My wife Mira and I sold our spotless condo, cleaned top to bottom. Even our two cats never made a mess. Three weeks later, the new owner, Gordon, sent a message: “We smell your dirty cats! We expect $10,000.”
Shocked, I called our realtor, Petra, who assured us we owed nothing. But Mira had other plans. Since the condo was a smart home, she logged into the app, flickering the lights and changing the thermostat just to mess with Gordon. It was harmless fun at first, until he began sending threatening texts and claiming he’d sue us.
Mira dug into his past and discovered Gordon had a history of evictions and lawsuits over fake “odors” and damages. Petra confirmed he was a scammer who bought homes, tried to extort sellers, and then flipped them for profit.
Soon, Gordon listed our old condo online at a huge markup, falsely claiming it was “recently renovated.” Mira reported him anonymously, and the listing was pulled. Furious, he demanded $2,000 instead of $10,000, but we refused.
Then, our lawyer friend uncovered something big: Gordon had a pending fraud case in another state for running the same scam. We sent him a cease-and-desist letter, and he immediately backed down, even signing an agreement never to pursue claims or badmouth us again.
A month later, karma struck—his financing collapsed, and he had to sell the condo at a loss. The new buyers? A sweet older couple with four cats. They told us they couldn’t believe how clean the place smelled.
The best part? Petra had personally recommended them and vouched for us. Over dinner with the new owners, we laughed about the whole ordeal.
In the end, we learned that standing your ground — and keeping good records — can expose scammers. And sometimes, karma delivers the perfect ending.