Kim goes into detail about scam artists, and lets readers know of her experiences with them in her recent blog.
Quoted from her blog - "I have, throughout my life, been surrounded by people who have committed fraud and scammed others. Not that these people were my friends, but people I have known and come across."
According to the comments & feedback responded back towards her latest post, many readers are speculating that she is referring to Teresa Giudice.
Teresa and her family's financial woes are no secret to viewers of the RHONJ show - according to many of the accusations against the "person" in Kim's recent blog post, it's safe to say that it's quite much of a resemblance to Teresa as she battled the press with similar claims of her exaggerated spending habits and credit card racketing.
Kim continues to elaborate - "In one instance, this person went into a local boutique and took (I can't say bought) hundreds of dollars of clothing for her children, and said "oh I will be back to pay you," and never went back. She did this on several occasions throughout many boutiques in the area, not just for the children but for herself also."
It was rumored earlier this year that Teresa went shopping at the Posche Boutique in Wayne, NJ (and many other boutiques) but never actually paid her [tab] amount in full. "She had wild spending on credit cards, racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars without a thought in mind to ever pay them."
After a highly publicized financial bankruptcy, there were rumors of the Giudice family losing their home - this is also where the speculation of the "person" in the blog being Teresa really comes from, Kim goes into the subject of credit card spending & a million dollar house add-on. "She built an add-on million dollar house (of course not in the right zip code) and bragged about how many more millions it was worth and that it was, indeed, brand new. So not true. It was built on swamp land with a major highway in the backyard, out in the middle of nowhere. She gave minimal deposits to all the contractors on the job and when the time came to make the final payment after the jobs were completed, these guys were "you know what" out of luck."
You can run all you want, but you can't hide from the scoop - the truth always seems to come out whether you choose to hide or run. Could Teresa Giudice really be the scam artist described in Kim Granatell's blog, or is it just a coincidence of similarity?
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