Thirteen months. Seventeen transactions. $9,881.42 paid to a fabricated business arrangement — confirmed in writing by the third party the entire scheme was built around.
Between January and June 2025, I paid $9,881.42 USD across 17 Square invoices to Authoritative Content LLC, operated by KJ Ross of Secaucus, New Jersey. The transactions were premised on a bulk supplement order destined for a real Arizona medical clinic and a revenue-share arrangement with the clinic's owner.
On 27 April 2026, the clinic's director confirmed in writing that no business relationship with Mr. Ross or his companies has ever existed. The bulk order was never placed. The client relationship was fabricated.
This page exists to document what happened, in case anyone considering working with Mr. Ross or his business entities searches for information about him.
This page documents the actions of KJ Ross (believed legal first name: Kenan), a US-based business operator. He has presented himself online under several business identities, all controlled by the same individual.
Mr. Ross presents a polished, real-name public profile. He has a real LinkedIn history, a real family, and a verifiable physical address. This page does not exist to expose his identity — his identity is public. It exists to ensure that anyone searching for his name in a business context finds the documented record of what happened, alongside the rest of his online presence.
I first made contact with Mr. Ross in late 2024 through an online business forum. He presented himself as a US-based marketing consultant operating Authoritative Content LLC, with a network of supplement and wellness clients including a real medical clinic in Arizona called Phoenix Natural Family Medicine, run by Dr. Sarah Hesler.
The proposal he made was straightforward on its surface: I would fund a bulk supplement order destined for the Arizona clinic. In exchange, I would receive a share of ongoing revenue from supplement sales the clinic generated through its patient base.
The clinic was real. Dr. Hesler was a real practitioner with a real practice that anyone could verify online. Mr. Ross's industry knowledge was detailed and credible. His online presence was professional. There were no obvious red flags at the outset.
The arrangement was made verbally and through messaging — no formal written contract was ever signed.
Between 24 February 2025 and 31 May 2025, I paid Authoritative Content LLC a total of $9,881.42 USD across 17 Square invoices. The most significant transactions were:
The remainder was made up of smaller monthly subscriptions, courier charges, sample shipments, and consulting services — most of which were also part of the broader scheme.
For thirteen months, Mr. Ross produced a continuous stream of reasons why the bulk order had not been delivered to the clinic and why I had not received my share of revenue. Each excuse was just plausible enough to delay action.
Throughout this entire period, Mr. Ross consistently refused to allow me to contact Dr. Hesler directly. Suggestions of a verification call were met with aggressive deflection. No tracking numbers, no warehouse receipts, no shipping confirmations, and no proof that physical goods had ever been dispatched were ever provided.
The single most important piece of evidence in this case is Dr. Hesler's written confirmation that the underlying business relationship — the entire foundation of thirteen months of payments and delays — was fabricated.
"I checked with my team and we don't recognize the name KJ Ross, Authoritative Content, LLC, nor do we have any bulk purchases of anything from April 2025."— Director, Phoenix Natural Family Medicine · 27 April 2026
This single sentence confirms what thirteen months of contradictory excuses had begun to suggest: the bulk supplement order never existed, the client relationship was never real, and the $4,390 transaction at the centre of the scheme was extracted on entirely false premises.
The case file includes the following documented evidence:
This matter has been formally reported to the following authorities. Each agency has issued a case reference, and several investigations are active at the time of writing.
If you have had a similar experience with Mr. Ross, Authoritative Content LLC, Culture For Good, Camby Media, or any business operator using the WebSkillz handle, you may not be alone. The behaviour pattern documented here — particularly the use of fabricated client relationships, multiple compartmentalised business entities, and prolonged delays after payment — suggests a methodology that is unlikely to have been deployed only once.
If you have been affected, the most useful steps you can take are:
Each individual report contributes to a pattern of evidence. The more documented cases that exist on official record, the more likely a coordinated investigation becomes.
KJ Ross (also known as Kenan Ross) defrauded my business of $9,881.42 over thirteen months through Authoritative Content LLC. The fraud is documented and reported to UK Action Fraud (reference RF26040217514C), Square (case 117393899), the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center, and the New Jersey Attorney General. The alleged client relationship at the center of the scheme was confirmed in writing as completely fabricated.
Authoritative Content LLC, operated by KJ Ross from Secaucus, New Jersey, was used to extract $9,881.42 from my business through fabricated client relationships and undelivered services. The entity also operates under Culture For Good and Camby Media. Multiple official fraud investigations have been opened.
KJ Ross operates under at least three business names: Authoritative Content LLC, Culture For Good, and Camby Media. He also uses the online handle WebSkillz on Facebook and X/Twitter.
KJ Ross currently operates from Secaucus, New Jersey. He previously operated from Melissa, Texas. IP addresses captured during sessions on my business websites confirm both locations and match his stated relocation history.
KJ Ross fabricated a business relationship with a real Arizona medical clinic (Phoenix Natural Family Medicine) and used that fabricated relationship to extract $4,390 for a bulk supplement order that was never placed, plus an additional $5,491 in related services. The clinic's director confirmed in writing on 27 April 2026 that no relationship has ever existed.
The pattern of behavior — including multiple compartmentalized business entities, fabricated client relationships, prolonged delay tactics after payment, and the existence of fictional affiliate personas — suggests a methodology unlikely to have been deployed only once. If you have had a similar experience with KJ Ross, Authoritative Content LLC, Culture For Good, Camby Media, or the WebSkillz online identity, please report it to the relevant authorities listed above.
Based on the documented experience: an articulate online presence with a real LinkedIn profile and family; proposals involving "exclusive" client relationships you cannot directly verify; requests for upfront payment for bulk orders or licensing fees; reluctance to allow direct contact with any "clients" he claims to represent; continuous, plausible-sounding excuses for delays after payment; refusal to provide shipping documentation, tracking numbers, or warehouse receipts; and multiple parallel business entities used for invoicing.