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SON Community Back Online

California woman loses home in romance scam that used AI videos of GH's Steve Burton

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https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-09-24/she-thought-a-general-hospital-star-was-in-love-with-her-then-she-lost-everything

Abigail Ruvalcaba was intrigued when a handsome daytime soap opera actor she’d been watching for years reached out to her in a Facebook message.

His rugged exterior softened by his piercing blue eyes and an almost shy smile disarmed her. She answered him, pushing away any doubts as to why the Emmy winner would suddenly contact her.

They talked on the phone. He sent her videos professing his love for her. They made plans to buy a beach house so they could start their lives together.

The problem was she was making plans not with “General Hospital” star Steve Burton, but with a scammer who intended not to romance her, but to swindle her. In the end, the scheme led Ruvalcaba to sell her home to send money to the bad actors.

It's a fairly long article that talks about this case and several others of people being scammed with AI videos of celebrities. Ruvalcaba is considered disabled because of bipolar and was apparently in a manic state when she sent thousands of dollars to the scammer.

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I'd be very surprised if Facebook was any help in this situation.

I used to try to report accounts on Facebook where the account was set up to appear to be a celebrity and would add replies as if they were personally interested in other commenters. But of course there was no way to report someone for impersonating a celebrity unless you could link it to the celebrity's real account, and even if you reported it as fraud or spam Facebook would eventually shrug and say it wasn't against their TOS. 

I wanted to read the Sarah Wynn-Williams book that Facebook tried to suppress but after a few chapters of her floundering around incompetently I couldn't bear any more and returned it to the library. 

  • Member

I won't lie: when I first read this story, I thought, "This would make a fantastic movie on the Hallmark Channel: woman gets scammed by 'bad actors' claiming to be handsome soap star on social media, soap star reaches out to victim to offer his support, romance blossoms," lol.

  • Member
8 minutes ago, Khan said:

I won't lie: when I first read this story, I thought, "This would make a fantastic movie on the Hallmark Channel: woman gets scammed by 'bad actors' claiming to be handsome soap star on social media, soap star reaches out to victim to offer his support, romance blossoms," lol.

 Love it... Catfish turned Cinderella story. 😁

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