
$1,485 OrdealβA Cautionary Tale for Fellow Job Seekers
This story is shared anonymously to protect others from falling prey to the same criminal scheme.
In the desperate search for a better opportunity, job seekers are vulnerable. I recently lost my hard-earned money to a highly organized and sophisticated employment scam that started with a simple Facebook advert. I want to share the detailsβthe red flags, the escalating demands, the total cost, and the timelineβto prevent my fellow brothers and sisters from being robbed of their fortune.
| Date/Period | Event | Key Red Flag |
| August 2025 | Responded to a job advert on Facebook from “APEX GLOBAL CAREERS” via email. | Legitimate job opportunities for major companies are rarely initiated via an unverified Facebook page and a generic gmail.com address. |
| Initial Contact | Referred to “Mr. Juma” (+254…) in Canada for Southern Africa recruitment. Instructed to pay $100 USD to “start the process.” | NEVER PAY A FEE TO APPLY OR START A JOB PROCESS. This is the number one indicator of a scam. |
| Escalation Phase 1 | Received a fake offer from a legitimate company (KPMG Canada). Instructed to get a medical test, then demanded $200 USD for “TB certificate processing.” | Job offers should come directly from the employer or a verifiable HR channel, not an intermediary demanding medical processing fees. |
| Escalation Phase 2 | Informed that the Certificate of Sponsorship was “out,” but now needed $250 USD for biometrics, claiming the employer refused to pay. | Costs were suddenly outside the “initial contract” and passed directly to the applicantβa classic bait-and-switch. |
| Escalation Phase 3 | Demanded $500 USD for a “Permanent Residency Card (PRC)” application, citing a spurious change in immigration law due to the World Cup. | Scammers invent official-sounding but complex, time-sensitive reasons (immigration law changes) to justify large, unexpected payments. |
| Final Payments | Received a proforma invoice from DHL demanding $365 USD for shipping and a $70 USD “stamping fee.” Scammers refused a “pay forward” option. | Refusal to allow the recipient to pay for shipping/customs on their end is a major red flag, as they retain control of the payment flow. |
| The End | Received a call from a fake “Kenyan Airport Authority” demanding $289 USD for clearing documents held at Jomo Kenyatta Airport, despite the documents being sent from Canada to Zimbabwe. | The illogical cargo route (Canada $\rightarrow$ Kenya $\rightarrow$ Zimbabwe) and the final, high-pressure, unexpected fee led to the realization of the scam. |
π° The Total Costs and Loss
The initial cost was promised to be around $350 USD (plus a post-employment agent fee). The final loss amounted to over four times that amount, with the demands showing no sign of stopping.
| Payment Component | Amount Sent (USD) | Status |
| Registration Fee | $100 | PAID |
| TB Certificate | $200 | PAID |
| Biometrics | $250 | PAID |
| PRC Application | $500 | PAID |
| DHL/Shipping | $365 | PAID |
| Stamping Fee | $70 | PAID |
| Total Funds Sent | $1,485 USD | TOTAL LOSS |
| Final Demand (Unpaid) | $289 USD | REFUSED (I stopped communicating) |
π¨ Warning: The “APEX GLOBAL CAREERS” Job Scam
My $1,485 OrdealβA Cautionary Tale for Fellow Job Seekers
This story is shared anonymously to protect others from falling prey to the same criminal scheme.
In the desperate search for a better opportunity, job seekers are vulnerable. I recently lost my hard-earned money to a highly organized and sophisticated employment scam that started with a simple Facebook advert. I want to share the detailsβthe red flags, the escalating demands, the total cost, and the timelineβto prevent my fellow brothers and sisters from being robbed of their fortune.
