Even the real scientists working on this stuff never actually demonstrate that they're seeing real superconductivity in their experiments, rather they just show stuff like a resistance drop that could be explained by a short circuit or even just a regular metallic phase (most of these conductivity measurements these people do can't even tell the difference between copper and a real superconductor).
I'd treat this sort of thing with extreme skepticism and move on.
The experimental results described in detail in the paper are credible enough.
Obviously anyone who is competent enough can fabricate a plausible fake description of any experiments, so no research paper reporting novel experimental results can be trusted until someone else succeeds to reproduce the claimed results.
While such results cannot be trusted until independent confirmation, they also cannot be dismissed as fantasies of dilettantes, without serious evidence for this.