covering accessibility and the disabled perspective in video games. When not writing, he is usually screaming about Pokémon or his cat, Goomba on Twitter.



Ed. Note -
The author:
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The comments:
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Coty Craven:
Twitter deactivated - https://x.com/CotyCraven
No archive available

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Website down - https://clcraven.com/
Archive: https://web.archive.org/web/20240326205244/https://clcraven.com/

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CanIPlayThat page DDOSed - https://caniplaythat.com/author/cyclopediabrain/
Archive: https://web.archive.org/web/20240225150425/https://caniplaythat.com/author/cyclopediabrain/
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Medium still up - https://cl-craven.medium.com/
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- From 2012 - 2019, Susan Banks, a deaf, Muslim, queer immigrant from Turkey who worked as a model, a financial advisor and a deaf-studies professor before being known as a high-profile video game disability advocate. She became a double amputee after dropping a cake mixer on her foot and died from a stroke while livestreaming video games. An award was created honoring her posthumously.
I'm almost sad to learn that this person never existed, the cake mixer thing just shattered my ribs from laughing.
"Coty Craven" is an obvious pooner, but of course IGN won't "deadname" her.
100% pooner, one glance at that pic of her is enough to confirm it. Not to mention the fanfic-tier characters she came up with.
 
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Apparently the rabbit hole goes deeper. The queer, muslim, refugee, model, professor, asset manager, double amputee was als HIV-positive and a marathon runner. Coty has also claimed to suffer from canceer and MS.

There is a lot more to this story! Before scamming the disabled gaming community, Coty, who went by Courtney at the time, scammed the Chicago dog rescue community from 2011-2015.
They presented as a Michigan transplant to the Chicago area who was recovering from ovarian cancer. Coty was great with the dogs entrusted in their care and was a very talented photographer. Coty befriended many of their dog-walking clients, many also involved in the same rescue, on social media and in real life. Coty shared details of their life several times a day, mostly involving their (supposed) illnesses and treatments, including multiple forms of cancer and MS. Eventually, Coty then started posting about Susan Banks, a woman they were supposedly dating. Within a year or two, Coty and Susan supposedly adopted a baby that was allegedly Susan’s deceased cousin’s son. They posted daily photos of a 2-3 year old African American boy named Hamilton. There were hundreds, if not thousands, of photos shared of “Ham”, over the years. Coty also regularly posted photos of Tubi, a cousin of Susan’s. Both Susan and Tubi had their own social media accounts and would interact with Coty and each other. Over the years, there was at least one other male cousin and another infant adopted from Turkey involved in the story. This went on for years. It seemed like a non-mainstream, but legit family of endearing people.
However, in the Fall of 2013, the deception ramped up with the notorious kitchen-aid incident. Supposedly, Susan was HIV positive, and the injury caused a life-threatening infection necessitating an amputation. Then a second amputation. People were already skeptical, but this was when it became obvious. Maybe a week or two later, it was revealed via Coty’s social media that Susan was a marathon runner and was being fitted for running blades so she could still run a marathon a month later (seriously within a month of a double amputation?). Susan was also then revealed to be deaf and earned a prestigious professorship at a school for the deaf shortly after. At some point Coty also claimed Susan was Schizophrenic. The second baby was adopted around this time.
All the implausible events in the Fall of 2013 obviously led people to question Coty. However, it wasn’t until late 2014 that everyone had come to the same conclusion through individual research and the private investigator hired by Coty’s employer. Coty had fabricated all these characters and stories through stolen and fake photos and fake social media accounts. By 2015, they had been exposed to the entire rescue community. They disappeared for a while, only for the “odd gamer girl” and “can I play that” sites to pop up a couple years later. That is where this article picks up.
This sounds insane, but it happened so gradually over 4-5 years. In the beginning, Coty was trusted by dozens of people respected in the rescue community. No one would have imagined they would make up an entire family over 4-5years and use it to scam two entirely separate communities of trusting people over a decade.
Coty isn’t a bad person. They are incredibly talented (in photography and obviously storytelling!) and very kind to animals. Everyone wants the best for them and their mental health. This is why they haven’t been exposed earlier. Everyone would embrace Coty if they apologized and got help, but unfortunately it’s come to this article. Just a sad, sad situation all around.
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There's also a Diesel Tech article about a certain Courtney Craven. (archive).

