724 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
724 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 1
|
|
Issue 1
|
|
|
|
ScamNews
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scamming in the Land of Opportunity
|
|
|
|
America is the land of opportunity - everyone knows
|
|
that. Unfortunately, for a growing number of Americans, it
|
|
is also the land of swindles, scams, cons and frauds.
|
|
According to a recent Louis Harris Poll, 9 out of 10
|
|
Americans are hit by scammers each year. We are all
|
|
susceptible to scams. This is the reason for publishing
|
|
ScamNews, an informative, entertaining newsletter designed
|
|
to show you how these fraudulent activities are perpetrated
|
|
on the public.
|
|
The material we have chosen to use comes from many
|
|
sources, including the following:
|
|
. Real con artists, men and women, who reveal the secrets
|
|
behind their plans to relieve you of your money and otherassets.
|
|
. Criminals in prison. We talk to people behind bars who
|
|
tell of scams and fraud that led to their prison time. Some
|
|
of their scams are old, some are as recent as the 6 o'clock
|
|
news.
|
|
. Prosecutors, police, judges and attorneys. We
|
|
describe law citings from cases of scammers caught in the act.
|
|
They give descriptions of the crimes, sentences received, and
|
|
potential profit as well as potential loss to the victims.
|
|
|
|
The final two sections will come from the readers.
|
|
Business Scams will be from people who have been encouraged
|
|
to swindle consumers as part of their job 'duties'. While
|
|
many of these practices are borderline legal, the majority
|
|
are not. As one business owner put it bluntly, "Every dollar
|
|
out of your pocket is a dollar in mine."
|
|
|
|
Reader Stories is as the name implies. Material is
|
|
supplied by the average consumer and/or swindler. We
|
|
encourage readers who have been victimized by scams and con-
|
|
artists to write their own stories and submit them. While it
|
|
probably won't get you your money back, it may help save
|
|
someone else from being conned.
|
|
ScamNews is especially interested in getting stories
|
|
from people who have committed cons. After all, that is where it
|
|
begins. We realize, of course, that not everyone who has pulled off a
|
|
scam is a career shyster. Some do it out of financial need and it's a
|
|
one-time shot, others are inadvertently conned into helping a pro do
|
|
his thing.
|
|
|
|
These stories are written and edited for our readers'
|
|
protection. Names are never used except with the subject's
|
|
permission or in cases that have been resolved in the
|
|
courts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONTENTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Doing Business in America
|
|
|
|
Home Improvement
|
|
|
|
You can't touch these guys, every thing is
|
|
legit, yet you might wonder if there "oughtn't
|
|
to be a law".
|
|
|
|
Cell Talk
|
|
"The Secrets of My Success"
|
|
|
|
School Money
|
|
|
|
If anyone gets busted, it won't be the pro. He
|
|
gets the dough, the new kid gets the egg on his
|
|
face.
|
|
|
|
Recyled Plastic
|
|
|
|
Plastic to merchandise to paper,--- money that
|
|
is. $5,000 - $10,000 per day without showing a
|
|
photo ID.
|
|
|
|
Mice to Know You
|
|
|
|
Traveling across America seems quite affordable
|
|
with this seemingly harmless ploy.
|
|
|
|
Phony ID's
|
|
|
|
Need to be someone else, or anyone other than
|
|
you? Here's 2 shots at it, both state issued
|
|
and 'valid'.
|
|
|
|
Reality World
|
|
|
|
Really big money and never a complaint from the
|
|
tenants.
|
|
|
|
Flea Market Gold Mine
|
|
|
|
A scam that leaves the victim smiling...at
|
|
least for for a while.
|
|
|
|
Justice Prevails
|
|
|
|
Money by Canon
|
|
|
|
Bucks by the hopper full. 2 brothers thought a
|
|
Canon copier could bring them pennies from
|
|
heaven.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Easy Credit
|
|
|
|
A little work at home enterprise for the husband
|
|
and wife who want to 'do' time together.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DOING BUSINESS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Home Improvement
|
|
|
|
Harvesting greenbacks is easier than most think. This
|
|
type of operation would probably work with almost anything one
|
|
could sell, especially to senior citizens. It seems the
|
|
method of operation is bully them, sign them and give them
|
|
'nothing to complain about'.
