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| Online Lottery - Gambling - Sweepstakes - Secert Shoppers Just about every junk email says you have WON something. SPAM or just another way to get you to sign your life AWAY. These emails are so appealling to the elderly. Can you truly WIN? |
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#1
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Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams
Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams Quote:
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Check out NCL's new brochure. If you need advice about an Internet or telemarketing solicitation, or you want to report a possible scam, use the Online Reporting Form or call the NFIC hotline at. http://www.fraud.org/tips/internet/fakecheck.htm |
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#2
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Re: Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams
It seems that the job boards would do more to assist with the phony job postings.
I have some across the "payment processor" position on both major national job boards as well as local ones. It is shame that so many are getting caught up in this. |
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#3
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Local Scams Revealed - Tips To Avoid Them
Friday September 22, 2006
home : news : news Email this article • Print this article Local scams revealed - tips to avoid them by Rosie Schluter Fighting scams locally was the topic of last week's public meeting of the newly organized Triad -- a partnership of citizens and law enforcement. Pat Thompson, Goodhue County Captain of Investigations and a 20 year veteran of law enforcement told how an area person was recently bilked out of $1250. The plot was accomplished by a phone call informing her that she had won $1 million but first she had to send a money order of $250 to redeem it. She actually did this five times. The money was sent to Canada and that is out of local law enforcement's jurisdiction. They tracked the phone number calling her to a prepaid cell phone. But with tactics like these, criminals have a likely chance of not being apprehended. And the money is usually lost. Police officers also may find themselves involved in a scam. Thompson got a call that there was unusual activity on his bank account. Huge amounts of charges actually. Thompson kidded that he checked with his wife and then decided it was not any of their purchases. But somehow the criminals had gotten his account number. But it was cleared up. Thompson suggests that if someone calls you for bank information you should ask for your last check number cashed, or perhaps the last five deposits, etc. to make sure you are talking to a reputable person of your bank. Also, he recommends that you be a "fine print reader." This information would have helped another local citizen who found out the hard way. She received a check for $2.50 in some of her mail. So she cashed it. But then she found out she had inadvertently joined a buying club! Another trusting soul who had been befriended by a person who later became identified as part of a scheme to take $100,000 from her by mortgaging her home and even more from cashing in her securities was explained by Bob Rohl from the Kenyon area. In Bob's case, the victim was a family member. He explained, she was vulnerable because she was a caring person who wanted to help people. She was also going through "trying, emotional times" when her husband was dying. She met a concerned man who could show her information that he had been a profitable businessman but was now down on his luck. To help him, she provided a place for him to live and bought him a car. But he got caught when he brought her to a bank to try to get cash for some securities she had just sold. Several banks wouldn't do it. Then he tried to open an account for her to deposit the money and then presumably withdraw it. But a bank employee became suspicious and contacted the police who came and arrested him on the spot, Bob revealed. The FBI also became involved he explained. Legal steps, such as what Rohl went through, were touched on by assistant Goodhue County attorney, Stephen O'Keefe. His office helps obtain search warrants and administrative subpoenas to get phone records, etc. Identifying the real scam artist might be difficult. Scams are disguised as legitimate businesses. The result may be that even if they are prosecuted and convicted, the money is still gone. O'Keefe's message was: "Prevention is the key." This led to Cannon Falls' Interim Police Chief, Rich Wisniewski giving tips to avoid scams.
The local Triad meets monthly at the Shepherd's Center in Cannon Falls and is open to the public. Next discussion on local issues is Wednesday, October 11 at 1 p.m Next informational meeting is in November on "Identity Theft." Source: CannonFalls
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#4
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Re: Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams
Keep in mind that these thugs are always changing tactics, methods, and in most cases, they look legit and sometimes are JUST PLAIN FRONTS or Middlemen or women. Some are hired guns.
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#5
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Re: Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams
Victims Stuck with $80,000 Scam Loss. December 01, Honolulu Advertiser — Two Windward Oahu, HI, residents who thought they had been hired by legitimate foreign companies to distribute checks were victims of a scheme that's left them responsible for $80,000. One victim is a Kaneohe businessman who negotiated a contract with a Japanese company. The other is the wife of a Kaneohe Bay Marine who filled out an online application with a Chinese corporation claiming to be a subsidiary of oil giant Sunoco Inc. Both believed they would be acting as "check distributors" for companies. After being "hired," they agreed to receive checks from these companies and keep a percentage while wiring large sums to accounts in China and Japan, police said. Unwittingly, both the man and woman were about to cash fraudulent checks 4 and wire the money back to the perpetrators. The checks from the "foreign companies" initially cleared the local banks, and the residents were each able to wire $40,000 to accounts in Japan and China as instructed by their employers. But federal regulators discovered that the checks deposited by the residents were counterfeit, and the banks are holding the residents responsible for the funds. This is a new twist on the Nigerian letter fraud. Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/ap...0362/1010/NEWS
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#6
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Re: Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams
Recently I received appx 3 offers from a company called Nettransaction Systems. They claim to be based in Lithuania and that their govt charges 25% for money tansfers. They claim they need reps in the US to process payments for them and offer up to a 10% commssion on any checks you deposit for them. This is yet another typical check cashing fraud scam You will be left with thousands of dollars in debt if you fall for this. I cnat swear to it bur I beleive they obtained my resume form career builder, because I've only started receiving these orders since I registed with them If you get anything from a comaony called NTS or National Transaction Sysems be aware be very aware.
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