Victim Speaks Out: My Disturbing Experience with Kierre Gibson & Corsa Auto Group
- keepitsimple7700
- Jul 12
- 3 min read
By Jose Aguilera
In late 2023, I thought I had found a life-changing opportunity. Instead, I walked into one of the most calculated, high-dollar scams I’ve ever seen — allegedly run by Ethan Duran, Kierre Gibson, and Brandon Medford under the name Corsa Auto Group.
🚘 The Pitch: Easy Money from Exotic Cars
It all started in October 2023, when I was approached by Kierre Gibson. He claimed Corsa Auto Group had a booming rental business with a massive waitlist of clients ready to pay $1,600+ per day for luxury cars.
All I had to do was join their “supercar automation program” — invest upfront, buy the cars, and sit back while they managed everything.
It sounded polished. Professional. Kierre even brought in Brandon Medford, a self-branded “top broker in the country,” to source the cars. I was sold.
I paid $20,000 upfront to join the program.
I bought a 2015 Lamborghini Huracán and a 2024 Mercedes Maybach, with all costs — insurance, maintenance, fees — out of my own pocket.
In return, I was promised a consistent stream of passive income.
❌ The Reality: They Took Everything and Disappeared
Not only did I never receive a cent — I discovered they had been using my cars nonstop. Renting them out. Driving them personally. Pocketing 100% of the income.
They strung me along for months using fake dashboards, fake chats, and endless excuses.
Here’s how the scam works:
They create a Notion dashboard to show “earnings,” but they control it entirely. When you start asking questions, the data suddenly vanishes.
All communication is done in Telegram, where messages are deleted the moment you push back.
Every delay is blamed on “the accountant,” who — surprise — you never speak to.
💸 Hidden Costs, Fake Fees & More Lies
Over time, I realized how deep the fraud ran:
$1,500/month in fake parking fees — when the cars were never parked, just constantly used.
$3,000+ in tickets and tolls, all racked up under my name.
They later claimed my car had been in an accident — and because they had my power of attorney, they pocketed the insurance payout and still tried to bill me for repairs.
🔚 Walking Away — and Fighting Back
By June 2024, after months of being misled, I pulled out and demanded my cars be returned. They stalled, lied, and even moved my Lamborghini between states to delay the handoff.
It wasn’t until late July 2024 that I finally got the car back — in rough condition, and with zero of the promised returns.
🕵️♂️ Who’s Behind It?
Let’s be clear about the key players:
Ethan Duran – Alleged ringleader. Runs the entire Corsa Auto Group operation.
Kierre Gibson – The smooth-talking recruiter who brings people in, collects payments, and pushes fake updates.
Brandon Medford – The broker who helps close deals, fully aware of how the scam works.
💭 Psychological Manipulation Is Part of the Game
What shocked me most wasn’t just the theft — it was how they gaslighted me into silence.
They made me feel like I was the only one having “issues.”
They erased chat histories and fabricated earnings to cover their tracks.
They blamed missing payouts on internal systems, delays, and “back-end accountants” — never taking ownership.
It was a strategy designed to wear me down and keep me quiet.
📂 The Proof I Hold
I’m not guessing — I have everything documented, including:
Legal contracts
Payment records
Full chat transcripts with Ethan, Kierre, and Brandon
Screenshots from Notion before they wiped it
And even video evidence — featuring Aaron Grant, an associate who rented my Lamborghini and admitted, on camera, exactly how the scam works.
(For clarity: Aaron didn’t scam me, but his video confession backs up every word of this.)
🧩 I’m Not Alone
After speaking out, I learned I’m just one of many. There’s a growing list of victims who were targeted by this exact scheme.
We’ve begun organizing and are now working with legal teams to pursue justice and full accountability.
This story isn’t just about money. It’s about exposing the truth, protecting future victims, and holding those responsible accountable — no matter how smooth their pitch, flashy their lifestyle, or big their following.
Comments