|
|
|
|
|
|
As a 40-year-old sales representative for a New
|
|
England wide home improvement firm, I enjoy meeting and working
|
|
with people. I have been with the company 12 years. We
|
|
specialize in home additions, garages, vinyl siding, outdoor
|
|
decks and vinyl replacement windows.
|
|
My company placed an advertising insert in the Sunday
|
|
newspapers. The ad was a single page heavy stock paper with a
|
|
detachable post card. When a prospective customer mailed in the
|
|
card, they received a call from a telephone operator in a
|
|
boiler room. The prospective client is "qualified" by the
|
|
boiler room employee as to whether the client can pay or owns
|
|
their own home. Next comes a sales agent who qualifies them as
|
|
definite buyers by asking questions to determine how much they
|
|
need the product and the level of their seriousness. The final
|
|
qualifying question are two, really: does the product meet all
|
|
their needs, and are they satisfied all their questions have
|
|
been answered? If the client checks out affirmatively, a sales
|
|
representative calls at the client's home. All the answers are
|
|
right on target. The sales rep stays on top of the client and
|
|
will do everything to close the deal - even if it means
|
|
spending the night!
|
|
We work closely with a bank and can draw up a second
|
|
mortgage on the client's home if it's necessary. All of the
|
|
members of our office are Notary Publics to speed up the
|
|
process of the deal.
|
|
To me, the questionable part of our business is the way we
|
|
target the elderly. The older a person is, the more expensive
|
|
the product. A two-car garage, for example, that would cost
|
|
most customers $4,200 has brought in as much as $12,000. There
|
|
is little the buyer can do once the job is completed, even when
|
|
the neighbors comment on the high cost, since the workmanship
|
|
is up to par and all the materials are standard.
|
|
My firm also sells and installs windows we buy for $95.
|
|
Our minimum price is $500, and I once witnessed a deal when a
|
|
couple in their 80s paid $1,200 for each window. To me, it was
|
|
unconscionable. And even at $95, a person would not save enough
|
|
on heat loss to regain their cost.
|
|
Am I proud of what I do? Of course not. But it does
|
|
affords my family a comfortable life.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CELL TALK
|
|
|
|
"The Secrets of My Success"
|
|
|
|
Note: These stories contain detailed information on
|
|
how scammers do their thing. Hopefully the detail will show
|
|
the inner workings of scams and thereby provide information to
|
|
prevent you from falling victim to any of these ploys. In
|
|
providing any kind of detailed information there is always a
|
|
risk of someone using it in ways not intended. Although it is
|
|
absolutely not the intention of ScamNews for this to happen, it
|
|
is obviously a possibility. So remember: THE FOLLOWING
|
|
INFORMATION COMES DIRECTLY FROM PRISONERS WHO HAVE LOST THE
|
|
THING AMERICANS , AND PEOPLE EVERYWHERE, CHERISH MOST...
|
|
FREEDOM. THEY LOST IT BY A SCAM...
|
|
|
|
|
|
School Money
|
|
|
|
|
|
Plastic has been a boone to just about every segment of
|
|
society as the following attests. This is an ideal example of
|
|
how easily corruption can and does perpetuate itself in
|
|
American society.
|
|
|
|
I'm 32, I live in the Boston area, and I've been pulling
|
|
scams as long as I can remember.
|
|
People ask if I ever had a real job. I don't think I ever
|
|
did, except maybe after my first release from juvenile
|
|
detention. I delivered pizzas.
|
|
Everyone seems to think scamming is easy money. It really
|
|
isn't. A lot of planning and scheming has to go into the scam,
|
|
otherwise it doesn't work. Me? I like simplicity. That is why
|
|
this holiday weekend scam was one of my favorites. It's quick,
|
|
it's easy, it works and it's extremely profitable.
|
|
There is a minimal risk because ATM machines have
|
|
surveillance cameras and voice print recorders. As long as I
|
|
wear something to hide my face without appearing too
|
|
conspicuous, I feel I'm relatively safe. It takes a week to
|
|
pull off the scam, and my profit is limited only by how many
|
|
cards I can buy.
|
|
My prospective target is college-age kids, and I work it
|
|
in any large city. We did this particular scam over the
|
|
Memorial Day weekend. In fact, those long three-day weekends
|
|
are the best time to swindle bank customers. A friend and I
|
|
knew some college-age yuppies who would rely on us every so
|
|
often to help them out financially. We asked them to put out
|
|
the word that we were buying ATM cards and their PINs for
|
|
$1,000 each. Anyone who helped us get such a card would be paid
|
|
the Tuesday after Memorial Day.
