SUMMARY OF THE DEPOSITION OF HEIDI DIAZ, PART ONE  
Who is Heidi Diaz?    
     Heidi Diaz has been known by the following names:  Kimmer, Jennifer Dancer,  Brad Curtis, Kimberely Stewart, and Kimberely Drake.  She also testified that she was       known on the Kimkins.com website as Vanessa, an affiliate manager.  She had used  the email Vanessa2lucky@yahoo.com.  She also used Brandon Diaz name without his permission to receive an affiliate payment.  She registered Brandon Diaz as the owner  of the Kimkins website without his permission.  She then switched the name of the  owner to Renee Drake who was the mother of Ms. Diaz.  Ms. Drake died in 1970.  She  has also used her niece’s name, Vanessa Romero.
How did Heidi Diaz Deceive Kimkins.com Members?   
     Heidi Diaz admitted that she has used false testimonials to promote the  Kimkins.com website.  Exhibit 2 to her deposition transcript revealed a picture of the  alleged founder of Kimkins.com.  This picture is the well-known photograph of the  Russian woman in a red dress.  She admitted that the woman featured in Exhibit 2 as  Kimmer is not Heidi Diaz.  It is a picture that she obtained from the internet.  The text  adjacent to the photograph was also false.  “Kimmer” did not lose 198 pounds in 11  months as promoted on the website.  She also admitted that the woman featured in the  picture did not receive a graduate degree in public administration and was not a  volunteer court appointed special advocate for abused children.    
     Exhibit 3 featured another screenshot from the Kimkins.com website that  contained the image of the infamous woman in the red dress that was identified as  Kimmer.  Again, she claimed that the adjacent text was partially false and that the photo  of Kimmer was in fact the same photo that she obtained off the internet.  On that same  page, she admitted that the featured story of Bambi, who purportedly lost 122 pounds  was in fact false.  She did claim that a company known as Clexus New Media employed  an individual known by the name of Aliyar Firat.  Mr. Firat reportedly supplied Heidi Diaz  with a picture of the woman in the red dress.  Mr. Firat stated that he would rather use  an actual photo of Heidi Diaz, but Ms. Diaz purportedly did not want to reveal her  identity. 
     Exhibit 4 is another screenshot from the Kimkins.com website.  She admitted  that the “before” picture was actually Heidi Diaz taken years before the start of  Kimkins.com website.  She again confirmed that the “after” photo was not her and was a  picture she had taken from the internet.  The text provided in Exhibit 4 was also false in  that she had not gone from 318 pounds to 118 pounds in 11 months.      
     Exhibit 5 contained four photographs.  The first photograph on the top was  actually Heidi Diaz, but the subsequent photographs, used in various advertisements for  Kimkins.com and designated as Kimmer, were in fact models.  She had taken said  photographs from other internet sites to be used on Kimkins.com.    
     She claimed the sole reason for not disclosing her identity prior to November 12,  2007 was to preserve her privacy.  However, she admitted that at the time she made  the subject misrepresentations, she did not feel her customers, who signed up for  lifetime memberships, were entitled to the truth about her personal weight loss success  with the Kimkins diet.  In retrospect, she did put her privacy rights over that of her  customer’s rights to know the truth about the weight loss results of the Kimkins diet.  
     She also admitted that she used numerous pictures of women from other  websites and put these pictures adjacent to fictionalized Kimkins weight loss success  stories.  She admits that the women featured in the photos marked in Exhibit 50 were  not in fact members of the Kimkins.com website and were not on the Kimkins Diet.  She  stated that the adjacent texts were false, but were predicated on success stories from  the Low Carb Friends website that predated the Kimkins.com site.  However, she has  absolutely no documentation of any of the alleged success stories that were used as a  basis for the fraudulent testimonials that were attached as Exhibit 50.  Further, she has no witnesses to back up her explanation.    
     She admits that she knew that potential Kimkins.com customers would rely on her false representations.  As a consequence, she claimed that she had offered a full  refund for those people who relied on her past misrepresentations.
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1 comment:
I have not received a refund since I signed up last June 2007; so how come she said she'd give full refund to anyone who was taken in by all her false representations of people who had lost weight? I guess that's why the lawsuit! I could not get my money back through paypal so waiting for the trial to get my $69 back.
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