Sadly, as reported in several of the articles, the ASA, FCA, Action Fraud and Trading Standards are all really behind the times on this kind of scam, and can't seem to decide who should handle it.
It's touched on in the brilliant Raise The Bar series:
Are faux-feminist spaces exploiting women using tactics derived by MLM schemes? Grace Holliday reports.
www.raisethe.bar
Seasons In Colour did some really good videos about it too, in her professional capacity as a financial crime investigator, and said about delivering training to institutions to help them get ahead of scammers like Sarah Akwisombe. But as we know, legislative changes take a long, long time so it would be ages before Sarah was shut down though that process. So I guess it falls on these threads to keep the pressure up, keep re-linking all the articles (to boost SEO ranking for all of them), to keep posting all the search terms related to Sarah Akwisombe (you find this under "people also searched"), and of course repeatedly using her full name in each post rather than initials.
Tattle results have overtaken all of Sarah's outlets bar her own website and instagram account. In time, if we keep the momentum up, they'll be overtaken too, and it'll be impossible to even look her up without bring bombarded with the truth about her scamming and abuse of clients. Fingers crossed, that'll ensure she never has opportunity to rip anyone off again. We've already seen how a Google search by an agency resulted in her losing a big campaign that she'd have tried to use to re-validate her name.
No chance.
Refinery29 did a great job of explaining the ridiculous nature of regulation at the moment in their brilliant article about Sarah Akwisombe and her scam. Really interesting to re-read how they got a load of testimonials all at once after the interview, almost as if Sarah had asked people to do them......
Instagram is full of people offering life coaching but it can go seriously wrong.
www.refinery29.com