|
|
The kids would report their cards were stolen on Saturday
|
|
of the holiday weekend, meaning it would not be processed by
|
|
the bank until that Tuesday. Two kids came across with 20 cards
|
|
for us the week before the Memorial Day weekend.
|
|
Beginning on Friday afternoon, we started cashing in on
|
|
the ATMs. Banks always make sure to load up their machines on
|
|
weekends, particularly holidays, and we wanted to make sure we
|
|
got more than our share. Some of the cards permitted
|
|
withdrawals on unverified funds - we had the college kids find
|
|
out which ones these were when they secured the cards. All we
|
|
had to do was put an empty envelope into the machine, claiming
|
|
we had deposited $1,000 cash, and then start withdrawing.
|
|
Most of the cards had a $200 a day limit, so we hit all
|
|
the accounts at least once a day, every day for four days. It
|
|
was an incredibly successful weekend. Each of us made over
|
|
$6,000. We paid the kids $500 each, and paid the card owners
|
|
$100 each. Which brings up the first lesson when you're getting
|
|
involved in a scam: never, trust a crook.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peddlin' Plastic
|
|
|
|
Apparently some con men are industrious. This next scheme
|
|
seems to require the scammer to go to a lot of trouble for a
|
|
buck.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The risk factor on this undertaking is very minimal, and
|
|
my profit margin is $5,000 to $10,000 per episode. All I need
|
|
is a friend or associate's credit card who is willing to wait
|
|
an hour or a day to report it stolen.
|
|
How much can a scammer make on this deal? Around $5,000
|
|
per hour or more, while the other party waits to call in the
|
|
"stolen" credit card. The more creative I am, the and the
|
|
longer I hold the card, the more I can make.
|
|
I acquire a recently "stolen" credit card and go to a
|
|
department store chain. I make a number of purchases such as VCRs,
|
|
microwaves or stereo equipment in the $300 to $500 range,
|
|
taking around 15 minutes in each store, and using city shopping
|
|
areas or malls for my purchases.
|
|
I have found it possible to make purchases in 15 different
|
|
stores in a morning or afternoon, for around $7,500. It's easy
|
|
to do with practice, and I've got plenty of practice.
|
|
Immediately after receiving a receipt from the credit card
|
|
purchase, I grab a candy bar or a pack of cigarettes from the
|
|
rack next to the cashier and pay for the item with cash. I
|
|
always use the same cashier and register.
|
|
I don't bring any personal ID to any store. If a problem
|
|
should arise with the card, I make a polite excuse to go to my
|
|
car to get proper verification - and leave!
|
|
Once I'm home with my merchandise and receipts, I
|
|
carefully line the receipts up with each other, laying one over
|
|
the other and holding them up to a light with the words "Total"
|
|
on top of each other. Where it says type of purchase, "Cash,"
|
|
the other will read "Credit Card."
|
|
I tear both receipts simultaneously with an irregular
|
|
pattern. The cash segment fits perfectly on the credit card
|
|
receipt.
|
|
For added insurance, I smear smoked oyster oil or mustard
|
|
or grease on the receipt. Then crumple it into a ball to make
|
|
it difficult to read.
|
|
I have someone else return the unopened product to the
|
|
store over the next 10-day period to declare that the wrong
|
|
product was purchased. Then when the return counter takes the
|
|
receipt, it is simply explained that it was in the trash - and
|
|
that's why it is torn and stained.
|
|
It has been my experience that 9 times out of 10, the
|
|
cashier won't even handle the stained receipt. All the cashier
|
|
will be concerned about is the product ID number, the price and
|
|
the words "Cash Purchase."
|
|
|
|
|
|
MICE TO KNOW YOU
|
|
|
|
|
|
This scheme could result in 'innocents' being hurt, maimed
|
|
or dead. Beware the ASPCA!
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is an easy, effective way to stay at luxury
|
|
hotels at absolutely no cost. Before registering at the hotel,
|
|
I stop at a local pet shop and buy two live mice.
|
|
Around midnight, I just release the mice in the room. I
|
|
have a female friend (my "wife" or "fiancee"), call the front
|
|
desk excitedly, preferably on the verge of hysteria. All the
|
|
front desk clerk has to hear are the words "rats in the room."
|
|
He'll take care of the rest.
|
|
I've found this scam to be good for a total refund, a
|
|
possibly free suite, and complimentary dinners and wine. The
|
|
least I get is a free night in another room.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PHONY ID'S
|
|
|
|
|
|
Genuine ID's are available for the asking. It seems for
|
|
some people life is not "be who you are", but rather "be
|
|
whoever you want to be".