ποΈ The Timeline of Deception
The scam was executed over a period of weeks, characterized by escalating payments and a mounting sense of urgency.
| Date/Period | Event | Key Red Flag |
| August 2025 | Responded to a job advert on Facebook from “APEX GLOBAL CAREERS” via email. | Legitimate job opportunities for major companies are rarely initiated via an unverified Facebook page and a generic gmail.com address. |
| Initial Contact | Referred to “Mr. Juma” (+254…) in Canada for Southern Africa recruitment. Instructed to pay $100 USD to “start the process.” | NEVER PAY A FEE TO APPLY OR START A JOB PROCESS. This is the number one indicator of a scam. |
| Escalation Phase 1 | Received a fake offer from a legitimate company (KPMG Canada). Instructed to get a medical test, then demanded $200 USD for “TB certificate processing.” | Job offers should come directly from the employer or a verifiable HR channel, not an intermediary demanding medical processing fees. |
| Escalation Phase 2 | Informed that the Certificate of Sponsorship was “out,” but now needed $250 USD for biometrics, claiming the employer refused to pay. | Costs were suddenly outside the “initial contract” and passed directly to the applicantβa classic bait-and-switch. |
| Escalation Phase 3 | Demanded $500 USD for a “Permanent Residency Card (PRC)” application, citing a spurious change in immigration law due to the World Cup. | Scammers invent official-sounding but complex, time-sensitive reasons (immigration law changes) to justify large, unexpected payments. |
| Final Payments | Received a proforma invoice from DHL demanding $365 USD for shipping and a $70 USD “stamping fee.” Scammers refused a “pay forward” option. | Refusal to allow the recipient to pay for shipping/customs on their end is a major red flag, as they retain control of the payment flow. |
| The End | Received a call from a fake “Kenyan Airport Authority” demanding $289 USD for clearing documents held at Jomo Kenyatta Airport, despite the documents being sent from Canada to Zimbabwe. | The illogical cargo route (Canada $\rightarrow$ Kenya $\rightarrow$ Zimbabwe) and the final, high-pressure, unexpected fee led to the realization of the scam. |
π° The Total Costs and Loss
The initial cost was promised to be around $350 USD (plus a post-employment agent fee). The final loss amounted to over four times that amount, with the demands showing no sign of stopping.
| Payment Component | Amount Sent (USD) | Status |
| Registration Fee | $100 | PAID |
| TB Certificate | $200 | PAID |
| Biometrics | $250 | PAID |
| PRC Application | $500 | PAID |
| DHL/Shipping | $365 | PAID |
| Stamping Fee | $70 | PAID |
| Total Funds Sent | $1,485 USD | TOTAL LOSS |
| Final Demand (Unpaid) | $289 USD | REFUSED (I stopped communicating) |
π What You Need to Know: Red Flags of the Scam
The perpetratorsβincluding “Mr. Juma,” “Acelyn Melly,” and the fake “HR Manager”βused a coordinated strategy to maintain pressure and credibility.
- The Upfront Fee: A legitimate employer or reputable recruiter will never ask you to pay a fee for registration, application, interview scheduling, or securing an offer.
- Generic/Free Email Address: The use of
jobsukdkw@gmail.cominstead of a professional company domain is a huge red flag. - Third-Party Transfers: Money was requested via Mukuru to a personal Mpesa number in Kenya (Franklin Onyari), not to a registered business bank account.
- Escalating/Unforeseen Costs: The fees kept increasing with vague or improbable justifications (like a sudden PRC requirement or employer’s refusal to pay).
- Urgency and Pressure: The fraudsters used an arbitrary reporting date (October 2, 2025) and threatened cancellation to force immediate payments.
- Illogical Logistics: The parcel being routed through Kenya on its way from Canada to Zimbabwe exposed the deception.
If a job offer is too good to be true, requires you to pay money to get a job, or uses threatening urgency, it is a scam.
I have since reported this incident and urge anyone who has been contacted by “APEX GLOBAL CAREERS” or the provided phone numbers (+254 758 982 514, +1 254 218 8398, etc.) to immediately cease communication and report it to your local police and financial institutions.
Protect your fortune. Share this warning.



































