Be wary of any site that is promoting the Acai Burn product. Acai Burn is nothing more than a poorly made, drum-dried acai product that is stuffed with inferior ‘filler’ ingredients. The mission statement from of the makers of this product must be something like: “make as cheaply as possible, sell for as much as possible”. Stay away.
Acai Burn also has the dubious distinction of being one of a large number of products being sold be “Fake News Sites”. This relatively new – but very popular – scam relies on making a site that looks just like a real news site. One of the sites selling Acai Burn in this way is www.usahealthreport.org. This site, and the news reporter on it (in this case she is called Gina Miller) varies very little from scam to scam. All the perpetrators do is change the name of the site and the supposed name of the reporter, and they’re good to go for another scam product. See some of the many scam sites in the graphic below. They ALL use the very same tactics as www.usahealthreport.org. Whilst the reporter is not called Gina Miller, you will notice some startling similarities between her and the other photos of women used.
So why go to all this trouble to pretend to be something you’re not if it’s a legitimate product? Well exactly. This isn’t a good product and it’s sold by deception as a result.
Another underhand tactic that these sites use is to trick potential customers into signing up for a Free Trial offer. This “free trial” is in fact far from free. The subscription can cost as much as $100 per month and it is, in most cases, almost impossible to cancel. Not a good deal at all.
So, stay away from these idiots and stick to professional acai sellers who deliver a good product and have no hidden agendas. In particular stay away from www.usahealthreport.org and Gina Miller.
You can read more about the free trial scam on our acai scams page.