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1 This one is so easy, it almost is too simple. The
|
|
first thing I do is run a want ad in the local newspaper that
|
|
reads,
|
|
|
|
|
|
"WANTED: Men/women who have never had a driver's
|
|
license. Ages ?-? Call 555-1212. Needed for
|
|
research program."
|
|
|
|
When the calls start coming in, I take down all the
|
|
vital information such as date of birth, place of birth,
|
|
height, weight, hair and eye color. I tell the applicant that
|
|
I will send further information for the procedure to obtain a
|
|
license.
|
|
|
|
#2 In my travels across the country I've met many
|
|
people... and for the select group who have similar vitals to
|
|
me, I've even borrowed their identities for a short while. I
|
|
just send an application to the Motor Vehicle Department in the
|
|
state where the person lives stating that "I" am going to
|
|
school (out of state) and that I've lost my license. I
|
|
indicate that I won't be back in state for another few months
|
|
and would appreciate them sending me a temporary license until
|
|
then. There is never any problem and usually there is no
|
|
picture on the temporary license only a run down of the normal
|
|
vitals.
|
|
|
|
|
|
REALITY WORLD
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Real estate is the American way to wealth. With this
|
|
formula it seems nearly instant wealth comes on a minimal
|
|
investment of cash.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I've found this works best in populated high rent
|
|
districts. My investment cost is between $5,000 and $10,000,
|
|
and the profit gain is limited only by my imagination and
|
|
willingness to work.
|
|
A female friend and I pretend to be a husband and wife,
|
|
new to the area. I rent a car, get traveler's checks and
|
|
appropriate clothing and, of course, cash. I have found the
|
|
risk factors to be minimal. It takes approximately two weeks to
|
|
pull off the scam once I've paid the initial rental agreement
|
|
costs.
|
|
I contact a realty firm that rents or leases homes and an
|
|
appointment is set up to look at a house, preferably without
|
|
neighbors who rent from the same realtors. I'm always careful
|
|
to arrive at the appointment with a rental car that has no
|
|
identifying stickers.
|
|
I try to appear diligent in my search for a perfect
|
|
rental. I act ' normal', do a little bickering about price, and
|
|
choose carefully. I talk about possible options to buy and ask
|
|
plenty of questions.
|
|
After I choose my rental, I pay the first and last months
|
|
rent, plus the deposit using cash or non-traceable traveler's
|
|
checks.
|
|
Once I have secured my rental home, I go to the phone
|
|
company and pay for immediate service.
|
|
My next step after getting a phone number is to go to the
|
|
classified advertising office of the leading newspaper in the
|
|
city. I advertise "my" home without giving an address, using
|
|
my new phone number for contact purposes.
|
|
If the home cost me $1,500 a month (first, last and
|
|
deposit), I have put up $4,500. I list the home for $1,000 a
|
|
month, or a total cost to new renters of $3,000 for the first,
|
|
last and deposit.
|
|
I wait in the rental unit during the calling hours
|
|
listed in the ad, making appointments for the best potential
|
|
renters. When the customers arrive, they will see an empty
|
|
luxury home, available for rent in an area where most homes
|
|
rent for $500 higher.
|
|
I collect the first, last and deposit from each of my
|
|
customers, giving them a move-in date of around 10 days.
|
|
If I get 10 customers, I have collected $30,000, for a
|
|
profit of nearly $26,000. People who have used the scam report
|
|
up to 27 customers in a week. I've always done well with this
|
|
one.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FLEA MARKET GOLD MINE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The treasure hunter becomes the 'treasured' prey in this
|
|
hit and run scam. The moral here is 'seller' beware.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This one is a bit tricky, but once it's perfected, the
|
|
risk factor is minimal and I've easily earned thousands of
|
|
dollars over a two to four-week period. My total investment
|
|
less than $500. And the only props I need are phony business
|
|
cards, a checking account, a newspaper ad, flea market space
|
|
and a fake ID. My initial step is to print 250 business cards
|
|
reading:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
'FINE JEWELRY AND GOLD INC.