Her Tiktok is still up too.


edit: this may be a different person
 

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At first I couldn't tell if this was the same pers
Maybe she didn't DFE the TikTok because the IGN article used her pooner-name?

Looking into the Coty stuff a bit more, I'm not so sure anymore, so I removed the links for the time being. Could be someone of the same name who's also lesbian and into dogs.
 
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I think I remember what you're talking about, but that was another case, believe it or not.
This happens pretty frequently — mostly about Native American ancestry. Some are more egregious than others, though. I do recall a recent story that was pretty bad (but a hilarious read), but it happens frequently enough that there are multiple Google hits for professors faking native ancestry. Probably one of those.

Oh, it's just a run-of-the-mill psychotic pooner. That actually explains it all pretty well. LOL, LMAO even.
I was so confused about “Coty” until I got to the picture. Of course, it’s a munchie pooner. Name a more iconic duo.

Guess she wanted to put that MFA in Fictional Writing to use.
 
Looking into the Coty stuff a bit more, I'm not so sure anymore, so I removed the links for the time being. Could be someone of the same name who's also lesbian and into dogs.
I found that person in my initial search and it is assuredly and definitely NOT the person discussed in this thread. Every link and vid of her should be removed, as they do have superficial similarities sufficient that it's going to confuse people.
 
You might have missed it but Byuu actually killed himself that day as described.
Oh I didn't miss it, that was my point: he did kill himself and if they'd spent an iota of the effort invested here, that never would have been up for debate. 😉
 
The “disability/chronic illness community” has got to be the most gullible crowd on earth. Their socials are just one obvious GFM grift after another, and their posts are always something like “and then the male white unmasked doctor said PEOPLE LIKE YOU SHOULD JUST DIE!” with thousands of likes and upvotes and gnashing of teeth.

I love it.
 
Apparently the rabbit hole goes deeper. The queer, muslim, refugee, model, professor, asset manager, double amputee was als HIV-positive and a marathon runner. Coty has also claimed to suffer from canceer and MS.
Or the TL/DR of the article you posted... woke grifters will believe the absolutely dumbest shit in the world if it checks enough boxes. I can't figure out if this schizophrenic pooner is a master level trolling grifter, or nuttier than a squirrel turd.
I found that person in my initial search and it is assuredly and definitely NOT the person discussed in this thread. Every link and vid of her should be removed, as they do have superficial similarities sufficient that it's going to confuse people.
I saw that other Courtney Craven too. Yeah it's definitely not the same person. Different areas of the country, and that one seems to at least be a somewhat productive member of society. But the fact that there are two somewhat notable butch lesbians named Courtney Craven that bear a passing resemblance to each other is kinda weird.
 
A fool intellectually disadvantaged persxn and xir money are soon parted.

The “disability/chronic illness community” has got to be the most gullible crowd on earth.
I don't know if it's necessarily a matter of being gullible, rather grifting is what everyone in the community aspires to so they all support each other in doing it. The best grifters get jobs with scam organizations who compete to grift from bigger organizations and government bodies, all playing into the cons run by the people below them in order to puff up their own claims. It's a pyramid of fraud.

I was thinking the pooner could have kept the grift going longer if she didn't conjure up such idiotic backstories for her characters, but in a setting so filled with bullshit artists it must be hard to even know how far is too far. Also if her characters had more reasonable backgrounds they may not have stood out from the crowd enough to draw in suckers.
 
I was thinking the pooner could have kept the grift going longer if she didn't conjure up such idiotic backstories for her characters,
Yeah, she reminds me of that English chick (archive) who claimed she had ALS and had some success pretending to write for magazines using voice-to-text. Then she came up with some wild story about being sued for being disabled by some AirBnb guests (sure, Jan) and everything unraveled. But not until after a bunch of people had donated to her GFM of course.
 
now that the woke hysteria is dying down i wonder how many (more) activists will get exposed as money-grubbing grifters or just being completely made up like the person in this article

it was all a money making empire based on manipulating women's feelings. the most profitable kind of grift
There are so many con artists throughout history pretending to have contact with or speak for important people real or imagined . Any and every preacher, swami, self-help speaker, pshycic , lost foreign princes and heiresses wild children. grifters been targeting the same niches since forever
 
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