Twitter permanently suspends D-1 Bound Recruiting account after USA TODAY Sports investigation – USA TODAY

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Twitter has banned several accounts associated with D-1 Bound Recruiting in the wake of a USA TODAY Sports investigation into the entity, which used social media to scam parents and athletes out of tens of thousands of dollars.
USA TODAY Sports identified 18 parents and recruits who said they sent money to D-1 Bound after first making contact with them on Twitter. The families, who hail from 11 U.S. states and Canada, say they lost nearly $33,000 in incidents over the past four years.
“We have permanently suspended several accounts referenced in the article for violations of the Twitter Rules,” a Twitter spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY Sports in a statement Saturday night.
Twitter said it banned D-1 Bound’s primary Twitter handle, @D1boundfactory, for violating its financial scam policy, which prohibits users from creating accounts, posting tweets or sending direct messages “that solicit engagement in … fraudulent schemes.”
The account had been operating since 2015 and amassed more than 38,000 followers, including prominent recruiting reporters and coaches at all levels of college football.
D-1 Bound appears to have evaded suspicion by hiding its contact information and changing its Twitter handle. When contacted by USA TODAY Sports late last month, the account protected its tweets, blocked the reporter and later rebranded itself as a private recruiting service, using the hashtag “#MembersOnly.”
SPECIAL REPORT:Football dreams. Promises of recruiting help. Then snared in a scam.
Twitter also suspended a second account associated with the entity, @D1BoundOfficial, for violating the same policy. That handle had billed itself as the official backup account of D-1 Bound, presumably for use in the event that its primary handle was suspended.
As part of its investigation, USA TODAY Sports found that D-1 Bound previously operated under a different name, “Slept On Recruiting,” and found a business record linking the entity to former Georgia State football player Krysten Hammon. His name is also associated with three of the eight phone numbers that D-1 Bound used to communicate with families, and one parent was instructed to send money specifically to Hammon, identified as the group’s secretary, by Zelle last fall.
Hammon, 26, did not reply to repeated requests for comment from USA TODAY Sports. 
The Twitter account that Hammon used during his college football career has been suspended. And Twitter said Saturday that it had also suspended another account associated with him, @Hammon_409, for violating its ban evasion policy.
“If an account has been permanently suspended for severe violations of the Twitter Rules, Twitter reserves the right to also permanently suspend any other account we believe the same account holder or entity may be operating in violation of our earlier suspension, regardless of when the other account was created,” the policy states.
Twitter added that its enforcement team is continuing to investigate the activities by D-1 Bound that were outlined by USA TODAY Sports’ investigation.
Did you interact with D-1 Bound or another recruiting service? Contact reporter Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on Twitter @Tom_Schad.

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