|
|
We pay the most for jewelry and precious
|
|
metals."
|
|
|
|
|
|
I open a personal checking account under a fictitious
|
|
name in an out-of-state bank. I do it in a state with a low
|
|
rate of fraud since they aren't hyper about scam artists and
|
|
will generally accept any business thrown their way.
|
|
I search out a rural flea market that does a high volume
|
|
business, with a large customer base and rent space for a
|
|
Sunday.
|
|
I then run an ad in the flea market section of the local
|
|
newspaper, offering to pay the highest prices for jewelry and
|
|
metals.
|
|
On Sunday I buy up all the precious metals and jewelry I
|
|
can get. By the time the bank opens for business Monday
|
|
morning, I'm in another state with my treasure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Justice Prevails
|
|
|
|
|
|
Money by Canon
|
|
|
|
Money seems to be as close as the nearest copying
|
|
shop. Although this could be one answer to somebodies budget
|
|
deficit, it could also help get rid of all ones responsibilities for
|
|
awhile. Uncle Sam is more than agreeable to providing
|
|
accomodations for all those with ambitions in 'printing without
|
|
permission', as these two brothers found out.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On May 15, 1990, Mark John Lamere bought a Canon
|
|
color laser copier and had it delivered to a space he had
|
|
rented in Minneapolis, Mn. During the next several days, he
|
|
made color photo copies of U.S. currency $20 and $100 bills.
|
|
He tried to pass one of the fake $100 bills on May 19th at
|
|
the Perimeter, a night club in Minneapolis. The bill
|
|
immediately was suspected as counterfeit by the bartend-er. He
|
|
called the club manager who after examining the bill notified
|
|
the police.
|
|
Police placed Mark John Lamere under arrest and questioned
|
|
him at Hennepin County Jail. Officers confiscated 10 identical
|
|
counterfeit bills from him. Lamere claimed he didn't know the
|
|
bills were fake, and said he got them the previous evening from
|
|
a man who bought a Rolex watch from him.
|
|
Later that same night, Mark John Lamere called his
|
|
brother, Jean-Paul Lamere, from jail and asked him to remove a
|
|
portfolio that contained other counterfeit money from his
|
|
apartment. JeanPaul Lamere picked up the portfolio and stored
|
|
it in a girl friend's attic. Some four months later, the
|
|
portfolio was reported to police.
|
|
Law enforcement officers, acting on the report, seized
|
|
$12,420 in counterfeit $20 and $100 bills with both fronts and
|
|
backs; $15,560 in bills with fronts only; and $11,620 in bills
|
|
with backs only, for a total of $39,600 in fake currency.
|
|
Because of the discovery of the fake money in the attic,
|
|
U.S. Secret Service agents executed a search warrant on the
|
|
business space rented by Mark John Lamere and were able to
|
|
recover the Canon color laser copier. Laboratory tests
|
|
performed on the seized copier and the bills found a link
|
|
between the two pieces of evidence.
|
|
Mark John and Jean-Paul were charged with
|
|
counterfeiting US currency in a 7 count indictment. They both
|
|
plead guilty to 1 count and were sentenced to 12 months in
|
|
prison with 2 years supervised release.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EASY CREDIT
|
|
|
|
|
|
Business was booming for this ambitious couple when... how
|
|
does that saying go now... is it the postman or the US Postal
|
|
Inspector 'always rings twice'?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In 1987, Marshall Peters came up with a scheme to defraud
|
|
citizens by soliciting funds for "pre-approved" credit cards
|
|
from individuals with poor credit histories. A year later he
|
|
and his wife, Linda, began doing business, calling their
|
|
company "Credit America".
|
|
The couple operated out of their home, using a mailing
|
|
list they bought from a mailing list brokerage firm. The list
|
|
was called "Credit Problem Names," and yielded the names and
|
|
addresses of some 40,000 individuals with credit difficulties.
|
|
According to authorities, the Peters sent letters of
|
|
solicitation to some 30,000 of the individuals on the list. The
|
|
letters read in part:
|
|
|
|
"CONGRATULATIONS! You have been pre-approved to receive
|
|
your very own CREDIT AMERICA MasterCard...We have a MasterCard
|
|
reserved for you right now, but you have to complete the
|
|
enclosed pre-approved CREDIT AMERICA application, and mail it
|
|
back to us with your annual $35.00 membership fee...you cannot
|
|
be turned
|
|
down, because you are already pre-approved. There is NO CATCH!
