Diana Kamileva
- First name, Last name: Diana Kamileva
- Country, City: Russia, Naberezhnye Chelny
Scam Pattern: Diana Kamileva
This case involves a woman introducing herself as Diana Kamileva, allegedly working as a dental assistant in the Kazan area.
She presented herself as sincere and financially independent, but gradually started asking for money under the pretext of visa and travel expenses.
Tactics used
- Claimed to be a dental assistant from Kazan, Russia, seeking to build a serious relationship abroad.
- Shared a flight itinerary, saying she would pay for her own travel to the United States.
- After gaining trust, asked for $2,000 to help secure approval for a US B2 visa.
- Previously used similar excuses: fabricated travel restrictions, falsified documents, and staged emergencies.
- Created emotional pressure by appearing committed to meeting in person and pretending she was close to traveling.
- Used multiple fake passports and booking receipts to make her story more convincing.
Fake contacts and documents
- Fake Russian passports in the name of Diana Kamileva.
- Fabricated flight itineraries showing trips from Kazan via Istanbul to the US.
- Requests for funds sent through Western Union and Ukrainian bank accounts tied to accomplices.
Verified identity uncovered
Our investigation confirmed the real identity of this scammer.
For privacy reasons, only partial details are displayed below.
Full verified data — including complete name, date of birth, full address, phone, email, social networks, and official documents —
is available exclusively through our
Identity & Background Report.
| Field | Public Information |
|---|---|
| Full name | Viktoriya K. |
| Date of Birth | 2005 (approx. 19 y.o.) |
| Region | Mari El Republic, Russia |
| Phone | +7-902-***-**89 |
| kaz****@gmail.com | |
| Social networks | VK, OK.ru (archived profiles) |
| Official documents | Passport, registration address, and other IDs available in full report |
Public entries are allegations based on our investigations and user reports. Sensitive data is masked.
Conclusion
The evidence shows a recurring pattern of romance fraud — gaining trust through personal stories, then demanding money for fake travel and visa expenses.
Victims are manipulated into covering “urgent” payments under the illusion of an imminent meeting.
Our investigation identified the real person behind these operations.
Complete verified details can be obtained only via the
Identity & Background Report.
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Gather the facts.
Provide the basics in plain text: her name & any aliases; dating profile link(s) and messenger; @usernames; +7 phone number and email(s); dates, amounts, and payment method (bank, crypto, gift cards); any “documents” you received (passport, visa, tickets).Attach evidence.
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