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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,230 |
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Valued Member
United States
84 Posts |
This is the second time that I got a message from a buyer on Wish- Local, ONE FROM NY AND THE OTHER FROM GERMANY! Am so much sorry for the quick response I had to work overtime, I will be having a little change in my schedule, my son had an emergency and was rushed to intensive care unit , My initial plan was for me to make the payment and have you ship it to our address but now that we have to leave the house it wont be possible that way but I already arranged with my usual local shipper who will be picking it up After you have been paid and he will have it kept safe since I wont be available at home, myself and my wife we will have to keep an eye on Brandon for now My little man he needs us most this time, I am OK with your price, i will be making the purchase but my mode of payment will be a certified bank check which I will send through UPS or USPS courier service on Tuesday and you will get it on Friday . So when you deposit or cash the check, I will call you to arrange shipment I believe everything should go smoothly. Meanwhile, I want you to email me back the information requested below so that the payment can get to you on time Your full name that going to appear on the check : Mailing information address [Not PO BOX ]: City: State: Zip-Code: Cell Phone # so I can give you a call or text when I send out the payment and the agreed price. I will plead that you remove the ad on line so I will be rest assured that you wont be selling it to another buyer. I won't mind adding an extra 30$ so you can keep it for her Thanks?
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Rest in Peace
10197 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
5239 Posts |
Indeed, somebody is phishing for something. If in doubt, do nothing.
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Valued Member
 United States
84 Posts |
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New Member
United States
14 Posts |
Seems totally legit. What's the problem?
Just joking, of course. I sold my car on Craigslist a while back, and one of the emails I got about it was very similar. It was from a supposed Marine that wanted to buy it sight unseen, because he was unexpectedly being deployed that day. The most obvious issue with these emails is that they want to buy "the product" for "the price listed" and don't specifically mention what it is that they're buying.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
94367 Posts |
Weird. Can't figure the angle.
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Rest in Peace
United States
17900 Posts |
Fake check that makes it into the bank and held after deposit.
If they are willing to let the check clear, that might be different. But I doubt you would even get a reply.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2843 Posts |
As an almost victim of such a scheme, I will explain. The "buyer" always, is away, agrees to buy whatever it is, for the asking price and stipulates that they will add the shipping cost into the certified check that they send. Here is the whole gimmick. The check will be deposited into your account and you will be asked to forward the shipping payment to a western union account supposedly that of the shipper. Or in your case someone is supposed to come and get the shipping money...After a few days the "certified" check will be determined by the bank to be a fraud. It will not be honored. Nobody will had come to pick up the item and you will be left with your item, no sale and $30 less having just fed that to their fake shipping company. Some of the details may change in any given version of said scam, but that is the format. They are just stealing the $$ that they are paying for shipping - that explains why they offer to pay so much for it in the 1st place. They usually do this for things like cars and motorcycles where a $250-$500 shipping is actually possible, that's how they get the most out of it. They always ask that you take the ad off of the site, and I suspect that is because, they don't want to alert you when you get more of the same offer from either a competing scammer or from their own software that is scouring the jnternet looking for victims.
Edited by BigSilver 10/09/2017 6:21 pm
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Pillar of the Community
7234 Posts |
Quote: Can't figure the angle. I can't either, must be something with you name, address, and cell# together. I had an Email yesterday informing me I was chosen by the United Nations to receive $950,000 - "they" wanted the same information.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
5239 Posts |
if they don't steal the shipping money, they are planning to do something with your personal information, or that is just the first step which will end with them asking for money. In the end, it doesn't really matter and there is no need to figure out the angle. Just ignore it.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4233 Posts |
Quote: Mailing information address [Not PO BOX ]: If they send USPS, why put that in? Other than a typical forged cashier's check scam (other versions involve "oops, I made it out for too much, wire me the difference"), the part where they demand your physical address would scare me.
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Valued Member
 United States
84 Posts |
I guess you could say "something smells phishy" 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3323 Posts |
I wonder if they're trying to get the address as a type of casing for later? If they know you are a coin collector they might be planning a burglary. Unless, this had nothing to do with coins? Just my paranoia kicking in.
Edit: this probably isn't a coin sale since a shipping truck is involved. Nevermind.
"Nummi rari mira sunt, si sumptus ferre potes." - Christophorus filius Scotiae
Edited by Bump111 10/09/2017 7:08 pm
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Rest in Peace
United States
7075 Posts |
Quote: Edit: this probably isn't a coin sale since a shipping truck is involved. Nevermind. Right, not a coin. The item PennyPride is selling is clearly something that little Brandon needs while in ICU. 
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Pillar of the Community
7234 Posts |
Quote: The item PennyPride is selling is clearly something that little Brandon needs while in ICU. That is so funny - deserves a face palm! 
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Moderator
 United States
54280 Posts |
They need your name and address so they can make out the fake check and physically mail it to you.
They need your phone number to call you and smooth talk you through the fraud, which I guarantee you will blossom to more than just your initial shipping plus the generous "extra" $30.
This is a remotely located scam operation. They are not really in New York or Germany. No one will be visiting your house, no one will be picking up "your item". They want to conduct the scam entirely by phone, text and email. I will tell you where they are located - some where IN THE WORLD not too far from a Western Union office. This could be Nigeria, Jamaica, Lebanon, Romania, Ukraine, Indonesia, or San Francisco or Chicago or Miami.
Edited by nss-52 10/10/2017 05:40 am
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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,230 |