Someone responded asking him to download Telegram, a messaging service, and when they started chatting, the person claimed to be the real Alicia Keys. He then found a Facebook fan page for the singer and posted about buying discounted tickets. “I think like $400-$500 a seat at MGM, so I couldn't afford to pay that per person to go to MGM and I was just trying to get a discounted rate,” Zeigler recalled. Until he saw tickets at MGM National Harbor, a more intimate and pricier venue, were going for hundreds of dollars. “I haven't been to concerts in a while, but yah, this was one I wanted to go to,” said Zeigler. ![]() Moerio Zeigler recently lost hundreds of dollars after trying to buy discounted concert tickets from someone posing as Alicia Keys. BALTIMORE - A Glen Burnie man is warning other concert-goers about an impostor pretending to be a famous singer.
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