Email address obfuscation in effect -- please
click here to turn it off.
[
Date Prev][
Date Next][
Thread Prev][
Thread Next][
Date Index][
Thread Index]
- To: "MLUG Off-Topic Discussion" <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
- Subject: RE: [MLUG - DISCUSSION] There's a Scam for everything
- From: "Spurling, Shannon" <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
- Date: Mon, 9 Aug 2004 11:46:33 -0500
- Reply-to: MLUG Off-Topic Discussion <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
- Sender: EMAIL:PROTECTED
- Thread-index: AcR7Ewylocjnn0GrRoa9oJ+2NeDO1wDGrHiwAACfwxA=
- Thread-topic: [MLUG - DISCUSSION] There's a Scam for everything
But, you can't write a cashiers check with out securing it with money.
Wait for the check, cash it, and then let him get in trouble for it when
it bounces. Or report him to the FBI for fraud.
Shannon Spurling
WAN Engineer -Specialist
MOREnet, Network Services, Core Network
3212 LeMone Industrial Blvd.
Columbia, MO 65201
Main:(573) 884-7200 Fax:(573)884-6673
EMAIL:PROTECTED
EMAIL:PROTECTED
-----Original Message-----
From: EMAIL:PROTECTED
[mailto:EMAIL:PROTECTED] On Behalf Of F Vernon
Green
Sent: Monday, August 09, 2004 11:41 AM
To: 'MLUG Off-Topic Discussion'
Subject: [MLUG - DISCUSSION] There's a Scam for everything
Well I had an interesting situation this weekend.
I have a boat I am trying to sell. I listed it on an Internet site that
also
prints a paper copy of the ad. I received a number of e-mails from
people
all wanting to buy it.
Upon closer examination all these people were from Belgium, Scotland and
West Africa.
Immediately my mind raced for reasons why these people would be
interested
in my boat. There were some plausible reasons, especially for someone
who is
a motivated seller, why they might want the boat. None of these reasons
really worked for me though.
I was in contact with one particular person and he promised he would be
sending a cashiers check in the next few days for payment. I then
decided to
do a search on the Internet for this seemed too easy to me.
Entering a search for "boat buying scams" I found that this is a common
scam. Apparently, what they do is send you a cashier's check that is for
more than the value of the boat with the explicit directions that you
are to
send the remainder of the value of the cashiers check to them
immediately
upon receipt, along with the title. Of course then the check bounces and
you
no longer have the title of the boat.
Now this is a pretty hard scam to pull on someone that has no money as
is
the case with me. It would be hard for me to send them a couple of
thousand
dollars without the check first clearing the bank.
This is just another one of those messed up things on the Internet that
I
guess we have to put up with. Annoying.
Vern
_______________________________________________
discussion mailing list
EMAIL:PROTECTED
http://mlug.missouri.edu/mailman/listinfo/discussion
_______________________________________________
discussion mailing list
EMAIL:PROTECTED
http://mlug.missouri.edu/mailman/listinfo/discussion