March 18, 2026

Lahore bakery shares disturbing messages as ‘client’ offers Rs30k to spike pastry

A Lahore bakery, Donut Bee, shared alarming messages from a client who offered Rs30k to lace a cake with a pill, raising serious safety concerns online.

News Desk

News Desk

March 18, 2026

Lahore bakery shares disturbing messages as ‘client’ offers Rs30k to spike pastry

A Lahore-based home bakery, Donut Bee, has sparked concern online after sharing screenshots of a disturbing conversation with a potential client who allegedly asked them to lace a pastry and cake with pills.

According to the screenshots, the individual — using the name “Sara Ahmed” — initially approached the business with a seemingly normal order for a cake and pastries. However, the conversation quickly took an alarming turn.

“I have one requirement and for that I will pay you whatever you want,” the person wrote, even offering to send the full payment in advance.

The request that followed raised serious red flags. The client allegedly asked the baker to mix a pill into the order, saying:
“Main apko pill separate dungi jo aap sirf ussi main daalo gi milk main melt kar k. Kuch ghalat nahi hai, women pill hai.”

They also insisted the baker could “Google it” to confirm it was “nothing suspicious,” and even offered to personally deliver the pill wherever convenient.

In another message, the individual hinted at the intended use, stating: “I don’t want to hide anything from you… this is for my assistant and it took me too much time to get her to party at my home. Main nahi chahti ke kuch spoil ho, we both are girls, I hope you get my point.”

Despite repeated attempts to convince her — including emotional manipulation and increasing the offer to Rs30,000 or more — the business owner refused outright. “Ye pill harmful ho ya nahi, I can’t proceed,” she replied firmly, ending the conversation.

The so-called client continued to pressure her, suggesting she must need money and work, and even adopted a casual tone — “First check Google yaar, then reply” — but received no further response.

The bakery later shared the entire exchange publicly, warning others — especially women — to stay cautious when dealing with unknown clients or invitations, particularly around private gatherings.

The incident has raised unsettling questions online: was this really a woman making the request, or someone posing as one? And more importantly, what could have happened if the request had been accepted?

While the true identity of the individual remains unclear, the situation has sparked conversations around safety, consent, and the risks hidden behind seemingly ordinary transactions.

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