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Eve Sweet Long Con Part 3 May 2026

By the time law enforcement and amateur sleuths began connecting the dots, "Eve Sweet" had already executed her longest con yet: the pseudocide. In Part 3, we witness the three signature moves of a master liar exiting the stage.

Independent blockchain analyst "CipherHound" (a pseudonym) refused to accept the narrative. In Part 3’s most significant reveal, CipherHound traced the original scam wallet through a series of mixers (Tornado Cash alternatives) and found a pattern: on the same day Eve "escaped," a whale wallet labeled "0xSweetDrainer" sent 43.7 ETH ($142,000 at the time) to a KYC’ed exchange account in the Cayman Islands. The name on that account? Not Eve Sweet. But a 34-year-old former digital marketing manager from Vancouver named Marcus Thorne. eve sweet long con part 3

Two endings are possible in Part 3. The first is the slow fade: messages become sporadic. Excuses pile up (“I’m in a hospital in Malaysia, no signal”). Eventually, the profile is deleted. The second, more brutal method is the violent snap: one day, the victim receives a single message saying, “You were never enough. This was a job. Don’t contact me again.” Then—absolute zero. By the time law enforcement and amateur sleuths

If you are currently communicating with an “Eve Sweet” (or any similar high-empathy, long-distance romantic interest), ask these three questions: If all three answers point to fraud, you

If all three answers point to fraud, you are not in Part 3 yet. You are in Act II. Stop. Screenshot everything. Contact your bank. And do not—under any circumstance—send the “final payment.”

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