"Secret Shopper Service" |
Table of Contents.................
1. Introduction
2. Inheritances and
Lotteries
3. Home and
Vacation Rentals
4. Wire Service
Secret Shopper
5. "The
Nigerian Letter"
6. Plucking at
Your Heartstrings (Fake Charities and Pet Adoptions)
8. Your Grandson
is in Jail in a Foreign Nation
9. Catfishing
10.
Additional
Internet Resources to Help You Keep
Your Wealth!
**editorial notation....the improper spelling, context, syntax, etc. included in emails, transcribed conversations, letters and such are from those documents. That is often a good indicator of fraud. A real attorney would be professional in his presentation of documents!
Introduction
Whatever interaction you do on the Internet these
days, you stand an excellent chance that you will be scammed! Wanting to sell
your car? Needing to rent a home, buy a TV, find a girlfriend (or boyfriend)?
Just looking to chat on Facebook? Over the years I have personally received
attempts to steal my money in many of these channels!
When I listed my car for sale on a popular and
trusted website, I received a full price offer from a person asking me to ship
the car from Utah to North Carolina (an additional $3,000). The hook was that I needed to pay for the
shipping and be "immediately reimbursed" though a "PayPal"
account. Not gonna happen here!
Looking for a job online, I received an offer for a
position which in real life would pay less than $15.00 per hour...they were offering
$29.00 per hour for a "work-at-home" customer service associate.
(There are positions such as this which are genuine.) They demanded, during a
pre-hire interview (conducted on Google Hangouts), full banking information,
along with Social Security details, driver license information, etc. The nice
lady invited me to visit "their" website. (Yes...the actual company's
valid web address!) The company appeared very legitimate. They are an actual
international "after-market" manufacturer of custom auto parts. So, I
contacted their HR team at the corporate office and was advised that no such
people existed in their organization, nor was there such a position. They were
able to immediately post a warning on their corporate website from the details
which I provided.
My son spotted a great deal on a home rental in an
area in which he desired to live. In researching the listing, it became clear
that the "would-be-landlord" was trying to rent a home that was not
his, and was occupied!
I just returned from a doctor visit today. I was
telling the young Medical Assistant about this project, and she shared yet
another horror story! Her mother was trying to purchase a Yorkshire Terrier
online. She paid for the dog and learned that the dog needed to have its shots
before shipping. She paid for that. Then she learned the cost of airfare to
ship her doggy to her, and paid for it as well! Then, $4,000 later, she learned
the sad reality that this was all a scam!
Whatever you are engaged it, question every
aspect....don't accuse, just question and verify. The honest folks won't take
offense, promptly verifying appropriate details! A former U.S. president once
said, "Trust, but verify!" That works here, as well as in
international political affairs!
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