Access to Whites isn't a subhuman right.
The Coworker’s Witness AccountThe Ex-Boyfriend Connection:
An employee working at the exact same Fayetteville Olive Garden location privately reached out to online investigators. This employee was verified to work at the branch and revealed that the customer was not a stranger or a random regular, but Skyes' ex-boyfriend.
Known to Staff:
According to this insider witness, the ex-boyfriend was well-known to the restaurant staff and had a reputation for deceptive behavior. This immediately fueled the theory that the entire event was a manufactured stunt.
How the Alleged Scam Structure Fits the Timeline
If the witness's account is true, the timeline matches a classic viral crowdfunding setup:
The Fraudulent Tip:
An ex-boyfriend knowingly writes a massive, un-cleorable $700 tip on a tiny credit card balance, knowing it will cross Olive Garden’s strict corporate fraud threshold ($500) and automatically trigger a manager intervention.
The Staged Conflict:
Knowing the restaurant cannot legally pay out $700 in cash instantly for an unverified transaction, the server becomes highly visible and emotional on the floor, forcing management to address her behavior.
The Viral Pivot:
Within hours of her firing, the mother posts an elaborate, highly emotional video to Facebook and TikTok framing the corporate chain as greedy and heartless.
The Lock:
The ex-boyfriend freezes his card on Monday. This allows him to publicly blame the restaurant for "failing to charge it," while ensuring his own bank account is never actually debited for the $700.
The Payday:
At the end, the niggers successfully raised thousands of dollars in pure cash through GoFundMe donations driven by viral public sympathy before the corporate or coworker facts caught up to the narrative.