Stefanya Ramirez Ospina: The Life She Built Online, and the One in the ICE File

PART 3: THE MANUFACTURED LIFE
Stefanya Ramirez Ospina has 307,000 Instagram followers.
The follower count allows Ospina to present herself as an influencer.
On Instagram, Ospina promotes a web-development company, a contact lens brand, automobiles, and luxury properties in Quindío, Colombia.
The six-figure followers count signals to strangers that she is important. It is offered as proof that she can be trusted. Her 307,000 followers are, in a sense, her references.
A form of credibility for anyone considering wiring money to a woman they have never met.
On her Instagram posts, Ospina is photographed alone, often with luxury items or in expensive settings, such as on yachts and in high-end hotels.
Her posts show her at resorts and luxury destinations, including Dubai, Cannes, Saint-Tropez, Aspen, and Manhattan, as well as at a ranch in Colombia, complete with a hat, a buckle, and livestock.

The rural images emphasize Western clothing and scenery rather than farm work.
While she presents herself as a business executive, her captions also describe her as a "goddess," "golden," and a "queen."
She prefers the vocabulary of divinity and monarchy.
THE CEO

On Instagram, Ospina identifies herself as the chief executive of Zeus Strategy LLC. The company's website says it is incorporated in Miami. Its telephone number carries an Alabama area code.
The website consists of a single page divided into sections for services, process, and contact information. It does not identify satisfied clients, completed projects, or any portfolio of work.
Zeus advertises what it calls "customized digital business solutions," promising "total control of your business: financial, administrative, accounting."

It promotes tools for tracking income, expenses, and cash flow without "complex accounting formalities."
Its listed services include personnel administration, payroll, and employee time tracking.
THE NUMBER
Instagram, her platform, reports that she has 307,000 followers. It does not disclose how many accounts are duplicates, bots, or shells.
A bot is an automated account created and operated by software rather than an individual user. Online, a bot appears like a person. It has a name, a picture, but no human being.
Automated accounts may use fabricated identities or photographs taken from real people, borrowed without permission.
Vendors sell bots to Instagram users who want to inflate their follower totals to create the appearance of popularity. For a few dollars, bot accounts can be added to any profile.
Automated, abandoned, and farmed accounts can also be used to inflate likes and comments.
FOURTEEN LIKES

Despite the comparatively high follower count of 307,000, Ospina's posts typically receive between 14 and 34 likes and fewer than 10 comments.
At commonly cited audience engagement rates of 1% to 3%, an account with 300,000 followers would generate 3,000 to 9,000 likes and comments per post.
In post after post, her likes are in the low double digits.
The comment sections have usually less than a dozen comments from the same recurring names.
Two posts from November 2025 showed abrupt increases to 1,486 and 1,445 likes, despite her otherwise consistently low engagement.
The number of comments did not increase, however, and remained in the single digits.
When 1400 people like a post, it is improbable that none of them will comment.
The imbalance is consistent with purchased engagement.
Ospina's engagement totals suggests the account's human audience is much smaller than its followers total.
YOU CAN BUY FOLLOWERS
A follower count measures accounts, not necessarily active human users. It includes bots.
Online vendors sell follower packages priced from a few dollars per thousand to several hundred dollars for 100,000.
Vendors also sell likes in post-specific packages, often for a few cents per like. A thousand likes can cost $10 or $20.
Comments cost more because they require generated text and language or subject matching. A package of 50 comments may cost $15 to $25.
For Ospina to buy 1450 likes, as it appears she did on a few posts, it would cost her between $30 and $ 70.
If she had pruchased a similar number comments, it would cost her $300 to $500.
On an organically engaged (human followers) account, likes and comments generally rise together because the same audience produces both. When those numbers separate dramatically, it strongly suggests purchased followers and likes.
WHAT IT BUYS HER

Ospina's account lists 307,000 followers. The large number never leaves the top of the page.
Her low engagement, however, is more consistent with actual human followers in the low thousands.
Standard software tools flag her 300,000-follower account that receives only on average 14 likes as having about 99 percent fake or purchased followers.
While her account cannot withstand much scrutiny, which would reveal that the account is dishonest, most social media users are not sophisticated.
The average user sees 307,000 followers and concludes that someone this successful must be authentic and honest.
They do not realize that her 307,000 followers are bots, or dead accounts, and only 2,000-5,000 actual humans ever followed her on purpose. And of these, based on engagement metrics, maybe only 100 are actively following her.
While this is common in social media, and a suprising percentage of so-called influencers are doing similarly, it is nevertheless fraud.
Think of a man wearing medals he never earned. It is called stolen valor. Imagine that bemedaled man selling some product (or himself) to people. The fake medals are dishonest, if not illegal (if he lies to people about them to make a sale.).
The medals suggest to potential buyers that this man is real. He did something. Whatever he's selling, he's earned the right to sell it.
Ospina and her ilk emply stolen metrics.
Ospina has used the account to market luxury lots in Quindío, displaying her family's contact numbers. The counterfeit social proof is attached to a transaction involving actual land and actual money.
She also uses the account to promote Zeus Strategy LLC.
CLEAR LENS

