Fans of Floyd Wallace affectionately call him “Scammer Floyd” for a reason that was apparently on display on Tuesday as he held a questionable at best live stream where he may or may not have had some fun at the expense of regulars to pay the fines he’s refused to pay himself.
Wallace left the United States in November knowing that he still owed $160.00 for probation fees in Texas and $160.00 (later ballooning to $200.00 with late fees) for a ticket from New Mexico.
The YouTuber opted not to pay the fines before traveling outside of the United States because he had a semi-dedicated fan base at the time and he knew that with a few batted eyelashes and a confessional, he could probably manage to get what he wanted out of his fans, and that would be to pay his fines for him.
Wallace left the United States and spent what little money he’s had on intimate encounters with random dates and/or McDonalds. Happy Meals cost money and are rumored to be incentives for his dates to provide him with intimate gratification.
He’s also spent the last two months insulting, alienating and breaking promises to his fans. Time after time, he’s raised money for causes or events only to back out at the last minute or laugh at fans for honestly believing anything he ever says or promises.
Most recently, there’s been flare ups with his major remaining donors. People who make up the most of his donations have either gotten into very public spats with Wallace, or have simply stopped attending his livestreams and, more importantly, supporting his lifestyle.
Knowing this, Wallace started Tuesday’s afternoon livestream with a hint of desperation. He said that his fines were due and that if he didn’t pay his probation fine immediately, he’d have to leave for the United States and he’d have no choice but to stay in the United States and end his sex tourism career, for now anyway.
He needed just $160.00, folks, $160.00 to make a difference in his life and to stay in Brazil for a few more weeks until he had to report to Oklahoma to go on trial for his obstruction trial at the end of January.
Oh, and his attorney in Oklahoma “threatened to fire him” because Wallace hasn’t been taking things seriously and hasn’t paid him what he owed. Suddenly gone was the over $500.00 Wallace was counting on from a refund of a flight to the United States he was forced to purchase by an airline before it would let him fly from Colombia to Brazil.
Wallace had under $1000.00 in his bank account, he was in a pickle, sure, he could pay the fines, but then maybe he couldn’t afford a flight back to America and then he couldn’t go out for happy meals on dates he won’t livestream and get sexually gratified by girls half his age and… the world was spinning.
After no bites from his audience, Wallace began to accept deals posed to him. The guy who wanted his merchandise rights provided that Wallace didn’t pay him back 1/4th more than he borrowed? Done. The guy who wanted to take a life insurance policy on Wallace if he didn’t pay back 1/3rd more than he borrowed? Done. Pay Wallace now, get double your money back on YouTube payment day? Send that CashApp or PayPal and it’s a done deal baby.
Wallace was taking in offers and it was unclear how much he actually took in towards the $340.00 he said he needed when… the stream ended and was made private. Hours later, his “edited” version of the stream also went up, was released and made private within 30 seconds of notifications going live.
All proof an any deals Wallace had made has been removed from YouTube. The evidence is gone. The deals are gone and just Wallace’s word is left for his fans to rely on.
From the man they already call “Scammer Floyd.”
We’ll be monitoring the drama as Floyd goes live again when he needs more money.