
My husband, Earl, received a call recently that I'm positive was a financial scam. The caller phoned our home office from a number in Texas; we live in New Jersey. The man left a message identifying himself a a "Sergeant Lloyd." He claimed Earl had "dropped his wallet" but not to worry because this supposed officer of the law had the wallet "safe and secure." He even said the wallet contained Earl's "identification and credit cards."
Since I was the one to first hear the message, my first thought was "did Earl really lose his wallet somewhere and not even realize it?" But then I looked at the number -- which had a 713 area code -- and my next thought quickly was "Who would be calling from Texas claiming to have Earl's wallet."
So I didn't even bother returning the call. I simply went right to our bedroom where I promptly found Earl's wallet. This time it really was "safe and secure" -- with all his personal ID and credit cards in tact. After I explained to my husband the nature of the message, he also said "Probably a scam." This whole incident made me think about how many con men (and con women) come out of the woodwork in a down economy.
I don't know what this caller's game plan was, but I suspect he thought he would bamboozle someone and perhaps hope that a relative of Earl's might get the message and return the call. Suppose Earl wasn't home and that I'd done just that. This caller probably thought that if a relative returned the call, that person may just give up some personal information, or even "pay" to get the wallet back. And by "pay" I mean, give a FedEx account number or agree to pay for the "police station's" expense of returning the wallet.
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Save Yourself from These Scams
Think you couldn't fall for a scam? Well, even when pennies are tight, a
new study says 1.3 million people have fallen for check scams and most of them have been taken for $3,000 or more! To protect yourself, peruse this list of the most prominent scams and keep your money safe.
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Save Yourself from These Scams
Think you couldn't fall for a scam? Well, even when pennies are tight, a new study says 1.3 million people have fallen for check scams and most of them have been taken for $3,000 or more! To protect yourself, peruse this list of the most prominent scams and keep your money safe.
Save Yourself from These Scams
The New "Oprah" Scam
No, Oprah would not ask you for your credit card information via email, so if you get a message saying you've been selected for some special episode and asked to send along your personal data, don't fall for it. The FBI just issued a warning to consumers about this new scam that uses Oprah's popularity to try to separate you from your money, first by thinking you're buying a plane ticket to her how in Chicago.
Find out how you can complain if you get this email by checking Mitch Lipka's latest Buyer Beware column.
Save Yourself from These Scams
"Spear Phishing"
This is not your ordinary stab-in-dark phishing scam, but such an extra-dangerous attempt to bilk you from your money that the FBI just issued a warning to consumers.
This is how the scam works: Rather than use a massive email blast, spear phishing attacks choose smaller, selected groups that share something in common. That could be anything from a workplace, to a bank to a website everyone purchased from.
Find out how to protect yourself.
Save Yourself from These Scams
Mystery Shopper or Processor
Work from home scams have been around for a long, long time, but thanks to a lousy economy they have become a growth market for frauds.
Many people have been duped by mystery shopping offers, some even combining the lure of getting paid for shopping (after paying a hefty fee for training) and the "overpayment" scam (see the next slide...).
Scammers might also sell you on the idea you could make money processing rebates or do billing. To learn how to enter this lucrative field you are sold a kit and most likely will get hit with subsequent monthly charges. The only ones making money on these deal are the crooks.
Save Yourself from These Scams
Getting Paid Too Much
This scam is enjoying a resurgence that folks using classified ads like Craigslist have been seeing. Someone answers your ad and offers to pay way too much for a service that is offered. Sometimes they say it is to pay their mover, who won't accept their check from a foreign bank. Often the person on the other end claims to be from another country. They tell you to keep what you're due and then refund them the rest. Just wait ... their check bounces and you're left high and dry.