|
|
"CREDIT AMERICA has made special arrangements for group
|
|
approval with VISA and MasterCard...Your membership is backed by
|
|
a 100% MONEY BACK SATISFACTION GUARANTEE,...You have nothing to
|
|
lose and everything to gain. To receive your CREDIT AMERICA
|
|
MasterCard with NO CREDIT CHECK and NO SECURITY DEPOSIT, your
|
|
preapproved application and $35.00 annual membership fee must be
|
|
received by CREDIT AMERICA within the next 30 days."
|
|
The letter was signed by Preston Roberts, vice president of
|
|
New Accounts. It displayed the VISA and MasterCard logos. There
|
|
was, of course, no Preston Roberts, nor had a special
|
|
arrangement been made with MasterCard or VISA. And bank cards
|
|
had not been pre-approved. In fact, Credit America was not
|
|
authorized to use MasterCard or VISA logos. The only Credit
|
|
America address was a rented mailbox, and Preston Roberts was a
|
|
fictitious name created by Marshall Peters. The Credit America
|
|
phone number listed on the solicitations was connected to an
|
|
answering machine.
|
|
According to authorities, Peters intended the solicitation
|
|
to cause victims to send in $35.00 to join Credit America in
|
|
return for the promise of pre-approved credit cards. Some 5,500
|
|
persons responded to the solicitations. Each sent in $35.00 for
|
|
the "credit card." While some of the targeted individuals
|
|
received a postcard acknowledging their request or a membership
|
|
handbook from Credit America, none ever got a bank card.
|
|
The Peters profited by more than $200,000 from the scheme
|
|
before U.S. Postal Inspectors moved in on their home in
|
|
October 1988, seizing some 3,750 opened envelopes containing
|
|
credit card applications. The search also produced 150
|
|
unopened letters of complaint. Some 700 opened complaint
|
|
letters were also confiscated, along with several handwritten
|
|
notes recording card applicants complaints left on the
|
|
answering machine.
|
|
In May 1990, a federal grand jury indicted the Peters.
|
|
Marshall and Linda Peters were charged with 14 counts of mail
|
|
fraud. Marshall was also charged with a single count of using a
|
|
fictitious name in the alleged swindle. The U.S. government
|
|
filed a redacted indictment that lifted four counts of mail
|
|
fraud from the indictment.
|
|
The couple entered innocent pleas and a jury trial started
|
|
Oct. 16, 1990. Marshall Peters was convicted of 10 counts of
|
|
mail fraud and one count of using a fictitious name to carry
|
|
out his scheme to defraud. Linda Peters was convicted of five
|
|
counts of mail fraud. Five other counts against her were
|
|
dropped.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reader's Response
|
|
|
|
Business Scams
|
|
|
|
Reader's Stories
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: The above categories will be reserved for our readers
|
|
and any others who desire to share their stories with us.
|
|
Sharing knowledge about scams and frauds is the only effective
|
|
way to avoid victimization from them. Through your
|
|
contributions, ScamNews will be able to offer up to date
|
|
information on the most current frauds, swindles and confidence
|
|
schemes being perpetrated today.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We hope that you have found this first and expanded issue of
|
|
ScamNews both entertaining and informative. Everyone is
|
|
susceptible in the scamming game, and by being aware of how
|
|
they work you may avoid being the next victim. Since most
|
|
victims of scam are left with little if any recourse to regain their money
|
|
or assets, prevention seems the only solution.
|
|
|
|
ELECTRONIC BREAK-INS AND BREAK-THROUGHS
|
|
|
|
Of special interest to subscribers will be accounts from
|
|
computer hackers and phone phreaks. These are the pro's of the
|
|
electronic underground supplying ScamNews with the latest
|
|
techniques being employed to breach security systems. From
|
|
minor invasions of privacy, to theft of credit cards, accessing
|
|
credit information services to destroy or repair credit
|
|
histories, charging thousands to not only stolen cellular phone
|
|
numbers but to any private or business phone in America,
|
|
embezzeling and transferring funds from private and corporate
|
|
bank accounts, creating checks or currency with a computer and
|
|
laser printer, and many more detailed examples of just how
|
|
unsecure the electronic environment truly is. In fact, the
|
|
government recently estimated that approximately 90% of the
|
|
Defense Department's computer systems have been successfully
|
|
breached by hackers, a sobering thought indeed.
