Admire Bio Named
…and Questions for Pres. Bio
By Dr. John Idriss Lahai
The entire trick depended on one plain, simple cardboard box.
The scam was run by a woman named Admire Bio. She had a huge plan. She needed the victims, who had already given her money, to believe everything she said. She showed them pictures of this box. She lied, saying: “These are the photos of the parcel I sent to the victims of the gold scam.”

Admire told them that the “gold” was inside the box. She explained that she shipped it to Dubai, and her partner, George Slim, would pick it up there and take it to the final buyers.
Then came the crisis, the second big lie. Admire called the victims with urgent news. She claimed the Ghanaian government had stopped the boxes. The government, she insisted, promised to release the gold boxes only if the victims sent her an extra $225,000.
This new demand was on top of the $225,000 the victims had already paid Admire.
The gold shipment was pure fantasy. Anyone who deals with gold knows the truth: real gold is not shipped like this. It must travel in a special metal container with a strong security seal. The box Admire showed had none of this.

It was just taped up with normal brown tape. Ghana Customs saw the pictures and instantly knew the lie. They said that tape is only used for packages that are not gold or other high-value metals.
Customs believed that the box most likely held Kente cloths, the famous Ghanaian fabric. Admire was just sending this cloth to Dubai so George Slim could pick it up on his way to England.
The pictures Admire used were the key part of the final trick. After George Slim got the simple fabric box, he likely changed the writing on it and took a fresh photo. Admire then quickly sent this photo to the victims as “real proof.” She told them: “Look! The box is in Ghana, but the government is holding it. They need the extra $225,000 before they will release it.”
The buyers had first agreed to pay Admire a total of $900,000 for the gold.
If the victims had believed her final urgent plea and sent the last $225,000, they would have paid Admire a total of $450,000. They would have paid that huge amount of money for gold that never existed.
Questions: Admire Bio, are these the photos of the parcel you sent to the alleged victims of the gold scam?
Did you inform the victims that you shipped the gold in these boxes to Dubai, and that George Slim was to collect and deliver them to the buyers?
Did you later contact the victims to claim that the boxes had been intercepted by the Ghanaian government?
Did you further claim that the Ghanaian government promised to release these gold-containing boxes only if the victims of your scam transferred an additional $225,000 (two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars)?
This was requested apart from the $225,000 the victims had already paid to you, is that correct?
Gold Transport Protocol & Alleged Deception
You and I know that this is not how gold is transported. Real gold is shipped in a special iron container, and the protective plastic has a special seal.
Why did you lie to these people you scammed?
According to Ghana Customs, the tape on the parcel in the pictures is typically used for outgoing goods that are not classified as precious metals or gold.
Ghana Customs suggests it is likely the parcel contained Kente cloths (the traditional dress of Ghana) that you were sending to Dubai for George Slim to pick up on his way to England.
After George Slim received the parcel, did he change the writing, take a photo, and send the picture back to you?
Did you then send that picture to the people you scammed as “real” photos to show that the parcel made it to Ghana but never left because the Ghanaian government was demanding you pay them another $225,000 before they would release it?
The buyers had agreed to pay you a total of $900,000 for the gold, correct?
If the buyers had sent you the additional $225,000, the total amount paid to you would have been $450,000 for gold that never existed. Is that correct?