Save Yourself from These Scams
The Check Isn't Real
The check comes in the mail. It's probably for a few thousand dollars. It's supposed to cover the fees you are to receive for a grant you've supposedly just been awarded, the lottery you've won or some other reward you never sought. Cash their check and then send that amount back to them (makes sense, right?) then you'll get a much fatter check. Problem is their check is bad, but you'll not likely find that out for a week or more -- after your money is long gone.
Save Yourself from These Scams
Your Auto Warranty Is Expiring -- Or Is It?
The automated call comes in on your cell phone or home phone. You're told your auto warranty is about to expire and if you don't act right away to keep it current you could lose coverage. Actually, what's happening is you're being sold an extended warranty. For some, the calls are ludicrous; they don't have cars. But for others they can be scary and, at a minimum, annoying and uses up minutes and battery time on your cell phone. The Better Business Bureau reports a huge spike in the number of complaints against those selling auto warranties.
Save Yourself from These Scams
The Nigerian Letter
This is one of the classic scams that just keeps coming back for more. It presents itself in new and different forms -- recently using a bogus note from the director of the FBI himself as the come-on. The Nigerian letter, also known as 419 fraud for the section of Nigerian law it violates, involves an e-mail (it really started as a letter) that seeks your help to stash some money for a foreign official in a jam. Your kindness in hanging onto their millions is supposed to be repaid by giving you a percentage. Instead, you end up sending your money to them.
Save Yourself from These Scams
Stimulus for Crooks
Whether it's letters supposedly from the Small Business Administration, bogus e-mails from the Internal Revenue Service or promises of "free" advice to get government grants, frauds are exploiting the idea that the federal government is distributing economic stimulus money. These phony notes solicit personal information intended to give the bad guys access to your credit or worse -- your cash. Remember, if something that appears to be from the government asks you for all sorts of personal information it's more likely from a crook trying to stimulate his or her own bank account.
Save Yourself from These Scams
What a Car Deal
It starts out with an ad for a car, most recently featuring people claiming they are about to be deployed with the military. The car is priced way below market value because they have to sell it quickly. You contact the seller and are told that you have to pay to an escrow service that they chose. The price is so good you don't want to lose out, so you agree to place a deposit or even pay the full amount to the "escrow service." It turns out it's not an escrow service and you don't end up with a car.
Save Yourself from These Scams
Needless to say, turning over any information to such a caller would have exposed us to identity theft. Let this tale be a reminder to all of us: Thieves are on the lookout for targets and they'll come up with all kind of creative hoaxes to try to part you from your money. People get desperate and downright inventive when money is tight -- and sometimes they're counting on your own greed or desperation to fall for their ploys.
For example, suppose Earl and I had said: "Ooh! Someone out there also has the name 'Earl Cox' and they lost their wallet. We should claim it, just to get those credit cards." Obviously we would've been wrong. But my point is that by being greedy (or downright stupid), you can get caught up in something you know -- or should have known -- was completely bogus.
So if you ever get some sham of a call like this one, just do the smart thing and either:
a) Hang up on the caller, or
b) Don't even let waste your time returning the call.
Even if you're tempted or curious to know about some call -- or an offer you get over the phone, the Internet, or anyplace else -- just remember the old saying: "Better safe than sorry."
Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has been featured in the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller
'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'
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By: X-abian Montsho Jahi on 6/19/2010 10:36AM
Everything in N. America was built off of scams and cons. Slavery was a scam. The Civil War was a con; "integration," Jim Crow, white superiority and Black inferiority are scams; mostly our "patriotic" support of wars.
Cons over the internet seem to be more prevalent than phone calls, nowadays. Heck, even religion and services to little children can be deemed scams. Adults are always trying to con the young and ignorant for sexual (Boy/Girl Scouts, volunteers, religious leaders, etc.) or financial reasons.
"I love you" is a scam in most instances, to get a person, relative or not, to let down their guard, defenses. Most hypocritically, political officials are known for lying skills. So why would anyone truly be surprised by a nation of lying liars, all for a piece of Afrikan centered riches?
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