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Report 4636

Associated Incidents

Incident 9231 Report
Nottingham Gallery Owner Allegedly Defrauded by Deepfake Impersonating Pierce Brosnan, Leading to Business Closure

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How AI deepfake of 007 star left art gallery owner's world in tatters
dailymail.co.uk · 2025

It was the dream signing for the owner of an unknown Nottingham gallery – an exhibition featuring the work of Hollywood actor-turned-artist Pierce Brosnan, who would also attend to meet fans.

But the gallery’s owner has revealed how her livelihood and reputation were ‘ruined’ after the Pierce Brosnan with whom she spent months negotiating the exhibition of a lifetime turned out not to be the Bond star but a ‘deepfake’.

Simone Simms has spoken for the first time about how she fell for the elaborate artificial intelligence (AI) scam which resulted in her losing her £30,000 Long Eaton gallery.

Ms Simms told The Mail on Sunday she was ‘villainised’ after selling £20,000 worth of tickets to art lovers with the promise of meeting 71-year-old Brosnan, only to discover she had been duped.

Scammers used AI to generate a convincing likeness of Mr Brosnan video-calling her from his £80million house in Hawaii.

Ms Simms recalled ‘how real’ he appeared on Zoom and how she ‘squealed with excitement that he was in my living room speaking to me’ before taking the bait and sending the scammers £3,000 for ‘shipping fees’ for the art.

Her nightmare began when she contacted what she believed to be Mr Brosnan’s legitimate Facebook page at the start of 2023 and asked if he would exhibit his paintings at her venue.

She then says she was contacted by what she thought was the star and around 200 messages were exchanged between them on the Telegram messaging app, including a number of voice notes discussing the exhibition.

In one audio message, listened to by The Mail on Sunday, a voice with Mr Brosnan’s distinctive Irish accent discusses the forthcoming exhibition.

‘Simone, it’s Pierce Brosnan here, how’s it going? Just wanted to apologise for not being able to set up a meeting,’ the voice says.

‘I’ve been swamped lately. Please let your team know that I truly appreciate the invitation to the art exhibition.

‘I have high expectations it will be a huge success.’

In a subsequent video call, Mr Brosnan’s image appeared on the screen but the sound was off. Messages from the person on the other side of the phone claimed there was a technological issue.

Two of Ms Simms’s friends were also in the video meeting, one of two Ms Simms believed she had had with Brosnan, and were both fooled, insisting she was not an ‘idiot’.

One of them, artist Neil Adcock, said: ‘It looked like his genuine face. He said his son had set it up for him. He said the sound problem was on our end. It carried on for a while.’

Meanwhile, after Ms Simms booked and marketed her show, the real Mr Brosnan saw an advertisement for the exhibition featuring his art online and issued a statement damning the gallery, insisting he ‘would never charge for a meet and greet’.

His lawyers sent her an immediate cease-and-desist letter in November 2023, three days after she advertised the £500 VIP meet-and-greet tickets.

A ‘horrified’ Ms Simms realised her mistake and tearfully recalled: ‘It was the worst time of my life and it tarnished my reputation.

‘Pierce hurt me by issuing the statement. He should have done more research before he did because he would realise I was only a fan reaching out but he villainised me and that’s where it started to go wrong.

‘I wish he would acknowledge me as a victim and not as a villain. He needs to tell the public about what truly happened and set the tone.

‘I don’t hate him, because he is a victim too. People abused his picture. If I knew it wasn’t him, I would never have set up the exhibition or sold the tickets.’

As soon as she realised she had been duped, Ms Simms refunded the £20,000 in tickets but was forced to shut her gallery in August 2024 after the saga left her reputation in tatters, with many still believing she had attempted to scam them.

Others have reported being contacted by a fake Facebook account, claiming to be Mr Brosnan, asking which of his films is their favourite before asking for money.

It comes as last month The Mail revealed how a divorced woman was duped into handing over £700,000 to a scammer posing as Brad Pitt and asked for money to fund his urgent kidney cancer treatment.

Mr Brosnan has been approached for comment.

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