If you’re looking for an inferior quality acai product, and if you’re looking to be tricked into recurring payments that you didn’t think you’d agreed to, then Acai Berry Detox is the product that you should be looking for. If, however, you are not that keen on getting ripped off, then stay well clear!
The site that seems to be pushing this crappy product the most is www.weeklyhealthusa.com. This scam site pretends to be a real news site (it certainly looks the part), and pretends to have a news reader promote the product to unsuspecting customers. Of course the site is fake and the news reader doesn’t exist (in this case it is claimed that her name is Karen Simpson).
The next part of the scam is to have the customer sign up for a tempting ‘free trial’ of the crappy acai product. On signing up the customer is – unknowingly – agreeing to a subscription to the product. They will get charged up to $100 EVERY MONTH until it is canceled. And guess what? It’s pretty much impossible to cancel. This type of scam is very common; read more on our Acai Free Trial Scams page.
These scam sites are really very common. The perpetrators simply change the name of the news reader and the news outlet that they are claiming to be. It’s a quick and easy scam. Unfortunately it works pretty well, and many people fall for it. The graphic below shows just some of the sites that are using similar – well, identical – practices to dupe customers. Tell all your friends about this scam and steer clear of www.weeklyhealthusa.com and Karen Simpson.
FAKE NEWS SITES
The sites below are examples
of this nasty scam technique


What I found disturbing with this scam is, we found the link on quite “respectable” website!