Ospina is also associated with a second Instagram account.
The account, @clearlensforyou, promotes contact lenses and is tagged in Bogotá. Its bio identifies it as a "digital creator" and says the products are "coming soon."
The account contains only five posts yet lists 190,000 followers.
A human follower typically subscribes after seeing content or a product of interest. Five posts represent only an initial launch. The account itself says the lenses are not yet available.
It is highly unlikely, almost mathemetically impossible, that 190,000 people actually follow an account with five posts and no available product.
The latest post of the five shows a showroom sign and a stack of magazines with Ospina on the cover.
Its caption says the lenses are designed exclusively for customers. The product remains unseen.
On the post, 190,000 followers produced only 18 likes. That equals approximately one like for every 10,500 listed followers, an engagement rate of less than 0.01%.
At normal human engagement rates of 1% to 3%, a genuine audience of 190,000 would generate between 1,900 to 5,700 likes and hundreds of comments. The post has only three comments.
It is not hard to understand. 190,000 followers could be purchased for between $380 and $1,900.
Clear Lens promotes contact lenses that are not yet available. Zeus advertises software without identifying clients or completed projects.
THE FACE THAT CHANGES

The numbers are not the only thing being altered.
Ospina's facial proportions appear to vary substantially across posts, including changes in the nose, jawline, and lips.
Skin texture disappears, proportions shift, and styling alters the face's apparent structure. The nose changes shape. The jaw changes shape. The lips change size.
The skin shines with the smooth, poreless immortality available only to saints, mannequins, and face-editing software.
Some variation may reflect styling or cosmetic procedures, while other changes appear consistent with digital editing or beauty filters.
It is the same instinct as the follower count, applied to the face.



Invent the audience. Then invent the person that the audience is meant to desire.
An artificial woman speaks to the artificial crowd.
WHAT WAS THE SUCCESS BUILT ON
While Zeus advertises software services but does not identify completed projects or clients. Ospina's real-estate promotions concern identifiable properties.
In a November video tagged in Quindío, Ospina promoted three luxury lots near the Coffee Park and directed potential buyers to Colombian telephone numbers associated with her family.
During September and October, she posted from a rural Quindío property — a bull, pastures, white fencing, a llama, tree-shaded grounds.
PLATITUDES

Ospina's promotional content is interspersed with messages about gratitude, manifestation, and self-esteem.
"Self-love will always be the highest frequency, making all your desires a reality."
"I believe and I create my reality."
"Love yourself enough to know who you are."
The captions promise that the proper frequency can turn desire into fact.
On her Instagram, gratitude creates wealth.
THE FILING
In an ICE filing, where Ospina is currently under investigation, the money was not manifested. It was allegedly stolen.
The removal filing sent to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement alleges that Ospina abandoned her U.S. residency, filed no U.S. tax returns, and, with her father, stole roughly $4 million from her oncologist husband, Jason Williams, skimmed through inflated payroll and padded invoices, and moved through employees whose accounts were later frozen and blacklisted.
According to the filing, the money did not arrive through manifestation.
Her Instagram story invokes energy. The ICE Investigation follows the money.
The opposition is almost too neat: cosmic abundance on one side, padded invoices on the other.
THE GOSPEL OF AUTHENTICITY
Ospina repeatedly posts messages urging followers to embrace authenticity, self-love, and personal identity.
It is authenticity sold by a feed where almost nothing is authentic.
The followers are bought. The face is edited. And the self-made success is, the federal filing alleges, someone else's money.
ICE has received the filing.
The account is still posting. Somewhere near the Coffee Park, Ospina is still offering luxury lots for sale.
Part 4 will examine the filing, the government's available options, including Department of Justice interest and the significance of the Supreme Court's June 23 action which bodes badly for the inauthentic and possibly future jailbird, Stefanya Ramirez Ospina.
See Also:
Stefanya Ramirez Ospina Used Green Card to Steal; Now ICE Has Her File
STEFANYA RAMIREZ OSPINA: 309,000 Followers, One Federal File


