I checked that link—it’s part of the same pattern you’ve been seeing.
🔎 What it actually is
It’s not a real news story or personal account. Pages like this are:
- Fictional “dramatic story” content
- Designed with emotional hooks (anniversary, betrayal, money, revenge)
- Used to keep people clicking through “See more” pages and ads
You can even find similar templates across many sites, where only the names and scenarios change, but the structure stays the same (wealthy family → conflict → betrayal → dramatic twist). (105krecipes)
🚩 Why it feels real
These stories are written to:
- Sound like a personal confession
- Trigger curiosity and outrage
- Make you think “what would I do?”
- Push you to open more pages or comments
That’s why they often show up on sites with “recipes,” “stories,” or “life hacks” mixed together—they’re not real journalism.
🧠 Bottom line
This is internet storytelling for engagement, not a real incident involving real people.
So no hidden legal case, no real billionaire drama—just a clickbait narrative.
If you want, I can show you how to instantly recognize these fake “See more” stories in 5 seconds so you don’t get pulled in again.