probably not. wayfair almost certainly has pretty detailed logs of all its transactions, including the names of the items sold, and to who. the FBI finding that their suspect purchased a $10k cabinet named after the victim during a raid would basically be a conviction in and of itself. no human trafficker would expose themselves to that kind of risk, much less one who had the knowledge and connections to do it as part of wayfair's business
i mean you could always have shell companies and stuff to cover stuff like this up, funds can be obfuscated pretty easily if you are incorporating in third world countries, some times hiding in plain sight is easier. you see this all the time when people use steganography to hide child research in files they post to reddit or send eachother meeting messages through classified fields.
wtf is wayfair btw is it like ebay?
also, I think this is pretty far fetched IMO. I agree with cheese, how is "cabinet expensive omg!!!" child trafficking? you can pretty easily google like 8 different random names to get missing person reports.
it would be pretty loving stupid to use the kids real name honestly
i mean redditors aren't exactly the most credible of online detectives
this lol, remember when they investigateed the "boston bomber" and basically harassed a family because their kid wasnt seen for a couple of days after the bombing and turns out he killed himself.
EDIT: I also saw a news article trying to claim that it's somehow related that when you google the SKUs and you get children in underwear. these are such dumb reaches
is there any evidence that's not circumstantial? who says this is human trafficking? it could be like, drugs or smthn.