Good afternoon, folks. Holden Foxwell here, and oh boy, do I have a story for you.
This one started simple enough. I was helping my dear old granny with her banking — nothing unusual — when I noticed something that didn’t sit right. A digital marketing outfit calling itself Maxy Jay Digital Solutions LLC had been pulling about three hundred dollars every few weeks out of her account.
We went straight to the bank.
They closed the account and reimbursed her money.
Now, most people would’ve stopped there.
But I’m a little too nosey for my own good.
So I went home and did what any mountain investigator does when something smells off:
I started digging.
A quick Google search led me to their Facebook page.
From there I found a phone number.
Big surprise — no answer.
But I did find something interesting:
they’re based out of Fairfax, Virginia.
So I took what I had back to the bank and told them to flag the company.
The woman I spoke with couldn’t have cared less.
Fine.
If the bank didn’t want it, I knew who would.
I took my report to the sheriff’s office.
That’s when I got the polite version of:
“Since your granny got reimbursed, the bank is the victim now.
This is Marion PD’s problem.”
And here’s where things get strange.
Two days later, I end up in county lockup.
Now, I’m not saying someone in Virginia is nervous.
I’m just saying the timing is interesting.
Because I still have questions:
- How many victims are there?
- How are they getting paper checks in a county where almost nobody uses them anymore?
- Who down here is still passing paper all the way to Fairfax?
- And why did someone get so jumpy the moment I started asking?
I don’t have the answers yet.
But I’m not done digging.
Not by a long shot.
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