It Wasn’t JUst Me
When I first started piecing this together, I thought maybe it was personal. A missed payment. A weird silence. But over time, I heard from others — friends, collaborators, and people Fallon brought into her professional orbit.
Some were owed money. Others were ghosted after Fallon used their credit cards, or failed to pay them for real work they completed.
These aren’t rumors. These are people I know personally. Some of them I connected to Fallon myself.
Lawyer ReFerral
The Lawyer I referred her to
Fallon asked me for a lawyer to help with a contract. I introduced her to someone I trust — a friend and respected professional.
The work got done. Fallon didn’t pay.
And back then? None of us were sweating a few thousand dollars. But now I look back and wonder how long she had been testing how far she could go.
The Duke Friend & The Card
The Card She Kept Using
One of Fallon’s close friends from her Duke days let her use her credit card to hold a hotel room.
Fallon kept using the number, saying the hotel must’ve made a mistake.
But when the friend called the hotel directly, they told her Fallon was still giving them the same number, intentionally.
When she tried to confront her, Fallon ghosted her too.
The Unpaid Team Member
She Worked for Fallon. She Never Got Paid.
One of Fallon’s friends — someone I’ve seen her work with on projects — joined Fallon’s team as a contractor. I saw her do the work.
Fallon never paid her. She kept dodging the contract signing and giving excuses.
The friend tried to be patient. But just like with me and others, Fallon disappeared.
These stories aren’t just about unpaid invoices. They’re about trust.
About how Fallon leaned on the closeness of these relationships to shield herself from accountability.
And every time it got close to collapsing, she vanished.