|
|
After reading this category, you will definitely be
|
|
questioning what the extent if any you should entrust
|
|
electronic data systems with valuable or vital information. At
|
|
the very least you will become aware of the vulnerabiities in
|
|
your own system and possibly
|
|
avert an intrusion costing you extreme financial loss.
|
|
|
|
Again, be aware that any use of this information with
|
|
criminal intentions could, and most likely will result in
|
|
imprisonment. After all some of the above mentioned informa
|
|
tion will be from people currently serving a prison sentence
|
|
for breaching electronic security systems. This information is
|
|
to be used for prevention and protection purposes by all the
|
|
citizens, businesses and law enforcement agencies who subscribe
|
|
to ScamNews.
|
|
|
|
Scams and frauds occur in nearly every area of our
|
|
lives. Upcoming issues will be
|
|
carrying numerous variations of the scams and schemes the
|
|
average American will most likely encounter in daily
|
|
situations.
|
|
Here are some of the categories that will be covered:
|
|
Credit Card
|
|
Sweepstake/Giveaway
|
|
Bank Loans,ATM,ect
|
|
Mailorder
|
|
Investment/Securitie
|
|
Home Improvement
|
|
Employment
|
|
Business Opportunities
|
|
Telemarketing
|
|
Auto Repair
|
|
Vacation Giveaways
|
|
Counterfeits
|
|
Phone Cards
|
|
Financial Planners/ Money Managers,
|
|
Jewelry,ID
|
|
Living Trusts
|
|
Fund Raisers
|
|
Equity Skimming
|
|
Retirement Associations
|
|
800/900#'s
|
|
Pyramid Schemes
|
|
Direct Debit Accounts
|
|
Cellular Phones
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ScamNews will be electronically published EVERY WEEK
|
|
through e-mail or monthly issues via US Postal Service.
|
|
|
|
Subscribe to ScamNews today and in addition to
|
|
receiving America's most up to date and detailed resource on
|
|
scams and frauds for less than $1.00 a week, you can also order
|
|
Graham Mott's blockbuster "How to Recognize and Aviod Scams, Swindles
|
|
and Rip-offs" for just $11.95. This is a 33% discount off the
|
|
retail price of $17.95 and is an exclusive offer being
|
|
extended to ScamNews subscribers only. To subscribe simply
|
|
send a check or money order in the amount of $50.00 (one year
|
|
subscription) to ScamNews, Rt. 2 Box 56 - E, Jayess,
|
|
Mississippi, 39641. Please include both e-mail and
|
|
US Postal addresses and indicate how you would like issues
|
|
sent. When you receive your confirmation notice in the mail,
|
|
we will also include an order form to use for the above bonus
|
|
offer "How to Recognize and Avoid Scams, Swindles and Rip-offs"
|
|
at 33% off. We are sure you'll enjoy this fascinating book in
|
|
which much of the information comes from Mr. Mott's personal
|
|
experiences.
|
|
Whether you decide to subscribe or not, we would still
|
|
like to hear from you. You can leave us a message with any
|
|
suggestions, comments or if you have any stories you would
|
|
like to relate, please simply e-mail them to AYGX42A@
|
|
prodigy.com. We are especially interested in information
|
|
pertaining to fraud and scams which occur in the average
|
|
consumers everyday experience. Remember this is all anonymous
|
|
information, your name will not be used under any
|
|
circumstances. Please let us know what you think!
|
|
A NOTE TO MEMBERS OF BBS's: This will be the only copyrighted
|
|
issue of ScamNews allowed for upload onto BBS boards. If you
|
|
feel this would be of value to members of any BBS's you
|
|
subscribe to then you are welcome to upload this edition.
|
|
Not only could you be credited with upload byte credits, you
|
|
could be helping someone avoid a scam. Subsequent issues,
|
|
however, will be for subscribers only and are not to be
|
|
distributed by anyone other than the publisher.
|
|
|
|
Thanks for reading ScamNews and hope to be reading your stories
|
|
soon!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jason Richardson
|
|
ScamNews Editor
|
|
|
|
ScamNews
|
|
Rt. 2 Box 56 - E
|
|
Jayess, Mississippi 33963
|
|
AYGX42A@prodigy.com
|