Scam Detective

Scam Campaign

Susan Jewelry & Counterfeit Brand Impersonation Scam

Identified on 4/22/2026

Primary Entity

domain

susanjewelryco.com
Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 3 community reports from users

Campaign Narrative

**Fraudulent E-commerce Network Targets Online Shoppers Through Multi-Brand Scheme**

Cybersecurity analysts have identified a coordinated scam campaign operating through a network of four fraudulent e-commerce domains that share the same underlying infrastructure. The connected websites include susanjewelryco.com, stssy.com, www.kellerboutique.com, and easyscribe.co, all registered through GoDaddy.com, LLC between November 28, 2025 and December 3, 2025. These domains are linked through 12 same-infrastructure relationships with moderate confidence levels of 0.50, indicating they likely operate from shared hosting services or are controlled by the same threat actors.

The campaign demonstrates sophisticated targeting across multiple product categories, with scammers creating fake storefronts for jewelry, fashion brands, and other consumer goods. Community reports reveal specific victimization patterns, including consumers being charged immediately through debit cards without receiving order confirmations from susanjewelryco.com, delivery of counterfeit jewelry items such as "Ocean's Oath Gold earrings" priced at $29.95 that bear no resemblance to advertised products, and fraudulent Stussy brand merchandise being sold through stssy.com via the Shopify app platform. The rapid registration timeline spanning just six days suggests this network was established specifically for fraudulent purposes.

The close registration dates and shared infrastructure indicate this is likely an organized operation designed to maximize reach before individual domains are identified and taken down. Victims report being charged immediately upon purchase but receiving either counterfeit goods or nothing at all, with some noting that order confirmation emails contained suspicious links. The use of recognizable brand names like Stussy and professional-looking jewelry websites demonstrates the scammers' strategy to exploit consumer trust in established retail categories.

Consumers should exercise extreme caution when encountering these or similar websites. Always verify the legitimacy of online retailers by checking domain registration dates, looking for established customer service contact information, and researching reviews from multiple sources before making purchases. If contacted by these entities through email or other means, do not click on any links, hang up if contacted by phone, and report the incident immediately to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC for telecommunications-related fraud. Before shopping on unfamiliar websites, consumers can check domain safety through established website reputation services and verify business legitimacy through Better Business Bureau listings.

This network represents a moderate to high threat level due to its coordinated infrastructure and active consumer targeting across multiple product categories. Immediate action should include monitoring for additional domains registered through similar patterns, alerting payment processors about the fraudulent charges, and issuing consumer warnings about the identified websites. The short operational timeline suggests these domains may be taken down relatively quickly, but consumers should remain vigilant for similar replacement sites using the same infrastructure patterns.

Entity Roster

Domains (4)

Data Sources

Related Campaigns

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Scam Prevention Resources

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