Pernilla Sjoholm: Last News

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Tindler Swindler victim 'signs up' for Celebs Go Dating in the hope of finding love

Netflix show about Simon - whose real name was Shimon Hayut - as the women involved tried to track him down. As well as Cecilie, Pernilla Sjoholm and Ayleen Charlotte were also taken advantage of by Simon, who dubbed himself the 'Prince of Diamonds' and flaunted his supposed wealth on social media. Now Cecilie is hoping to find love again - and has turned to the E4 show for help.
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All news where Pernilla Sjoholm is mentioned

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‘The Tinder Swindler’ subject says women “weren’t conned or threatened”
The Tinder Swindler subject Shimon Hayut has said the women in the Netflix documentary “weren’t conned”.Hayut, who also went by the alias Simon Leviev in the recent film, recently spoke to Inside Edition about the allegations levelled against him by several women who met him on Tinder.The first part of the interview aired yesterday (February 21) with a second part due to be released today (February 22), also featuring Hayut’s girlfriend Kate Konlin.“I’m not this monster,” Hayut said of the claims of The Tinder Swindler. “I was just a single guy that wanted to meet some girls on Tinder.”The Netflix documentary alleges that Hayut convinced women he was the son and heir of diamond mogul Lev Leviev, before reportedly conning them out of millions of dollars.“They weren’t conned and they weren’t threatened,” Hayut said of the women featured in the doc, and said of the claims he was the son of Leviev: “No I am not, and I never presented myself [as such].”He went on to say he didn’t “feel bad” for the women who accused him as the allegatiosn were false, and said he is “a legit businessman” in terms of justifying his current lavish lifestyle.Hayut added: “I want to clear my name, I want to say to the world, this is not true.”Victims Cecilie Fjellhøy, Ayleen Koeleman and Pernilla Sjoholm recently set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to repay their debts after being conned.“You’re probably here because you’ve heard about our story, and we appreciate you taking the time to search and find this page,” they wrote.“The past few days have been a whirlwind, and we three (Ayleen, Pernilla and Cecilie) have been completely shocked and floored by the flood of compassion and support from everyone.
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This Morning fans outraged as Tinder Swindler victim begs for £600k to pay off debts
This Morning viewers were left outraged after a victim of the Tinder Swindler conman, who featured on the new Netflix series, appeared on the show and asked for help paying off her debts.Cecilie Fjellhoy joined hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield to discuss the hit show which focuses on Israeli love rat Simon Leviev.The pretty Norwegian graduate found herself falling victim to serial swindler Simon after she matched with him on popular dating app Tinder.Her intense fauxmance with the criminal mastermind very quickly began turning sour as he turned from her dream man into a drain on finances and emotions.Cecile, 29, ultimately found herself checking in to a psychiatric facility and over £200,000 in debt as she faced reality and got out of the relationship.Now she and her fellow victims have started a fundraising page to attempt to get back the £600,000 they lost at the hands of their lover.However, viewers of the ITV daytime show were lacking in sympathy for the woman as Cecile explained the impact the experience had on her and were disgusted that she was now asking others to pay off the debt she had accrued because of Simon.Taking to Twitter to air their disgust they didn't hold back as they slammed Cecile and her fellow victims Pernilla Sjoholm and Ayleen Charlotte.One angry viewer wrote: "What!! They’re now asking other people to pay for them! #swindler #ThisMorning."Another added: "A Go Fund Me page, the nerve of them!."A third posted: "Someone paid 1500 on that go fund me ??? What?!"Another social media user wrote: "Is this a joke? Why do they expect other people to pay for their mistakes."A fifth user tweeted: "It's horrible what happened to them and everything but they can't seriously be expecting other
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The Tinder Swindler returns to Instagram for denial posts
The Tinder Swindler subject Shimon Hayut has taken to social media to deny being a “fraud”.The Netflix documentary focuses on a group of women trying to bring down a man they met on a dating app who scammed them for millions of dollars.Hayut served five months of his 15-month prison sentence for stealing an estimated $10million (£7.4million) over the years by tempting his dates with expensive trips to seduce them.He went on to delete his social media after the release of The Tinder Swindler last Wednesday (February 2), but returned to Instagram yesterday (February 7) to defend himself.“If I was a fraud why would I act on Netflix I mean they should have arrested me when we were still shooting [sic],” he wrote on his Instagram Stories.“It’s high time the ladies start saying the truth. If you can’t give them world they’ll turn yours to hell [sic].”He went on to say he is planning on “addressing the whole world” this Friday (February 11), adding: “Say my name #Simon Truth.” The Tinder Swindler victims Cecilie Fjellhøy, Ayleen Koeleman and Pernilla Sjoholm have since set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to repay their debts after being conned.“You’re probably here because you’ve heard about our story, and we appreciate you taking the time to search and find this page,” they wrote.“The past few days have been a whirlwind, and we three (Ayleen, Pernilla and Cecilie) have been completely shocked and floored by the flood of compassion and support from everyone.
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Why Tinder Swindler Simon was released from prison after only five months
Netflix's latest true crime documentary, The Tinder Swindler, lands on the streaming service on February 2 and tells the story of one man's scheme to con women out of thousands of pounds via a dating app.Described as "the jaw-dropping story of a prolific conman who posed as a billionaire playboy on Tinder, and the women who set out to bring him down", the new series follows conman Shimon Hayut on his journey from crime to prison time.After posing as a billionaire CEO and legally changing his name to Simon Leviev to make his story more authentic, Shimon would contact women via Tinder and take them on lavish dates, before asking them for money - which he would use to seduce his next victim.He was eventually caught in 2019 and given a lengthy prison sentence, but the victims were left shocked after Shimon Hayut was released from prison after just five months.He had originally been sentenced to 15 months in prison and ordered to pay his victims $43,289 in compensation in December 2019, by Tel Aviv Magistrate's Court.However, Shimon was later given early release in May 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.The Times of Israel reported that Shimon had met the conditions for his early release, under the program aimed at reducing the prison population due to the outbreak of Covid-19.His early release was met with shock and anger by his victims, with Pernilla Sjoholm, who speaks as part of the Tinder Swindler documentary, saying to Channel 12 news: "I was in shock from the decision to release him."She added: "He deceived people and left prison after five months?"How can you give trust to a man like that, who escaped from Israel twice? A man that deceived and swindled women in Europe for hundreds of thousands of euros.
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