I became aware of the latest incarnation of this scam recently
when I was trying to sell a couple of guitars on a music forum I frequent. After
I posted the sale, I got a letter from "Trisha Emde from Belgium" who wanted to
know how much I wanted. I responded with my price of $3,200 and got an immediate
response that this was acceptable. Then the following e-mail arrived:
"Hello Bill,
Thanks for your response. Due to shipping and insurance, and that
a shipping company is coming to pick up from you. You will receive a money order
of $6,000 then you deduct the cost price $3,200 for it, then you will assist in
forwarding the shipping cost which is the balance/extra to the shipper who will
be coming to pick up, and this must be done in good faith. I will like to read
from you concerning this shipping arrangement before processing and sending the
payment out to you. Thanks for your co-operation, while awaiting your response"
Of course what happens next is that you received a forged money
order, pay the shipper the balance and you are then out one guitar, and whatever
you give the shipper. Interestingly, everyone on the forum that was selling
something received the same pitch from Trisha. And that is one forum.
What you have to admire about this scam is the targeted nature of
it. Unlike the typical Nigerian scam, which is sent out en masse, this one has
to be personalized. They have to get your address from the forum, engage you in
conversation about your instrument, figure out a dollar amount that they will
try and soak you for, and arrange for the shipper to pick it up. As a result,
this scam is less known than the hidden bank account scams we are so used to.
You only receive it if you have placed something up for sale, and it sounds
okay. They are going to send a cashiers check after all.
A nice aspect to this scam is that you can even deposit the check
and wait five business days, figuring that it would clear by then. But because
it takes much longer to clear a foreign account, you could assume the check
cleared and still have your bank stamp "counterfeit" two weeks later.
In my case, being the smart guy that I am, I would probably tell
the person, okay but tell your shipper to come after the check clears. The
$6,000 dollars arrives which I deposit. I wait five business days. Check seems
to have cleared. I call in the shipper and give him $2,000, the difference
between my sale plus shipping and what Trisha sent. Bye-bye guitar and $2,000
and a week later, my cleared postal order is discovered to be made of rubber.
Bye-bye $6,000.
You have got to give it to those darn Nigerians!
Bill
McCloskey is the founder and CEO of Emerging Interest. He can be reached at
bill@emerging.com.