

A viral short video recently claimed that some Indian female students in U.S. regions like Ohio and Dallas were allegedly “honey trapping” wealthy NRIs by entering homes as helpers, stealing valuables, gathering personal information, blackmailing men, and even buying houses with the money.
However, no police reports, official records, or documented incidents support these sensational accusations.
Many NRIs called the video misleading and attention-seeking:
One NRI said, “The creator wants views. She mentioned random states without giving a single piece of evidence. Claims of buying houses with that money are completely unrealistic.”
Another stated, “There are zero registered cases of such honey traps. In the U.S., crimes like these are always reported. If something like this happened, NRIs would immediately approach the police.”
A third NRI added, “Earlier, some homes had student helpers. Every girl behaved respectfully. This video seems designed to target hardworking students and stop support for them.”
An NRI woman remarked, “If a honey trap happens, the man is responsible for crossing boundaries. Blaming women without proof is wrong.”
A few NRIs said that while rare incidents can occur anywhere, the video exaggerates and generalises, making its authenticity questionable.
The consensus is unanimous:
The viral claims have no factual basis, no complaints have been filed, and the narrative appears to be sensational, exaggerated, and unsupported by evidence.













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